STATE EX REL. OKLA. BAR ASS'N v. Rouse
This text of 1998 OK 56 (STATE EX REL. OKLA. BAR ASS'N v. Rouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE of Oklahoma, ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION, Complainant,
v.
Charles Richard ROUSE, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Charles R. Rouse, Oklahoma City, Pro Se.
Dan Murdock, General Counsel, Allen J. Welch, Assistant General Counsel, Oklahoma Bar Association, Oklahoma City, For Complainant.
*205 ALMA WILSON, Justice:
¶ 1 The complainant, Oklahoma Bar Association, alleged one count of misconduct warranting discipline against the respondent attorney, Charles Richard Rouse. The Complaint alleged violations of Rules 1.7, 1.9(a), 1.16(a)(1), 8.4(d) and/or 4.3 of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct.[1] A Pretrial Order was prepared with stipulations attached, wherein the Bar Association alleged only a violation of Rule 1.7, and recommended that the respondent be publicly censured. After a hearing before the Professional Responsibility Tribunal, the trial panel found that the Bar Association did not prove a violation by clear and convincing evidence and unanimously recommended that the complaint against the respondent be dismissed. In its brief to this Court, the Bar Association continues to urge that the respondent receive a public reprimand. We find that the Bar Association has not proven by clear and convincing evidence that the respondent has violated a rule of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct, and we dismiss the complaint.
¶ 2 The Bar Association alleges that either the respondent agreed to represent two murder suspects whose interests were diverse, or that the second suspect reasonably believed that the respondent had agreed to represent him. The stipulated facts reveal that on May 30, 1996, B.G., was arrested on the charge of First Degree Murder. B.G.'s father was a deputy sheriff who knew the respondent and immediately retained him to represent his son. The respondent was denied access to B.G. at the police station, but while there learned that B.G. had confessed to involvement in a two-year old murder, and further learned that a co-defendant, M.R., was still at large. The deputy sheriff advised the respondent that he knew the co-defendant, and could probably locate him immediately. *206 The respondent requested that the deputy locate M.R., and see if he would talk to the respondent. The respondent then went to his office to await word from B.G., and called an associate of his firm to go to the Oklahoma City Jail to consult with B.G. The deputy and M.R. arrived at the respondent's office within two hours. The respondent and M.R. met for about one-half of an hour.
¶ 3 Testimony before the trial panel reveals that although the deputy was off duty, and was not wearing a uniform nor driving a patrol car, he requested that M.R. wear handcuffs, which M.R. agreed to do, placing them on himself. When they arrived at the respondent's office, the respondent asked about the handcuffs and they were removed. M.R. accompanied the respondent to his office, leaving the deputy sheriff and B.G.'s girlfriend in the reception area. The respondent testified that he advised M.R. that he could not represent him and M.R. reminded the respondent that the respondent had represented M.R. in a 1991 bankruptcy. A subsequent review of the respondent's records revealed that he had also represented M.R. in a 1992 charge of D.U.I. in the municipal court of Oklahoma City.
¶ 4 The respondent testified that after he advised M.R. that he was representing B.G., he asked M.R. for information because the only facts the respondent knew were that the charge against his client was murder, and that there was one victim and one co-defendant. M.R. described to the respondent some of the details surrounding the charge. The respondent testified that some of the details were exculpatory, and some inculpatory. M.R. told the respondent that he wished to surrender to the police because there was already a warrant out for his arrest because of a parole violation. The respondent testified that he advised M.R. to get his own attorney and warned that he would be best served by talking to his attorney before making any statements to the police. When M.R. related that he was indigent, respondent testified that he agreed to inform the public defender. At M.R.'s request, the respondent transported him to the jail where M.R. surrendered.
¶ 5 The respondent testified that between 8:45 and 9:00 one morning, he told Barry Albert, the head of the homicide division of the Public Defender's Office for Oklahoma County, that he had a murder case with two people, and that he could represent only one. The respondent asked if Albert would represent one. Albert explained that he did not go to the jail to interview potential clients. At some subsequent time, Patrick Ehlers, from the Public Defender's Office was appointed as M.R.'s lawyer. The respondent testified to the trial panel that during the preliminary hearing, Ehlers moved to disqualify the respondent as B.G.'s counsel. Ehlers claimed that an attorney/client relationship had attached between the respondent and M.R. A hearing was held. Barry Albert testified that the respondent told Albert that the respondent was representing two people in a Murder I case, and that he would have to withdraw from one of them because he had a conflict. Albert testified that there was nothing done by the respondent in representing M.R., and admitted that the only document the respondent prepared on M.R. appeared to be made during an interview, and did not appear to be a client intake memorandum that a lawyer would complete when interviewing a new client. Albert also admitted that Albert had a reputation as an aggressive defense attorney and that he would "give no quarter" in representing his client. After the hearing on the motion to disqualify the respondent from representing B.G., the trial judge ruled that there was a "monumental conflict" but he refused to find specific facts, or to elaborate. The respondent called the Bar Association to discuss the case with them shortly after the hearing, and Ehlers subsequently filed a bar complaint against the respondent.
¶ 6 Complainant's exhibits 1 and 2 are copies of arraignment minutes, both dated June 6, 1996. B.G.'s arraignment minute shows D. Rouse as his attorney. M.R., who was arraigned at the same time shows D. Rouse as attorney, which is then obliterated. When questioned on this during the hearing before the trial panel, the respondent testified that at the initial appearance the judge asked the respondent if he was representing *207 M.R., and the respondent replied that he was not.[2] The Bar Association and the respondent stipulated that if called, M.R. would testify that he believed the respondent represented him.
¶ 7 The judge who heard the disqualification motion specifically informed the Bar Association during the investigation that in connection with this disciplinary matter, he found no violation of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct during that extended hearing. The trial panel specifically mentioned the judge's conclusion during the disciplinary hearing when finding that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the "clear and convincing" burden of proof of violation of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct. The trial panel again included the judge's statement to the Bar Association in its "Summary of Evidence and Findings of Fact."
¶ 8 The Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings, 5 O.S.1991, Ch. 1, App. 1-A, Rule 6.12(c) require that a charge against an attorney must be established by clear and convincing evidence.
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1998 OK 56, 961 P.2d 204, 1998 WL 297675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-okla-bar-assn-v-rouse-okla-1998.