Matter of Arrick

882 P.2d 943, 180 Ariz. 136, 176 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 9, 1994 Ariz. LEXIS 109
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1994
DocketSB-90-0057-D
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 882 P.2d 943 (Matter of Arrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Arrick, 882 P.2d 943, 180 Ariz. 136, 176 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 9, 1994 Ariz. LEXIS 109 (Ark. 1994).

Opinions

OPINION

ZLAKET, Justice.

This is a disciplinary proceeding arising out of respondent’s representation of two clients. The hearing committee found that respondent violated the Code of Professional Responsibility.1 It recommended that he be suspended for one year and placed on probation thereafter. The disciplinary commission modified the committee’s findings and recommended disbarment. Respondent has been on interim suspension since October 9, 1990. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to Ariz. R.Sup.Ct. 53(e) and is the final arbiter of both fact and law. In re Neville, 147 Ariz. 106, 108, 708 P.2d 1297, 1299 (1985).

I.

The first matter concerns a client we shall call “Mrs. E,” who was accused of second degree murder and child abuse arising out of the death of a six-week-old infant she had been babysitting. Respondent was retained by Mrs. E for an initial fee of $7500, with an equivalent amount to be paid if the matter went to trial. We present here a significantly abbreviated version of the underlying facts.

The child’s mother left the baby with Mrs. E on the morning of August 16, 1982. She claimed that when she picked him up in the afternoon, the baby was bruised and had difficulty breathing. The child was treated, but died four days later. An autopsy report listed the cause of death as head and neck injuries. Doctors who examined the child on the 16th confirmed that he had head bruises that were likely sustained within the prior 24-hour period and petechia on his eyelids. They concluded that the injuries were non-accidental and consistent with “infant shaking syndrome.” They also believed that the child had been struck on the head.

The testimony at the preliminary hearing regarding Mrs. E’s statements to police was conflicting. The officer who interviewed her on August 16 testified that, after an initial denial, she admitted hitting the child in the abdomen and upper chest. He also claimed that she told him she shook the baby and might have slapped him. Mrs. E later testified, however, that she never admitted to striking the child. She claimed that she only told the officer she patted the baby’s abdomen and shook him gently to help him breathe. The child, she said, was having difficulty eating and breathing, and slept most of the time he was with her. Mrs. E also told the officer that the child had a bump on the head and purple spots on his eyelids when he was left with her in the morning. Witnesses who had seen the baby, however, indicated that he had no marks or bruises before being taken to Mrs. E’s.

Respondent had second-hand information that the child’s mother was under a great deal of stress in August 1982. Her boyfriend, the child’s father, was in jail on rape charges. She and her children were living with a sister, who was apparently ready to evict her for nonpayment of rent. Furthermore, when the mother picked up the baby on the 16th, she was allegedly quite upset because she had been made to wait a long time for a ride home from work. Respondent was also aware that the child had been treated in late July 1982 for head injuries sustained in a “fall.” According to the mother, the child’s brother had accidentally kicked or pushed him off a table.

Mrs. E had no criminal record prior to the 1982 incident. She had done a good deal of babysitting before that time and had never been accused of child abuse. Moreover, during the period in question, she and her husband were in the process of adopting an eight-month-old child who had lived with them almost since birth. There was no indication that this child had ever been mistreated.2

[138]*138In October 1982, respondent informed Mrs. E and her husband that the case would likely proceed to trial and they would need to send him the additional $7500 under the fee agreement. They did so. Then, in March 1988, he met with Mr. and Mrs. E and advised them that, while he had done a thorough investigation and hired experts, he was unable to come up with any viable defenses. He told Mrs. E that her chances of conviction were around 75 percent and that a guilty verdict would result in a mandatory 21-year prison sentence. He recommended that she plead no contest to manslaughter and child abuse and told her that she had a reasonable chance for probation. On March 30, Mrs. E did as respondent advised her. She was sentenced to ten years in prison.

Because the case did not go to trial, Mrs. E and her husband wrote respondent and demanded that he refund the second $7500. He failed to return the money.3 More importantly, however, respondent admits that, contrary to what he told Mrs. E in advising her to plead no contest, he had not conducted a thorough investigation. For example, although he had names of numerous witnesses possessing relevant information, he either did an inadequate job of interviewing them or failed to meet with them at all. Those witnesses included the officer who interrogated Mrs. E and testified at the preliminary hearing, the medical examiner who performed the autopsy, the doctors who treated the child prior to his death, the baby’s mother, and others who had seen the child in the 24-hour period prior to his death.

Respondent also failed to subpoena medical records from the July “fall” until six weeks after he recommended to Mrs. E that she accept a plea agreement. He argues that because these records had been inappropriately filed under the name of the child’s brother, they likely would not have been located even if he had subpoenaed them earlier. He points to the fact that all records under the deceased child’s name were obtained by the prosecution and supplied to him. These did not include the records of the July incident. Nevertheless, respondent was aware of the claimed fall and apparently did nothing to discover why it was not reflected in the records he received from the state.

Furthermore, although he retained a pathologist for the case, respondent failed to provide him with pertinent police and medical records, as had been requested. In fact, that physician advised respondent that he could not rule out the possibility that the July fall was a contributing cause of death, which made the medical records concerning this incident quite important. And, despite a specific request by the doctor, respondent failed to obtain and provide tissue slides that would have enabled the child’s fatal cerebral hemorrhage to be dated. Yet, he represented to Mr. and Mrs. E at the March meeting that he had provided all of this evidence to the pathologist, but the doctor was unable to come up with anything helpful to the defense. He also falsely told them that the physician felt the July fall was too “remote” to have contributed to the death.

Finally, respondent did not hire an investigator until January 1983—one month after the first scheduled trial date. Even then, he only instructed the investigator to interview character witnesses in anticipation of a sentencing hearing.

In August 1984, after serving 14 months in prison, Mrs. E’s petition for post-conviction relief was granted on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel with respect to her plea agreement, and she was released. In May 1986, respondent and his insurance company settled a malpractice claim brought by Mr. and Mrs. E for $325,000 in cash, plus periodic payments throughout her lifetime.

The hearing committee and commission both concluded that respondent’s investigation of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
882 P.2d 943, 180 Ariz. 136, 176 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 9, 1994 Ariz. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-arrick-ariz-1994.