State Bar Grievance Administrator v. Jaques

281 N.W.2d 469, 407 Mich. 26
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1979
Docket58697, (Calendar Nos. 1, 8)
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 281 N.W.2d 469 (State Bar Grievance Administrator v. Jaques) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bar Grievance Administrator v. Jaques, 281 N.W.2d 469, 407 Mich. 26 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

*36 Ryan, J.

(to vacate order of the Grievance Board). I must respectfully disagree with the opinion of the Chief Justice.

Following publication of my original opinion in this case, affirming in part the decision of the State Bar Grievance Board and suspending respondent from the practice of law for two years, the United States Supreme Court decided Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Ass’n, 436 US 447; 98 S Ct 1912; 56 L Ed 2d 444 (1978). Thereafter that Court directed us to reconsider our original decision in light of Ohralik, supra.

Having done so, I am persuaded that Ohralik forbids us to construe this state’s Code of Professional Responsibility and the Supreme Court Rules governing the State Bar of Michigan as prohibiting the particular conduct for which we disciplined respondent.

In our original decision, we did not consider the then undeclared constitutional dimensions of the disciplinary rules prohibiting attorney solicitation. We confined our inquiry to whether respondent’s conduct violated the literal prohibitions of DR 2-103(A) and DR 2-103(C). The Supreme Court had yet to provide guidance in the area of attorney solicitation beyond its decision in Bates v State Bar of Arizona, 433 US 350; 97 S Ct 2691; 53 L Ed 2d 810 (1977), dealing with broad restrictions on the impersonal media advertising of routine legal services. 1 The Court has now provided such guidance in Ohralik.

The careful language with which the Supreme Court framed its holding manifestly suggests that disciplinary rules may not prohibit attorney solici *37 tation per se. 2 We would be remiss in our obligation to adhere to the spirit of that decision if we choose to limit its impact on our own disciplinary-rules which prohibit all forms of attorney solicitation. Under Ohralik, in-person solicitation of remunerative employment by an attorney is not removed from the protection of the First Amendment although the level of judicial scrutiny is lower. The appropriate inquiry is whether the particular conduct of the attorney is likely to result in the adverse consequences which the state has a legitimate and important interest in prohibiting. 3 Ohralik, supra, 462-464.

1 am unconvinced that the particular conduct attributed to Jaques in findings I and II rises to the level of "fraud, undue influence, intimidation, overreaching, and other forms of 'vexatious conduct’ ” which the disciplinary rules may properly seek to prevent. Ohralik, supra, 462. Jaques did not directly contact any prospective client. His *38 solicitation was directed to a union business agent who ostensibly represented the interests of union members with potential claims. The union agent possessed the expertise to make a detached and informed evaluation of Jaques’ qualifications before passing any recommendation along to his members. 4 There is no claim that the union official was in fact nothing more than a "runner” or agent for Jaques. Under these circumstances, the union agent served as a buffer between the attorney and prospective clients thus alleviating the potential for overreaching and undue influence.

We have no occasion today to address the propriety of disciplining an attorney for the type of in-person solicitation attributed to Jaques in findings III and IV of the State Bar Grievance Board. Those findings were dismissed on the prior appeal because of procedural irregularities.

While as a lawyer I am now no less offended by the unprofessional behavior of Mr. Jaques in connection with the Port Huron tunnel explosion cases than when I wrote to discipline him for it, in obedience to the authority of the Supreme Court which has given it constitutional countenance, I vote to vacate the order of the Grievance Board.

Kavanagh, Levin, Fitzgerald, and Blair Moody, Jr., JJ., concurred with Ryan, J.

Coleman, C.J.

In State Bar Grievance Administrator v Jaques, 401 Mich 516; 258 NW2d 443 (1977), this Court affirmed, as modified, a State Bar Grievance Board order suspending respondent’s privilege to practice law. The suspension was based on findings that respondent violated DR 2- *39 103(A) 1 and DR 2-103(C) 2 by personally soliciting others to join in a class action he was planning to file and DR 2-103(0 by requesting the agent for a local labor union to recommend employment of him to persons who had claims arising out of a tunnel explosion. Respondent appealed to the United States Supreme Court which vacated this judgment and remanded the case for further consideration in light of the decision in Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Ass’n, 436 US 447; 98 S Ct 1912; 56 L Ed 2d 444 (1978). 3 The Supreme Court’s action in this case is an indication that we should consider the constitutional issues present in order to resolve whether the state’s action in disciplining respondent violated US Const, Ams I, XIV. The Supreme Court’s reference to Ohralik indicates that the constitutional standard employed in Ohralik should control this case. After reviewing Ohralik, and the constitutional standard applied in that case, we would hold that the suspension of respondent’s privilege to practice law did not offend the Constitution 4 and reinstate the order of suspension.

*40 I

In Ohralik, two girls were involved in an automobile accident with an uninsured motorist. Ohralik, an Ohio attorney, telephoned and visited the parents of the 18-year-old driver and learned that their daughter was in the hospital. He approached the daughter in the hospital and, after a brief conversation, told her that he would represent her. He asked her to sign a representation agreement but she said she would have to discuss it with her parents. After another visit with her parents, he returned to her hospital room where she signed a contingent fee agreement. In the meantime, Ohralik approached the driver’s passenger at her home on the day she was released from the hospital. He offered to represent her on a contingent fee basis and she responded "O.K.” As a result of complaints filed by these two individuals, Ohralik’s license to practice law was indefinitely suspended for violating DR 2-103(A) and DR 2-104(A) of the Ohio Code of Professional Responsibility.

Ohralik appealed to the United States Supreme Court claiming that his actions in soliciting these clients were constitutionally protected and indistinguishable, for the purpose of constitutional analysis, from the advertising in Bates v State Bar of Arizona,

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