Milligan v. Board of Professional Responsibility

301 S.W.3d 619, 2009 Tenn. LEXIS 824, 2009 WL 4637249
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2009
DocketE2008-02692-SC-R3-BP
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 301 S.W.3d 619 (Milligan v. Board of Professional Responsibility) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milligan v. Board of Professional Responsibility, 301 S.W.3d 619, 2009 Tenn. LEXIS 824, 2009 WL 4637249 (Tenn. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARON G. LEE, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which JANICE M. HOLDER, C.J., CORNELIA A. CLARK, GARY R. WADE, and WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JJ., joined.

In this direct appeal, the issue presented is whether the trial court properly affirmed a Board of Professional Responsibility hearing panel’s denial of a suspended attorney’s petition for reinstatement of his law license. The trial court affirmed the hearing panel’s decision that the attorney failed to present sufficient proof of his moral qualifications to practice law in this state and that his reinstatement will not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar or the administration of justice or subversive to the public interest. After reviewing the entire record, we hold that the attorney failed to present sufficient evidence that he has the moral qualifications to practice law in this state and that his reinstatement will be not detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar or the administration of justice or subversive to the public interest. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court denying the petition for reinstatement is affirmed.

Factual and Procedural Background

After receiving his law license in 1975, James L. Milligan, Jr. engaged in a primarily civil practice. In 1995, he started the law firm of Milligan and Associates and was employed there until his license was suspended in 2005. Milligan has had a lengthy involvement with the Board of Professional Responsibility (“the Board”), as is evident from the following account of events preceding and subsequent to his suspension.

In 1987, Milligan was privately admonished by the Board based on a client complaint. Thereafter, in 1994; this Court publicly censured Milligan and ordered that he be monitored by another attorney for two years for violations of Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 8, Disciplinary Rule (“DR”) 1-102(A)(5) 1 DR 6-101(A) 2 , and DR 7-101(A) 3 , upon findings that because *622 he maintained an excessive number of cases, he was unable to adequately represent and communicate with his clients or conduct a proper investigation before filing lawsuits. In 1995, Milligan received a public admonition as the result of a complaint by another client. After these incidents, three complaints were filed with the Board which resulted in the suspension of Milli-gan’s license.

The first of these three complaints, filed November 30, 1999, alleged that Milligan wrote a commission check in the amount of $216.67 from his client trust account to his then-associate, attorney G. Turner Howard, and that the bank dishonored the check because there were insufficient funds in the account. A second complaint, filed April 25, 2000, alleged that Milligan settled a personal injury claim arising out of an automobile accident on behalf of his client Kerry Johnson without consulting Johnson, that he forged Johnson’s signature on the settlement check and a claim release, that he had a notary falsely notarize the release, and that he deposited the settlement funds totaling $16,000 in his own personal account. Based upon these two complaints and prompted by the Board’s petition, this Court, on May 5, 2000, ordered the temporary suspension of Milligan’s license. Upon petition by Milli-gan, we ordered the reinstatement of his license on June 19, 2000, pending a full disciplinary hearing and conditioned upon his retention of Terry Hall, a certified public accountant, to monitor the finances of his law practice and upon his further retention of Leroy Bible, a certified fraud examiner, to conduct a review of his law office accounts.

On August 17, 2000, the Board filed a petition for discipline against Milligan asserting the substance of the complaints of November 30, 1999, and April 25, 2000. On August 23, 2001, the Board filed a supplemental petition for discipline to also include matters in an additional complaint lodged against Milligan on May 22, 2001, wherein it was alleged that Bible’s audit of the accounts of Milligan’s firm, including the client trust account, had revealed financial improprieties and that Milligan had not cooperated with the audit.

The Board’s hearing panel committee (“the Panel”), after a full disciplinary hearing, ruled that Milligan had violated numerous disciplinary rules. Specifically, with regard to the matters alleged in the complaint of November 30, 1999, the Panel found that Milligan misappropriated funds by writing the check for insufficient funds to his associate Howard and thereby vio *623 lated DR 1-102(A)(4), 4 (5) and (6) 5 and DR 9-102(B)(3). 6 With regard to the April 25, 2000 complaint, the Panel found that Milli-gan settled Johnson’s personal injury claim without Johnson’s prior authorization, that he forged the signatures of Johnson and Johnson’s wife on the back of the settlement check, that he forged the Johnsons’ signatures on the release document tendered by defense counsel, that he had a notary employed in his office falsely notarize the forged signatures on the release document, and that he deposited the settlement check in his own personal bank account, thereby commingling his Ghent’s funds with his personal funds. The Panel also found that in an effort to conceal his misconduct, Milligan later procured false affidavits from the Johnsons indicating that they had approved the settlement of their claim in the amount of $16,000 and had approved Milligan’s endorsement of the settlement draft and release document. The Panel also found that when Milligan distributed the settlement proceeds, no medical or litigation expenses were deducted. The Panel found that these actions by Milligan in his representation of the John-sons violated DR 1 — 102(A)(3), 7 (4), (5), and (6); DR Y — 102(A)(3), 8 (4), 9 (5), 10 (6), 11 and (7); 12 and DR 9-102(A) 13 and (B). 14 With *624 regard to the third complaint of May 22, 2001, based upon the fraud examiner’s audit, the Panel found that during 1999, Mil-ligan overdrew client trust accounts on at least twenty-four occasions and on thirty-two separate occasions withdrew funds from the client trust account in eases prior to the deposit of case settlement proceeds. The Panel also noted Milligan’s admission that he received payment of attorney’s fees in cases where settlement proceeds had not yet been received and that he deducted arbitrary charges for “word processing, photocopy, communications, etc.” from client shares of settlement proceeds.

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Bluebook (online)
301 S.W.3d 619, 2009 Tenn. LEXIS 824, 2009 WL 4637249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milligan-v-board-of-professional-responsibility-tenn-2009.