Kennedy v. Bar Ass'n of Montgomery County, Inc.

561 A.2d 200, 316 Md. 646, 1989 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 26, 1989
Docket101, September Term, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 561 A.2d 200 (Kennedy v. Bar Ass'n of Montgomery County, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Bar Ass'n of Montgomery County, Inc., 561 A.2d 200, 316 Md. 646, 1989 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1989).

Opinion

RODOWSKY, Judge.

Appellant, Thomas F. Kennedy (Kennedy), is a member of the Bar of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals and has been admitted to practice before the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, but has never been admitted to the bar of this Court. In this injunction action the Circuit Court for Montgomery County found, among other facts, that Kennedy “has deliberately attempted to circumvent the provisions of the [Maryland] Code and the Maryland Rules, so as to engage in an extensive and systematic practice of law [in the State of Maryland], both in Court and out of Court, while not being licensed to practice in the State of Maryland.” On this appeal Kennedy does not challenge the trial court’s fact-findings. He questions only the scope of the permanent injunction which was issued against him, contending (1) that he may maintain an office in Maryland for the practice of “federal” and “non-Maryland” law, and (2) that in certain particulars the injunction is overbroad. For the reasons hereinafter set forth, we basically reject Kennedy’s first contention but agree with portions of his second contention.

In March of 1977 Kennedy was admitted by examination to the District of Columbia Bar. Kennedy continued his then full-time job with the Department of State and practiced law for his own account in the evening out of offices at 1025 Fifteenth Street in the District of Columbia. Those offices were headed by the building’s owner, Milton E. Canter (Canter), who was also Washington counsel for a *651 New York law firm. Kennedy left the State Department in April 1978 and practiced full tíme as a solo practitioner in Washington. During that period the District of Columbia professional disciplinary authorities informally admonished Kennedy. In re Kennedy, 542 A.2d 1225, 1281 n. 11 (D.C.App.1988).

In May of 1981 Kennedy assisted, on an emergency basis, a member of the Maryland Bar, Van S. Powers (Powers), in a trial in Pennsylvania. Thereafter Powers and Kennedy entered into an arrangement whereby Kennedy worked out of Powers’s office in Hyafctsville, Prince George’s County, Maryland under supervision and without making court appearances. That relationship ended acrimoniously in February 1984. Each attorney filed a disciplinary complaint against the other in the District of Columbia. Kennedy’s complaint against Powers was dismissed. Kennedy’s appeal and exceptions to a recommendation that he be suspended for one year and one day were pending before the District of Columbia Court of Appeals when the instant case was tried in Montgomery County. Kennedy also sued Powers civilly and that claim was eventually settled. In that action Kennedy contended that he and Powers were partners.

From December 15, 1981, until November 28, 1983, while Kennedy was working out of the office in Hyattsville, he was suspended by the District of Columbia authorities from the practice of law because of nonpayment of dues. Kennedy states that he was unaware of the suspension, notice of which had been sent to Mm by registered mail. He explains that he did not go to the post office to pick up the registered mail because he assumed it was from one of Ms creditors. As soon as Kennedy learned of the suspension, he paid the dues and was reinstated.

When Kennedy’s arrangement with Powers terminated, Kennedy formed a partnership for the practice of law with Edward Jasen (Jasen), a member of the Maryland and District of Columbia Bars, who was then sixty-seven or sixty-eight years of age. Jasen had been practicing out of *652 Canter’s office at. 1025 Fifteenth Street but Jasen’s income from his practice had diminished by approximately seventy-five percent due to the withdrawal from activity in Washington of the New York law firm with which Canter had been connected. Kennedy envisioned that the core of a practice with Jasen would be collection work for doctors in which the attorneys would utilize state of the art computerized procedures. Kennedy’s share of any firm profits was to be seventy-five percent and Jasen’s, twenty-five percent.

The law offices of Jasen & Kennedy were established in 1984 in Silver Spring, Montgomery County, Maryland, first at 8720 Georgia Avenue and thereafter at 1015 Spring Street. The heading of the firm’s legal stationery presents the Silver Spring address in the center while, in small type to the right of the heading, the address at 1025 Fifteenth Street, D.C. also appears. On the left of the heading of the stationery symbols indicate that Jasen is admitted in “MD., D.C. & U.S. Courts” and that Kennedy is admitted in “D.C. & U.S. Courts Only.” In the October 1985 yellow pages telephone directory of C & P Telephone Co. for Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, Kennedy’s name was listed in the lawyers’ section in bold type. His name was followed by a one and one-half by two inch box ad for “Jasen & Kennedy Silver Spring & D.C. Offices.” Only the Silver Spring address and telephone number were set forth in the ad which in part described the firm as engaged in “General Practice Of Law.” In the same yellow pages directory for October 1986 through September 1987 there appears in the “coupon section” a three and three quarter inch by one and three quarter inch ad for Jasen & Kennedy which gives only the Silver Spring address and telephone number. In the lawyers’ section of the yellow pages for that same twelve month period, under Kennedy’s name, is a one and a half inch by two inch ad for Jasen & Kennedy giving both the Silver Spring and Fifteenth Street addresses and telephone numbers. Kennedy’s professional card also lists both addresses.

*653 The address at 1025 Fifteenth Street was used by Jasen & Kennedy almost exclusively as a mail drop. Jasen & Kennedy had no office space reserved there, no employees there, paid no rent there but, through an arrangement with Canter, could receive mail and maintain a telephone listing there. Telephone calls placed to the Jasen & Kennedy listing for 1025 Fifteenth Street were electronically forwarded to the Silver Spring office. The trial court found that “[t]he purported office of the Defendant maintained in the District of Columbia is a sham and is not an office for the practice of law by the Defendant as defined by Rule l-312(b) of the Maryland Rules.” 1

Kennedy produced ninety percent of the business for the firm, and did eighty to ninety percent of the work done by the firm in the office. The practice became sufficiently extensive to justify employing five secretaries. The collection practice, consisting principally of claims by Maryland based doctors against Maryland residents, involved approximately 4,200 open files when the firm’s computer system was converted to a new programming language. Whenever counsel was required physically to appear in a Maryland court, Jasen and Kennedy almost always presented themselves together before the court. But Jasen rarely moved for Kennedy’s pro hac vice admission pursuant to Rule 20 of the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar. 2

*654

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Bluebook (online)
561 A.2d 200, 316 Md. 646, 1989 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-bar-assn-of-montgomery-county-inc-md-1989.