People v. North

964 P.2d 510, 98 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4440, 1998 Colo. LEXIS 590, 1998 WL 552695
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedAugust 31, 1998
Docket98SA138
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 964 P.2d 510 (People v. North) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. North, 964 P.2d 510, 98 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4440, 1998 Colo. LEXIS 590, 1998 WL 552695 (Colo. 1998).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The respondent in this lawyer discipline case, Phillip Jeffrey North, answered a question on the application for admission to the Bar of Colorado falsely, and was subsequently admitted to practice law in this state. A hearing panel of the grievance committee approved the findings and recommendation of a hearing board that North be publicly censured. We accept the recommendation.

I

North was admitted to practice law in Colorado on May 4, 1993. He was licensed to practice law in West Virginia in 1978 and in Virginia in 1986. Based on the evidence presented, the hearing board made the following findings by clear and convincing evidence.

On September 18, 1992, North filed an application for admission to the State Bar of Colorado on motion pursuant to C.R.C.P. 201.3(l)(a). The board found that North reviewed the application form in a cursory *511 manner and paid little attention to the specific questions. In particular, question 35 asked the following:

Regardless of whether the record has been expunged, cancelled or annulled have you ever been investigated, arrested, charged, convicted, imprisoned, placed on probation or parole or forfeited collateral for any offense against the law? (If YES, describe all relevant circumstances including, but not limited to, the date, location, court, facts and disposition, if any, concerning the matter. In answering this question you may omit traffic offenses for which you paid a $50 fine or less.)

Because he did not adequately review this question, North mistakenly believed that it referred only to criminal convictions. He instructed his secretary to check the box marked “No” to question 35. He did not provide any further details in response to the question. The board also found that North signed the application without further review. By signing the application, North swore as follows:

Being first duly sworn upon oath, I depose and state ... that the statements and representations made in the foregoing application are true and correct; ... that it is understood by me that if any statements or representations are false or untrue, that the license may be denied or, if granted, maybe revoked....

The application for admission was approved in April 1993, and he was admitted on May 4,1993.

North’s answer to question 35 was false and untrue. On November 10,1977, when he applied for admission to the bar of West Virginia, he prepared a written response to a character questionnaire which included this question 13:

13. The following is a complete record of all criminal proceedings (including traffic violations other than occasional parking violations) to which I am or have been a party:

North’s answer was:

Date: 1/31/71
Court: Charleston Police Court
Nature of Proceedings: Criminal
Plaintiffs: State
Disposition: dropped/expunged

Underneath his handwritten responses, North made the following comment: “[C]harge: possession of marijuana[.] Note: substance was not marijuana; charges dropped[.]”

At the hearing, North’s recollection of this incident was vague because it happened twenty-eight years ago. According to the hearing board, what North recalls

is that he was sitting in a car parked outside a building while a friend went inside. A police officer approached the car, talked to [North], and then asked [North] to follow him to the police station. [North] drove the car to the police station, where he was asked some questions. At the police station, [North] was informed that police had discovered a substance in the car which they believed was marijuana. [North] was allowed to leave the police station. No further action was taken by the police.

The board found that there was clear and convincing evidence that North was at least investigated for an offense against the law in South Carolina, even if he was not formally charged.

Further, North was investigated for an offense against the law in London, England in 1984, where he attended graduate school. He was detained by the London police and questioned about an allegation that he caused bodily harm to the teen-aged son of a friend. The police asked North to go to the police station to answer questions. North told the police that the teen-ager stole from his residence and when he confronted him about it, the discussion led to pushing and shoving between the two. After questioning, North was summoned to a legal hearing concerning the charge that he caused bodily harm. He hired a lawyer to represent him at the hearing before a tribunal which included a jury or panel as decision-maker. At the conclusion of the hearing, the charges were dropped. He was nevertheless required to report this incident in which he was charged with a criminal offense to the Board of Law Examiners.

*512 The assistant executive director of the Board of Law Examiners testified- that had North disclosed these incidents in his application and had given the Board of Law Examiners an opportunity to investigate them, he would probably still have been admitted. Nonetheless, North’s false response to question 35 concerning offenses against the law was material to the process of evaluating his application.

While the board found that North’s response to question 35 was not intentional, “he completely disregarded his responsibility to review carefully the application and verify that the responses were accurate. This casual attitude toward an application for admission to the bar rises to the level of reckless behavior.” We agree. DR 1-101(A) provides, “A lawyer is subject to discipline if he has made a materially false statement in, or he has deliberately failed to disclose a material fact requested in connection with, his application for admission to the Bar.”

Initially, we find that North’s negative response to question 35' constituted “making a materially false statement in ... his application for admission to the Bar,” and not merely an omission. In Brogan v. United States, — U.S.-, 118 S.Ct. 805, 807-08, 139 L.Ed.2d 830 (1998), the Court held that a federal statute imposing criminal liability for making false statements to federal investigators was violated when the defendant falsely answered “no” to the question whether he had ever received cash or gifts from a certain individual when he was a union officer. “The word ‘no’ in response to a question assuredly makes a ‘statement’-” 118 S.Ct. at 808. The Court therefore rejected the so-called “exculpatory no” exception that some lower courts had grafted onto the criminal statute. See id. at 811-12. We find the Court’s reasoning persuasive in the present context.

Second, while DR 1-101(A) does not on its face impose the requirement that a lawyer have any particular mental state when making the false statement, we believe that a state of mind of at least recklessness must be shown. In In re Rosen, 570 A.2d 728

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Bluebook (online)
964 P.2d 510, 98 Colo. J. C.A.R. 4440, 1998 Colo. LEXIS 590, 1998 WL 552695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-north-colo-1998.