Louisiana State Bar Ass'n v. Frank
This text of 472 So. 2d 1 (Louisiana State Bar Ass'n v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
LOUISIANA STATE BAR ASSOCIATION
v.
Mack I. FRANK.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Thomas O. Collins, Jr., Wood Brown, III, New Orleans, Robert J. Boudreau, Lake Charles, Sam J. D'Amico, Baton Rouge, Carrick R. Inabnett, Monroe, Harold J. Lamy, New Orleans, Alfred S. Landry, New Iberia, Philippi P. St. Pee, Melairie, Roland J. Achee, Shreveport, Gerald F. Thomas, for applicant.
Lolis Edward Elie, New Orleans, for respondent.
DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDING
LEMMON, Justice.
This disciplinary proceeding was instituted by the Committee on Professional Responsibility of the Louisiana State Bar Association after respondent was convicted in federal court of a one-count violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2314 and 2 (1970) by being a principal to the interstate transportation of a counterfeit security. Because the conviction was for a serious crime which reflected on respondent's moral fitness to practice law, this court suspended respondent from the practice of law on March 2, 1981 and ordered the Committee to institute disciplinary proceedings. Articles of Incorporation, La. State Bar Ass'n., Art. 15, § 8(4). After the conviction became final, the Committee filed this proceeding on January 5, 1982. Respondent failed to answer the petition within the prescribed time.
*2 A hearing scheduled for November 10, 1982 was rescheduled at respondent's request to November 24, 1982. However, respondent did not appear at the appointed hour, and the commissioner held the hearing without him. When respondent appeared at the commissioner's office after the hearing had concluded, the commissioner allowed him to make a statement for the record and also afforded him the opportunity to submit sworn affidavits of any mitigating circumstances and evidence of respondent's efforts to earn a living and to rehabilitate himself. Respondent did not submit any evidence, but another attorney wrote a letter to the commissioner attesting to respondent's character and integrity.
The commissioner rendered a report, noting that the conviction of interstate transportation of a counterfeit security was a serious crime which reflected on respondent's moral fitness to practice law, that there were no mitigating factors in his favor and no evidence of efforts to rehabilitate himself, and that respondent had not made a serious effort to participate in the proceedings. The commissioner recommended permanent suspension from the practice of law.
When the matter was first scheduled for oral argument, this court remanded the case to allow respondent's new attorney to present evidence of mitigating factors. At the hearing on remand, ten persons of substantial standing in the community testified that respondent had been rehabilitated. Nevertheless, the commissioner found that the crime is serious, bears upon respondent's moral fitness and trustworthiness, and "goes to the very heart of the activities of an attorney at law and his dealings in the commercial world, where trust and integrity are absolutely critical". He again recommended permanent suspension as the appropriate discipline.
The Committee concurred in the commissioner's findings of fact and conclusions of law, but recommended disbarment rather than permanent suspension.
When a disciplinary proceeding is based on conviction of a crime, the conviction is conclusive evidence of guilt. Articles of Incorporation, La. State Bar Ass'n., Art. 15, § 8(7)(c). Nevertheless, the facts underlying the conviction of the crime are extremely important in the determination of the appropriate discipline. Therefore, the facts upon which the conviction was based should be presented in some manner (by introduction of the transcript of the criminal trial, by stipulation, or by some other appropriate method) at the hearing before the commissioner so that the commissioner and this court will have the information available for use in the determination of discipline.[1] This information is particularly useful when the conviction was in a federal court or a court of another state and the crime was not a substantive one which parallels a crime defined by Louisiana law.
Here, the federal prosecution was for interstate transportation of a counterfeit security (rather than for a substantive offense such as forgery), and the government was only required to prove that respondent caused the security to be placed into interstate commerce when he knew or should have known that the security was counterfeit. It is therefore important to review the evidence produced at the criminal trial before discussing the appropriate discipline.
The criminal conviction involved a $25,000 cashier's check that Dillard Harrison, Jr. deposited on September 24, 1979 in a Lafayette bank in the account of Delta Oil Maintenance Company. The check was *3 drawn on the Indiana National Bank, was made out to Delta Oil Maintenance Company, and was signed by Alex Wade.
Harrison testified that he had opened the account upon respondent's instructions in the name of Delta Oil Maintenance Company, with Harrison and Mark Johnson authorized to sign the checks. (Other evidence showed that Delta's post office box number listed on the signature card with the Lafayette bank was phony, and testimony by an FBI agent established that respondent had told the agent that he had signed the name of Mark Johnson on checks for another business owned by respondent.) He further testified that he was arrested when he returned several days later at respondent's direction to withdraw $7,000. Harrison implicated respondent in the scheme, stating that all of his activities with the check had been directed by respondent.
According to Harrison's testimony, he worked for respondent as a management consultant in Third World International, a business owned by respondent. He described Third World as a travel agency whose principal activity was planning pre-game entertainment and bus transportation to Southern University's football games outside of Baton Rouge. Harrison also worked for respondent in other sideline businesses.
To prove knowledge on the part of respondent, the government introduced evidence of two other counterfeit checks which had been negotiated either directly or indirectly by respondent before the incident in question. The first was a $3,500 check drawn on the same Indiana Bank. The check was payable to respondent and was signed by Alex Wade (as was the check on which the charge was based). Respondent deposited this check himself in his personal account in a bank in Eunice on April 30, 1979. He had withdrawn the funds by the time the bank learned that the check was counterfeit, and he signed a note for the $3,500 shortage. At the time of trial, he had only paid $90 on the note.
The second previous counterfeit check was one for $5,000 drawn on Midwestern Bank (also in Indiana), made payable to Third World International and Dillard Harrison. That check was also signed by Alex Wade. Harrison testified that respondent gave him the check with instructions to deposit it in Third World's business account in a Baton Rouge bank. Harrison did so on September 14, 1979, depositing $4,000 and withdrawing $1,000 in cash, which he gave to respondent.
Each of the three checks had the same appearance. The $3,500 and $25,000 checks drawn on the Indiana National Bank were numbered 60062 and 60064, and the $5,000 check was numbered 60068.
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472 So. 2d 1, 1985 La. LEXIS 9190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-state-bar-assn-v-frank-la-1985.