LS v. Mississippi Bar

649 So. 2d 810, 1994 Miss. LEXIS 264, 1994 WL 192817
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1994
Docket92-BA-00507
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 649 So. 2d 810 (LS v. Mississippi Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LS v. Mississippi Bar, 649 So. 2d 810, 1994 Miss. LEXIS 264, 1994 WL 192817 (Mich. 1994).

Opinion

649 So.2d 810 (1994)

Attorney L.S.
v.
The MISSISSIPPI BAR.

No. 92-BA-00507.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

May 19, 1994.
Rehearing Denied February 23, 1995.

Stanford Young, Waynesboro, for appellant.

Charles J. Mikhail, Michael B. Martz, Jackson, for appellee.

EN BANC.

SMITH, Justice, for the Court:

This is an appeal taken from the April 28, 1992, Opinion and Judgment of the Mississippi Bar Complaint Tribunal finding attorney L.S. guilty of professional misconduct and suspending him from the practice of law for thirty (30) days.

Attorney L.S., after the conclusion of a lengthy medical malpractice case, contacted by telephone a juror and alternate juror and recorded the conversations. Prior to the jury verdict, Judge Frank Russell had read an order prohibiting the attorneys from contacting jurors without the court's permission. L.S. represented to the jurors that he had approval to talk to them when in fact he did not. L.S. contends that due to a hearing loss and fatigue from the trial he did not understand or comprehend the judge's order.

L.S. was found guilty of constructive contempt of court and this Court affirmed that decision and $250 fine.

The Complaint Tribunal found L.S. guilty of violating Mississippi Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 3.5(a) and (b) for having contacted the jurors post-verdict when the contact was prohibited by court order and without the court's permission. The Tribunal also found a violation of Rule 4.1(a) in making a false statement of a matter fact that he had permission to call the jurors. Finally, the Tribunal found a violation of Rule 8.4(a) *811 by tape recording without consent the telephone conversations. The Tribunal was of the opinion that a 30-day suspension was warranted.

On appeal, L.S. states the issues as follows:

I. WHETHER, L.S. VIOLATED RULE 3.5(a & b), WHICH PROVIDE THAT A LAWYER SHALL NOT SEEK TO INFLUENCE A JUDGE, JUROR, PROSPECTIVE JUROR OR OTHER OFFICIAL BY MEANS PROHIBITED BY LAW, OR COMMUNICATE EX PARTE WITH SUCH PERSON EXCEPT AS PERMITTED BY LAW.
II. WHETHER, L.S. VIOLATED RULE 4.1(a) WHICH PROVIDES THAT DURING THE COURSE OF REPRESENTING A CLIENT, A LAWYER SHALL NOT KNOWINGLY MAKE A FALSE STATEMENT OF MATERIAL FACTS OR LAW TO A THIRD PERSON.
III. WHETHER, L.S. VIOLATED RULE 8.4(a, c & d), WHICH PROVIDE THAT A LAWYER SHALL NOT VIOLATE A RULE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT, ENGAGE IN CONDUCT INVOLVING DECEIT OR MISREPRESENTATION, OR ENGAGE IN ANY OTHER CONDUCT PREJUDICIAL TO THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE.
IV. WHETHER THE PENALTY IS APPROPRIATE.

Subsequent to the hearing before the tribunal, this Court decided Attorney M v. Mississippi Bar, 621 So.2d 220 (Miss. 1992), holding that surreptitious taping of telephone conversations did not violate the rule of professional conduct. Because the tribunal based the suspension in part on L.S.'s recording of the telephone conversations, clearly a lesser penalty is in order.

This Court has previously reviewed the question of whether L.S. violated the judge's order and found the evidence sufficient. Under the standards outlined in The Mississippi Bar v. Attorney ST, 621 So.2d 229 (Miss. 1993), and cases referenced therein, a private reprimand is an appropriate penalty.

FACTS

In a three week trial in Lee County Circuit Court, L.S. represented the plaintiff in Nichols v. Tubb, 609 So.2d 377 (Miss. 1992) on appeal. On Thursday, February 4, 1988, at the conclusion of the trial and prior to the jury verdict being announced, Judge Frank Russell read an order stating that no one was to discuss the case with any juror without the judge's consent.

On the Sunday after the trial, L.S. received a telephone call from Dr. William Gary, who had been a witness for the plaintiff. Dr. Gary had talked to alternate juror Mrs. Jean Denham, who was a longtime patient of his, about his concern over the verdict for the defendants. Mrs. Denham mentioned that she knew that the plaintiff was receiving $7,000 a month from workers' compensation. This information had not been presented as evidence to the jury.

After talking to Dr. Gary, L.S. attempted to reach the judge but he was unable. L.S. then contacted Mrs. Denham by telephone and recorded their conversation without her knowledge. Mrs. Denham refused to discuss the case with L.S.. In the course of the conversation, L.S. told Mrs. Denham that the judge "told me to check with some of the jurors." Mrs. Denham asked L.S. for the judge's telephone number and instead of giving the number L.S. told her he would put her in touch with the judge.

L.S. then called and talked to juror Chester Stasko and recorded the conversation without Stasko's knowledge. L.S. told Stasko that the judge "said that counsel would be permitted to call [the jurors]." Stasko told L.S. that he became aware of the workers' compensation payment only after the jury verdict.

On Monday morning, L.S. met with Judge Russell and told him what had happened. The judge showed L.S. a copy of his order, at which time L.S. read it and apologized to the judge for talking to the jurors without permission. L.S. told the judge that he had taped the conversations and later provided the tapes and transcripts of the tapes.

The State filed a petition for contempt against L.S. for violating the court's order. *812 L.S. was found guilty of constructive contempt in Lee County Circuit Court and this Court affirmed the conviction and $250 fine.

The formal bar complaint in this matter was filed on September 6, 1991, and the hearing before the complaint tribunal was conducted on April 3, 1992. Before the complaint tribunal, L.S. testified that he either did not fully hear or understand the judge's order due to a hearing loss and fatigue from the trial. L.S. attempted to present a 1972 report on his hearing from Dr. Shea, but it was never allowed in evidence. A 1987 audiogram report was allowed in the record for identification only.

Attorney William Randall testified on behalf of L.S.. Randall testified that L.S. has a hearing problem. Randall stated that he was in the courtroom when the verdict was returned in the Nichols case and that he did not hear the order read. Randall heard the judge make a statement but not this particular order. Randall testified, as did L.S., that this order was not the standard order given at the conclusion of trial. According to Randall, L.S. was surprised when Randall told him that he had heard this same order given in other cases.

Gregory Bates, a juror in the trial, also testified for L.S.. Bates testified that he did not remember an instruction from the judge. Bates further stated that he had heard that the plaintiff was receiving $7,000 a month discussed in the jury room.

The opinion and judgment of the tribunal were entered on April 28, 1992. The tribunal found clear and convincing evidence that L.S. had violated the Rules of Professional Conduct, Rules 3.5(a & b), 4.1(a), and Rule 8.4(c & d) and entered a judgment imposing a 30-day suspension.

DISCUSSION

In bar disciplinary matters, this Court examines the evidence de novo "on a case by case basis, sitting as triers of fact and no substantial evidence or manifest error rule shield the Tribunal from scrutiny." Attorney W.L. v. Mississippi Bar, 621 So.2d 235 (Miss. 1993) and cases cited therein. See Rule 9.4, Rules of Discipline for the Mississippi State Bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
649 So. 2d 810, 1994 Miss. LEXIS 264, 1994 WL 192817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ls-v-mississippi-bar-miss-1994.