OPC v. Rose

2017 UT 50
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 2017
DocketCase No. 20151037
StatusPublished

This text of 2017 UT 50 (OPC v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
OPC v. Rose, 2017 UT 50 (Utah 2017).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final publication in the Pacific Reporter

2017 UT 50

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

SUSAN ROSE, Appellant, v. OFFICE OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT, Appellee.

No. 20151037 Filed August 15, 2017

On Direct Appeal

Third District, Salt Lake The Honorable Royal I. Hansen No. 070917445

Attorneys: Susan Rose, pro se, Sandy, for appellant Adam C. Bevis, Billy Walker, Salt Lake City, for appellee

JUSTICE PEARCE authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE DURHAM, and JUDGE POHLMAN joined. Having been recused, JUSTICE HIMONAS does not participate herein; COURT OF APPEALS JUDGE JILL M. POHLMAN sat.

JUSTICE PEARCE, opinion of the Court: INTRODUCTION ¶1 The district court disbarred Susan Rose for violations of Utah’s Rules of Professional Conduct in cases Rose handled in both federal and state courts. Her disbarment came after the district court struck her answer and entered default judgment against her. The disbarment did not come suddenly, or by surprise. Over the course of several years, Rose had received multiple warnings from multiple tribunals. These tribunals called her motion practice “bizarre,” ROSE v. OPC Opinion of the Court

“inscrutable,” “dilatory,” “frivolous,” “legally meritless,” “wholly superfluous,” “utter[ly] incomprehensibl[e],” “unresponsive, immaterial, and redundant,” and “not based in reality.” ¶2 After receiving and investigating referrals concerning Rose’s conduct, the Office of Professional Conduct brought an action in the Third District Court. Nearly eight years later, the district court struck Rose’s answer and entered default judgment, concluding that Rose had abused the discovery and litigation process. By entering default judgment, the court accepted as true the allegations that Rose had violated a number of the Rules of Professional Conduct. ¶3 At her subsequent sanctions hearing, Rose refused to defend herself. She told the district court, “I think it’s fair to say I know how this will go, I know how the end result will be, and I’m done.” And in the end, Rose was disbarred. ¶4 Rose does not explicitly argue on appeal that the district court should not have entered default judgment, that her conduct did not violate the rules, or that disbarment was too harsh a sanction. 1 Instead, she claims that Utah’s process is unconstitutional in a number of ways. She contests this court’s jurisdiction and argues that the Supremacy Clause and principles of res judicata prevent Utah from disciplining her. She also brings a number of constitutional claims, arguing that Utah’s attorney discipline proceedings violated her due process and equal protection rights under the United States Constitution. She ultimately petitions this court to dismiss this case entirely because “Utah’s system is an inquisition” that violates her due process and equal protection rights and is therefore “void.” ¶5 We affirm the order of the district court but note that this is an unusual case. The district court entered a default judgment against Rose, and Rose chose not to defend herself at the sanctions hearing. Rose has not directly challenged the decision to enter

_____________________________________________________________ 1 There can be no doubt that Rose believes that the district court should not have entered default, that she did not violate the rules of professional conduct, and that disbarment was not an appropriate sanction. But Rose does not aim fire directly at those contentions, preferring instead to attack this court’s jurisdiction and to assert that Utah’s attorney discipline process is unconstitutional.

2 Cite as: 2017 UT __ Opinion of the Court

default or the appropriateness of disbarment as a sanction. This requires us to start from the factual premise that Rose committed the violations of which she was accused. We are only left to sort through Rose’s challenges to the attorney discipline system. BACKGROUND ¶6 Susan Rose was admitted to the Utah State Bar in 1997. In 2001 and 2005, the Utah Bar received two informal complaints against Rose in two separate cases—one in federal court and the other in state court. I. The Federal Court Case ¶7 In 1999, Rose represented a group of plaintiffs in an action before the Navajo Tribal Court. The Tribal Court granted Rose’s clients relief. Rose later tried to enforce the Tribal Court’s order against San Juan County and several non-tribal member defendants in federal district court. Her case was assigned to Judge Dale Kimball. ¶8 While representing her clients in federal court, Rose filed several pleadings and motions that the court found to be frivolous. After Judge Kimball granted a motion to dismiss against certain defendants based on sovereign immunity and then dismissed the case as to several other defendants for lack of jurisdiction, Rose filed a notice of appeal in the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals. She also moved to disqualify Judge Kimball. ¶9 In Rose’s motion to disqualify Judge Kimball, Rose emphasized Judge Kimball’s apparent religious affiliation. Rose complained that “being a member of said Church and an acknowledged social leader in Utah, [if he] would have ruled to enforce the civil rights of the Navajo Court plaintiffs, Judge Kimball may have been subjected to great social and political pressures.” Rose claimed that ruling in her clients’ favor would have caused Judge Kimball “political and social embarrassment.” ¶10 The judge did not agree, and he told her so. He explained that Rose and her clients would “not find a judge more sympathetic to their claims, more willing to apply the law impartially, or more patient with [Rose’s] blundering-but-probably-well-meaning efforts.” (Emphases in original.) Judge Kimball nevertheless recused himself because he believed that her clients “ha[d] lost faith in th[e] court’s ability to treat them impartially.”

3 ROSE v. OPC Opinion of the Court

¶11 Judge Kimball’s opinion and recusal order describe Rose’s conduct before his court and her competence as an attorney: • The court had been “tolerating [Rose’s] repeated and time-consuming calls to chambers with procedural questions and also tolerating Plaintiffs’ often incomprehensible pleadings and memoranda.” • “Defendants have repeatedly—‘and justifiably’— requested . . . that the court dismiss Plaintiffs’ Complaint based on ... its utter incomprehensibility and its failure to identify which claims are alleged against which Defendants. This court, however, . . . has chosen . . . to endure Plaintiffs’ inscrutable Complaint.” • “Plaintiffs [filed a] constant stream of motions, corrections to motions, amendments to motions, re- filing of motions after the responsive memorandum had been filed by the Defendants, and further briefing of motions after oral arguments.” • “[T]he court has clearly demonstrated its frustrations with Plaintiffs and their counsel for their failure to understand the law or to follow the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the local rules, and the Rules of Professional Conduct.” • “Plaintiffs also cast various aspersions regarding this court’s alleged statements during oral arguments, without any citations to transcripts to demonstrate that such statements were actually made and the context in which they are made. To the extent that there exists any kernel of truth in any of the various statements that Plaintiffs allege that the court made, the statements, not surprisingly, have been taken entirely out of context and/or mischaracterized . . .

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2017 UT 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opc-v-rose-utah-2017.