Kosseff v. Board of Bar Examiners

475 A.2d 349, 1984 Del. LEXIS 311
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 19, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 475 A.2d 349 (Kosseff v. Board of Bar Examiners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kosseff v. Board of Bar Examiners, 475 A.2d 349, 1984 Del. LEXIS 311 (Del. 1984).

Opinion

MOORE, Justice:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Bar Examiners (“Board”) denying *350 the application of Robert A. Kosseff (Kos-seff) for admission to the Delaware Bar. The Board found that Kosseff failed to prove, as required by Supreme Court Rule 52(a)(1), that he possessed such good moral character, reputation, and disposition as to qualify him to practice law in this State. 1 After reviewing the entire record, we conclude that th ported by suh its denial of Bar. 3 Board’s findings are sup-stantial evidence and affirm Kosseff’s admission to the

I.

Following the Board’s initial refusal of his application, Kosseff petitioned for a hearing before the Board, which was held on August 13, September 17, and October 4, 1982. At these proceedings evidence was adduced bjy stipulation and expert testimony of specific incidents demonstrating his lack of good moral character. Kosseff also presentedj evidence regarding these matters as welj as his character in general.

The Board ruled that the burden was on Kosseff to show that he possessed the requisite good moral character and reputation, particularly in light of the serious questions placing his truthfulness and candor in issue. After h taring all the evidence, the Board concluded that Kosseff failed to meet this burden. We agree with that conclusion, whi<p was supported by several factual finding^ to which we now refer.

Kosseff has been a member of the Pennsylvania Bar for over nine years. He was a law school professor from August. 1977 until July 1980, when his contract was not renewed. 2 His teaching responsibilities included a course in legal ethics. From July to November 1980, Kosseff worked full-time in a political campaign. On January 10, 1981, he began working with an attorney in private practice in this State. In 1982, he applied for admission to the Delaware Bar. From 1980 until the summer of 1982, Kosseff was involved in a number of incidents reflecting adversely upon his good moral character.

The Board found that in 1981, while employed by the Delaware attorney, Kosseff went to a car dealership, which was the plaintiff in a civil action brought against a client of Kosseff’s firm. Kosseff, then 32 years old, and a former legal ethics teacher, knew the dealership had retained counsel, but misrepresented himself as an official from a state consumer agency in order to gain information he considered crucial to the success of the civil action. When asked for credentials, Kosseff departed. He admitted this misconduct to the Board, but claimed that he was under the influence of alcohol at the time.

Apart from this extraordinarily serious incident, the Board found that Kosseff obtained a loan of $2,500 from a close personal friend, which he promised to secure by a lien on his condominium. Kosseff represented to this friend that he was planning to sell the condominium and that her lien would have to be satisfied before Kosseff received any of the sale proceeds. In fact, no such lien was ever placed on the property. The friend later learned that Kosseff had sold the property and asked him to repay her loan. Kosseff’s first explanation was that the sale proceeds were insufficient to cover her lien. The friend then *351 sought the advice of her brother, a member of the Delaware Bar, who soon learned the true state of affairs. Only then did Kos-seff admit to his friend that he had never placed a lien in her name against his condominium. Subsequently, the friend’s brother and Kosseff negotiated a repayment schedule, and the loan was eventually paid well in advance of the revised terms of payment. However, in June 1981, Kos-seff s friend, from whom he was then estranged, wrote the Board about the entire incident and questioned Kosseff s “suitability for acceptance to the Delaware Bar”. When the appellant learned of this he telephoned the complainant and amid curses and threats stated in part that “you haven’t heard the end of this yet”.

On the same day Kosseff told the complainant’s brother that if he had to, he would deny that he had agreed to place a lien on the condominium. When Kosseff was asked if he intended to perjure himself, he stated “[t]his is my career at stake. Off the record, if I have to, I’ll do what I have to”. Kosseff then threatened to bring criminal charges in Pennsylvania against the complainant for allegedly breaking and entering his home. Subsequently, Kosseff told the complainant’s brother that if she would withdraw her letter to the Board, he would repay the balance of the loan. Kosseff also stated that otherwise, “it’s going to get very messy for her”.

In addition to the car dealership incident and the loan transaction, the Board determined that Kosseff, although not admitted to practice in Delaware, appeared pro hac vice before various Delaware courts on 24 occasions, and even did so after receiving notice of an order specifically denying him permission to make any further appearances as counsel in Family Court. Appellant admitted that he made no attempt to obtain suspension of this order prior to his appearance, despite adequate time to do so. He also admitted that he failed to inform the presiding Master of the order. To make matters worse, Kosseff told this Court at oral argument that based on his own standards of propriety he would violate the order again.

In addition to these pro hac vice appearances, the record establishes that Kosseff has attended and taken depositions and participated in several pre-trial conferences in Delaware proceedings without being admitted to the Bar. The Board also found that in soliciting a Superior Court judge to act as his preceptor, Kosseff failed to inform the judge of either his numerous pro hac vice appearances or of his misrepresentations to the car dealership.

In the course of Kosseff’s activities in the Delaware courts, he represented Suzanne Winters in two actions concerning the purchase and repair of an automobile. Ms. Winters sent a check to Kosseff’s employer which she understood to be for filing fees in a Superior Court fraud action that Kosseff planned to bring. No complaint was filed on her behalf in Superior Court and the fee check was ultimately returned to Ms. Winters. In late July 1982, after numerous attempts to contact Kos-seff, and after a default judgment was entered against her in a related matter, Ms. Winters telephoned Kosseff and informed him that she would complain to the state bar association. Kosseff responded by accusing her of being drunk or on drugs and by threatening to sue her for slander.

Regarding appellant’s unauthorized practice of law, the Board also found that his name appeared under the lobby listing of “Attorneys” in a prominent Wilmington office building as “Robert Kosseff, Esq.”. While he did not cause this listing to be posted, he was aware of it and did nothing to qualify or remove it.

II.

On appeal, Kosseff asserts that the Board’s standard, requiring him to prove his good moral character beyond a substantial doubt, violated his right to due process of law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. In particular, appellant claims that the evidence adduced at the *352

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Bluebook (online)
475 A.2d 349, 1984 Del. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kosseff-v-board-of-bar-examiners-del-1984.