Jenkins v. Virginia State Bar

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 17, 2024
Docket1240276
StatusPublished

This text of Jenkins v. Virginia State Bar (Jenkins v. Virginia State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Virginia State Bar, (Va. 2024).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

JARED RYAN JENKINS OPINION BY v. Record No. 240276 JUSTICE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH October 17, 2024 VIRGINIA STATE BAR EX REL. EIGHTH DISTRICT COMMITTEE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKBRIDGE COUNTY Robert M.D. Turk, Chief Judge Designate, Bruce D. Albertson and F. Patrick Yeatts, Judges Designate

Jared Ryan Jenkins, a Virginia attorney, appeals from a disciplinary sanction imposed by

a three-judge panel. The panel concluded that Jenkins had violated Rules 3.4 and 8.2 of the

Rules of Professional Conduct. The panel suspended Jenkins’ license to practice law for nine

months. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of the panel.

BACKGROUND

Jenkins, acting on behalf of certain beneficiaries of a trust, filed a motion to intervene in

the Circuit Court of Rockbridge County to stop the sale of property held by the trust. Jenkins

contended that the circuit court was required to appoint a trustee prior to any sale. The motion to

intervene stated that “[i]f these actions are allowed to stand, the citizens of Rockbridge County

will rightly question the rule of law.” The motion to intervene was filed against the backdrop of

prior litigation construing the trust.

At the hearing on the motion to intervene, Jenkins stated that “there is a procedure

literally in the statute to appoint a trustee to do this. So if we’re going to ignore this

statute . . . what other statutes are we going to ignore[?]” The circuit court denied the motion to

intervene, concluding that it was not well founded. The circuit court further found that “several

of the allegations made [by Jenkins] were false, insulting and offensive to counsel and to the Court and were made without any basis in law or fact and were in violation of Section

8.01-271.1 . . . as the statements and allegations impugned the integrity of the Court and Judicial

system itself.” The circuit court ordered Jenkins to pay the legal fees incurred by the opposing

party in defending the motion to intervene, in the amount of $4,000.

When Jenkins did not pay the fees, the circuit court issued a rule to show cause. Jenkins

filed a response to the rule to show cause in which he challenged the circuit court’s jurisdiction

to proceed. Jenkins wrote that “[i]nconvenience is no excuse for illegality. This case is rife with

unethical conduct.” He asserted that “[t]he Court asserts authority to convey the property out of

a family land trust to the brother of a former Circuit Court judge” and that “[t]his wrongful and

unethical assertion of judicial power must be resisted.” Jenkins further wrote that

“[i]t is beyond comprehension that the Court . . . would act in this manner and not consider that [its] behavior was unethical . . . . It is much easier to infer that everyone involved believed that they were above the law and could achieve their desired ends without caring whether their manner of doing so was legal or not.”

According to Jenkins, “[i]t appears that the Court felt this unethical collusion would be legal and

beyond question merely because he signed the orders approving it,” and, “[r]ather than

addressing the concerns about the appearance of impropriety, the Court sanctioned me for having

the temerity to raise the issue. I was ordered to pay the attorney’s fees charged for having to

support and justify their unethical and illegal behavior.” Jenkins wrote that the circuit court was

guilty of “[i]gnoring the laws.” According to Jenkins, “[i]f the Court will go to these lengths for

these purposes, it is reasonable to ask to what other lengths and for what other purposes the

Court has wrongfully attempted or will wrongfully attempt to use its self-assumed power.”

Finally, Jenkins stated that “[j]eopardizing the public trust in the judiciary by wrongfully and

unethically pursuing the course of action taken in this case is dangerous.”

2 The day before appearing in court on the show cause hearing, Jenkins emailed members

of the Rockbridge County Bar Association. In this email, he stated that the judge, “who we all

know has little to no experience with the civil side of the court, would rather send me to jail than

admit he was wrong,” which “is dangerous to us all.” He stated that the judge “has the authority

to do this the right way, but he has chosen to do it the wrong way at every opportunity.” Jenkins

characterized the court’s decisions as “tyranny” and “disqualifying.” He exhorted his colleagues

“to attend the hearing so that you can see the lengths [the judge] will go to when an experienced

attorney in good standing questions his authority.”

Following a show cause hearing, the circuit court held Jenkins in contempt, ordered him

to serve 60 days in jail, ordered him to pay a daily fine until he purged his contempt, and

required him to pay additional attorney’s fees to the plaintiff. The circuit court later revoked

Jenkins’ privilege to practice in the Rockbridge County Circuit Court. Jenkins ultimately paid

the fine.

A subcommittee of the Virginia State Bar certified the charges of misconduct against

Jenkins. The Virginia State Bar then filed a complaint against Jenkins alleging that his conduct

violated the Rules of Professional Conduct. A three-judge panel concluded that Jenkins had

violated Rules 3.4 and 8.2 and suspended his license to practice law for nine months. Jenkins

appeals from this decision.1

ANALYSIS

Our standard of review in these matters is well established. In reviewing the Board’s

decision in a disciplinary proceeding, we conduct an independent examination of the entire

record pertaining to the charge before us. Pilli v. Virginia State Bar, 269 Va. 391, 396 (2005).

1 Although Jenkins appealed, he did not appear at oral argument.

3 “We consider the evidence and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence in

the light most favorable to the Bar, the prevailing party in the . . . proceeding.” Id. “We accord

the [panel’s] factual findings substantial weight and view those findings as prima facie correct.”

Id. “Although we do not give the [panel’s] conclusions the weight of a jury verdict, we will

sustain those conclusions unless it appears that they are not justified by a reasonable view of the

evidence or are contrary to law.” Id.

Jenkins assigns the following three errors:

[1] The court erred by not continuing the case until after the substantive underlying issues were decided by the Supreme Court of Virginia.

[2] The court erred by not considering evidence relevant to Jenkins’s affirmative defense.

[3] The court erred because there was insufficient evidence to find Jenkins violated Rule 3.4 or 8.2 of the Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct.

Most of Jenkins’ arguments appear to rest on the following premises: the circuit court

was in error in ruling against him in the underlying case, in which Jenkins argued that the sale of

property could not proceed without appointing a trustee, and, moreover, the circuit court lacked

jurisdiction to proceed in this manner. Because the circuit court was without jurisdiction,

Jenkins reasons, everything that flowed out of that case was void ab initio, and, moreover,

Jenkins could not have infringed the Rules of Professional Conduct in challenging the judge’s

actions.

Like the three-judge panel, we reject Jenkins’ foundational premises. As the panel

observed, this disciplinary proceeding is separate from the merits of Jenkins’ arguments in the

motion to intervene.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pilli v. Virginia State Bar
611 S.E.2d 389 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2005)
Motley v. Virginia State Bar
536 S.E.2d 101 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Jenkins v. Virginia State Bar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-virginia-state-bar-va-2024.