Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enfor

CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 2010
Docket06-0628
StatusPublished

This text of Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enfor (Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enfor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enfor, (Mo. 2010).

Opinion

November 9 2010

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA No. AF 06-0628 ______________

IN RE REVISING THE RULES FOR ) LAWYER DISCIPLINARY ENFORCEMENT ) ORDER ) _____________

Article VII, Section 2(3) of the 1972 Montana Constitution vests this Court with original and exclusive jurisdiction and responsibility in all matters involving admission to the bar of the state of Montana and the conduct of the bar’s members. In the exercise of that jurisdiction and responsibility, we hereby adopt the attached Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enforcement, RLDE (2011), which shall replace the RLDE (2002) now in effect. In so doing, we gratefully acknowledge the input and the hard work of all who have participated in developing the RLDE (2011). In brief, the Rules we adopt today continue the format of and include many carryover provisions from the RLDE (2002). However, they also incorporate substantive changes to Rules 3, 4, 5, 9, 10, 13, 20, and 26. In addition to those changes, Rule 11, RLDE (2002), has been abrogated as redundant in the context of the RLDE (2011). These RLDE (2011) shall be effective as of January 1, 2011, provided, however, that any matter then pending shall be concluded under the procedures existing prior to the effective date of these Rules. The Clerk is directed to provide copies of this order and the attached RLDE (2011) to: the State Law Librarian, with a request that this Order and the attached Rules be published to the Supreme Court website;

the Executive Secretary and the Chair of the Commission on Practice, with the request that they distribute this Order and the attached Rules to all members of the Commission;

the Office of Disciplinary Counsel;

the Code Commissioner for the Montana Legislative Services Division;

Peter Michael Meloy; Timothy Strauch;

Annie Goodwin, Chair of the Commission on Character and Fitness;

the Montana Trial Lawyers Association;

Pat Bellinghausen, of the Billings Gazette; and

the Executive Director of the State Bar of Montana with the request that notice hereof be published in the next available issue of The Montana Lawyer and that a link be provided on the Bar’s website to this Order and the attached Rules on the Court’s website.

DATED this 9th day of November, 2010.

/S/ MIKE McGRATH /S/ W. WILLIAM LEAPHART /S/ PATRICIA COTTER /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT /S/ BRIAN MORRIS /S/ JIM RICE

Justice James C. Nelson, dissenting. Respectfully, I dissent from the Court’s Order. This matter began when the Billings Gazette (Gazette) filed suit in the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, against this Court’s Commission on Practice (COP) and Office of Disciplinary Counsel (ODC). Pursuant to the public’s “right to know”

2 guaranteed to every person under Article II, Section 9 of the Montana Constitution,1 the Gazette sought to open “confidential” lawyer disciplinary files held by COP and ODC pertaining to one specific attorney. See Billings Gazette v. State, 2008 MT 287, ¶ 1, 345 Mont. 385, 190 P.3d 1126. We declined to reach the merits of the Gazette’s claim. Billings Gazette, ¶ 8. Rather, we determined, simply, that because this Court has exclusive jurisdiction over lawyer discipline pursuant to Article VII, Section 2(3), the District Court correctly concluded that it did not have authority to issue an order opening lawyer disciplinary files which we had declared confidential under Rules 20 and 26 of the Montana Rules of Lawyer Disciplinary Enforcement (MRLDE). Billings Gazette, ¶¶ 10-11. We also ruled that we could not open, retroactively, the attorney’s disciplinary files when she had relied on those files being kept confidential. Billings Gazette, ¶ 12. The Gazette then filed a Petition for Declaratory Relief in this Court, pursuant to Rule 14 of the Montana Rules of Appellate Procedure, mounting a facial challenge to the constitutionality of MRLDE 20 and 26. In re the Supreme Court Rule on Attorney Discipline (No. OP 08-0556). The Gazette, again, grounded its claim in the fundamental Right to Know provision of Montana’s Constitution. Furthermore, the Gazette asked that we recast MRLDE 20 and 26 so as to vindicate the public’s right to know. Concluding that the Gazette’s petition had “arguable merit,” we nonetheless, again, dodged the challenge. This time we entered an order on November 26, 2008, stating our objective to ensure that any revised rules should apply to all attorneys.2 We also determined that it would be more efficient to decline original jurisdiction, dismiss the Gazette’s petition without prejudice, and

1 Article II, Section 9 states: “Right to know. No person shall be deprived of the right to examine documents or to observe the deliberations of all public bodies or agencies of state government and its subdivisions, except in cases in which the demand of individual privacy clearly exceeds the merits of public disclosure.” This constitutional guarantee is self- executing. See Fritz Snyder, The Right to Participate and the Right to Know in Montana, 66 Mont. L. Rev. 297, 303, 314 (2005) (citing Allstate Ins. Co. v. Billings, 239 Mont. 321, 325, 780 P.2d 186, 188 (1989)). 2 In the Billings Gazette case, as noted, the challenge pertained only to a specified government attorney. Billings Gazette, ¶¶ 3-5. 3 sua sponte initiate a public rulemaking process—which was to commence within 60 days of the date of our Order. Now, some two years later—after studies, meetings, working groups, emails, written position statements, and countless hours—we are essentially back where we started—at square one. Despite making some cosmetic changes to the Rules of Lawyer Disciplinary Enforcement, it remains the case that lawyer discipline administered through “admonition” (see MRLDE 13) will still likely remain private. Rather than ridding the discipline process of admonitions altogether—the substitute being the nondisciplinary letter of caution issued by Disciplinary Counsel (see MRLDE 5B(6), 10C(1)(c))—we have retained the option for COP to privately discipline an attorney for his or her misconduct, by means of a private admonition. See MRLDE 13. I turn to that rule.3 MRLDE 13, as now amended, provides in its entirety: Following the filing of a formal complaint, an Adjudicatory Panel may determine to sanction a lawyer by the imposition of an admonition. The Adjudicatory Panel shall determine whether to impose the admonition publicly or privately after weighing, on a case-by-case basis, the lawyer’s privacy interests and the public’s right to know. The demands of the lawyer’s individual privacy must clearly exceed the merits of public disclosure in order for an Adjudicatory Panel to impose a private admonition. An Adjudicatory Panel may do so, however, only after consulting Disciplinary Counsel and the lawyer subject to sanction, to apprise the interested parties of its reasoning for such decision and to allow for comment. An Adjudicatory Panel’s decision to close an adjudicatory hearing and/or impose an admonition, either publicly or privately, shall be final unless, within ten days of the Adjudicatory Panel’s decision, the lawyer subject to sanction, Disciplinary Counsel, or a member of the public, files a petition with the Clerk of the Supreme Court asking the Court to review the Adjudicatory Panel’s decision. The Court shall conduct an in-camera review of the Adjudicatory Panel’s decision in which it evaluates the lawyer’s privacy

3 Notably, in addition to authorizing an Adjudicatory Panel to impose an admonition privately, MRLDE 13 indicates that the Adjudicatory Panel may also decide “to close an adjudicatory hearing” altogether. This flies in the face of MRLDE 20B, which states that the proceedings before COP are public, except in the narrow circumstances listed in MRLDE 20B(1)-(4).

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Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary Enfor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rules-for-lawyer-disciplinary-enfor-mont-2010.