KENTUCKY BAR ASS'N v. House

366 S.W.3d 927, 2012 WL 2362582, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 94
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 2012
Docket2012-SC-000183-KB
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 366 S.W.3d 927 (KENTUCKY BAR ASS'N v. House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KENTUCKY BAR ASS'N v. House, 366 S.W.3d 927, 2012 WL 2362582, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 94 (Ky. 2012).

Opinion

*928 OPINION AND ORDER

Juliette Alane House 1 was admitted to practice law in Kentucky in 1989. 2 In December 2010, the Inquiry Commission filed a seven-count Charge against House for violating SCR 3.130-1.1, 3.130-1.3, 3.130 — 1.4(b), 3.130-1.16(d), 3.130-S.l(b), 3.130-8.4(b), and 3.130-8.4(c). 3 The Charge relates to misconduct in House’s representation of Kevin Weeks.

After a disciplinary hearing on the matter, the trial commissioner found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that House violated the rules of professional conduct as charged in all seven counts and recommended that House be permanently disbarred.

House did not file a notice of appeal of the trial commissioner’s report. Because the trial commissioner’s findings and conclusions are supported by the record and the law, we do not elect to review the decision. And we adopt the order and recommendation of the trial commissioner. 4 We agree that House violated the rules of professional conduct and that permanent disbarment is warranted.

I. KBA FILE NO. 18527.

Kevin Weeks retained House to represent him in his Indiana criminal trial. House was not licensed in Indiana or temporarily admitted under Indiana Supreme Court Rule 3, 5 but the trial court apparent *929 ly permitted House to represent Weeks in the trial under Indiana’s prior pro hac vice rule. Weeks was convicted of a criminal offense and sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment. Weeks and his father, Bob Weeks, hired House to appeal the criminal conviction. Bob Weeks agreed to pay House $20,000, plus half the fees and costs for the appeal.

In July 2008, House filed a Notice of Appeal in Weeks’s case, which was rejected by the Indiana Court of Appeals because the filing fee was not paid and because House was not licensed to practice law in Indiana. At the evidentiary hearing before the trial commissioner, House admitted that she knew the Notice of Appeal was rejected. She asserted that she filed a second Notice of Appeal, but there is no indication that the Indiana Court of Appeals received this filing. House also admitted that she did not comply with the Indiana Supreme Court Rule that requires the temporary admission of out-of-state attorneys.

In November 2008, House emailed Bob Weeks, indicating that the Indiana Court of Appeals returned her material because she was not admitted to practice law in Indiana. But she stated that she was “filing all of the necessary paperwork to accomplish this task.” House told Bob Weeks that in the meantime, Weeks needed to file his appeal pro se. In the same email, House requested that the $250 appeal fee and $185 admission fee “be paid immediately.” Bob Weeks complied and issued a check to House for $435.

House prepared and filed for Weeks a motion to proceed informa pauperis in his appeal and a motion for an extension of time to file his Notice of Appeal, which the Indiana Court of Appeals granted. And, in December 2008, Bob Weeks paid House $9,785 as the first installment of the agreed-upon $20,000 fee, with a deduction for half the court fees and temporary admission fees. 6

A notice of completion of the trial transcript was filed with the Indiana Court of Appeals in March 2009. And, in July 2009, the Indiana Court of Appeals issued an Order dismissing Weeks’s appeal, with prejudice, because Weeks did not file a Case Summary, Appellant’s Brief, or any other filings to prosecute the appeal.

House knew that Weeks’s appeal would be subject to dismissal if an appellate brief was not filed within thirty days of the transcript certification. And House asserted that she prepared a 162-page appellate brief on Weeks’s behalf but that the Indiana Court of Appeals failed to accept it for filing. But she never presented this brief at the evidentiary hearing, and she presented no proof that the Indiana appellate court ever received and rejected the document. House also claimed that she did not receive notice that the transcript was complete or that Weeks’s appeal was dismissed because Weeks was technically proceeding pro se, and House was no longer counsel of record.

In November 2009, four months after the Indiana Court of Appeals dismissed Weeks’s appeal, with prejudice, House told Bob Weeks that she had filed the appellate brief. She indicated that she had not heard whether the Court of Appeals wanted oral argument but that the Attorney General’s Office “still ha[d] a few weeks before they file their brief. Then I may file a rebuttal.” House also asked “when [she] would [receive] the final payment.” Bob Weeks requested that House send him a copy of the appeal brief, but he never received it.

*930 In December 2009, House wrote to Weeks informing him that the brief was submitted to the Court of Appeals. She asserted that because she was not admitted to practice law in Indiana, she was doing the work and submitting it through an Indiana Public Defender.

Without knowing that his son’s appeal had been dismissed several months earlier, Bob Weeks paid House the remaining $10,000 of the agreed-upon fee. But when Bob Weeks requested a copy of the appellate brief filed by the Attorney General from the Clerk of Court for the Indiana Court of Appeals, the clerk informed him that the case was dismissed and no briefs were filed by either side. Bob Weeks contacted House to express his concern, and House assured him that she filed a brief and did “exactly as [she] stated.” In February 2010, Bob Weeks requested a refund of the $20,000 fee from House.

House informed Weeks in April 2010 that the Indiana Court of Appeals dismissed his appeal. She told Weeks that “the Attorney General’s office in Indiana will not recognize me as your attorney and that her mailings to that office were returned to her. She also stated that the Indiana Court of Appeals accepted documents from her “but has held them pending some arbitrary determination about your representation.” And House admitted that “[although the public defender agreed to be the middle person for the brief, that never happened.” But she claimed that she was preparing post-conviction motions that she would forward to Weeks for him to sign on his own behalf as an unrepresented litigant.

In June 2010, Weeks wrote to House, complaining that House’s April 2010 letter was the first time she informed him that his appeal had been dismissed nearly a year before. He reminded House that he had not received any post-conviction motions from her. Weeks requested a detailed list of House’s work on his appeal. In July 2010, after receiving no response to his letter, Weeks dismissed House as his attorney and requested a refund of all the fees she received in connection with his appeal.

House has never refunded any of the money paid to her for representation in Kevin Weeks’s criminal appeal, including the temporary admission and appeal filing fees, which House never paid to the Indiana Court of Appeals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
366 S.W.3d 927, 2012 WL 2362582, 2012 Ky. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-bar-assn-v-house-ky-2012.