State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Busch

1998 OK 103, 976 P.2d 38, 1998 WL 730177
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 18, 1999
Docket4234
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1998 OK 103 (State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Busch) 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.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Busch, 1998 OK 103, 976 P.2d 38, 1998 WL 730177 (Okla. 1999).

Opinion

OPALA, J.

¶ 1 In this disciplinary proceeding against a lawyer, the issues to be decided are: (1) Does the record submitted for our examination provide sufficient evidence for a meaningful de novo consideration of the complaint’s disposition? 1 and (2) Is disbarment (with imposition of costs) an appropriate disciplinary sanction for respondent’s breach of professional ethics? We answer both questions in the affirmative.

¶ 2 The Oklahoma Bar Association [Bar] charged J. Michael Busch [Busch or respondent], a licensed lawyer, with two counts of professional misconduct. After a hearing, a trial panel of the Professional Responsibility Tribunal [panel or PRT] issued a report containing its findings of fact and conclusions of law, together with a recommendation of discipline. PRT found that respondent had violated numerous provisions of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct [ORPC] 2 and of the Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings [RGDP]. 3 It recommended that Busch stand disbarred and be required to pay the costs of this proceeding. Busch denies that (a) there is clear and convincing evidence of his alleged violations and (b) his conduct warrants imposition of any sanctions.

I

INTRODUCTION TO THE RECORD

¶ 3 This bar disciplinary proceeding was commenced on 26 December 1996 by the filing of the Bar’s complaint in accordance with the provisions of RGDP Rule 6. 4 The *42 complaint consists of two counts, each organized around allegations of Busch’s professional misconduct toward an individual griev-ant, and each alleging multiple violations of the ORPC 5 and of the RGDP. The hearing on the complaint began on 8 October 1997. It spans five days of testimony adduced over a period of five months. 6 Our disposition of this case has called for careful examination of voluminous materials. The record comprises over eleven hundred pages of transcripts and documentary exhibits in excess of one hundred items. 7

¶ 4 Upon the conclusion of hearings, the panel found clear and convincing evidence to support both counts. 8 As set forth below, we adopt many, but not all, of PRT’s findings of facts and conclusions of law and endorse its recommendation of discipline. The seriousness of the violations and respondent’s unwillingness to acknowledge any wrongdoing warrant his disbarment.

II

THE RECORD BEFORE THIS COURT PROVIDES SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE FOR A MEANINGFUL DE NOVO CONSIDERATION OF ALL FACTS RELEVANT TO THIS PROCEEDING

¶ 5 In a bar disciplinary proceeding this court functions in an adjudicative capacity as a licensing authority vested with exclusive original jurisdiction. 9 Its cognizance rests on constitutionally invested, non-delegable power to regulate the practice of law, which includes the licensure, ethics, and discipline of legal practitioners in this state. 10 Before deciding whether discipline is warranted and what sanction, if any, is to be imposed for the misconduct alleged, this court conducts a full-scale, nondeferential, de novo examination of all relevant facts, 11 in the course of which the recommendations of the trial panel are neither binding nor persuasive. 12 We are not guided by the standard-of-review criteria applicable in the context of corrective relief on appeal or on certiorari, in which we may be compelled to leave undisturbed another tribunal’s findings of fact. 13

*43 ¶ 6 The court’s duty can be discharged only if the trial panel submits a complete record of the proceedings. 14 Our initial task is to ascertain whether the record is sufficient to permit (a) an independent determination of the critical facts and (b) the crafting of appropriate discipline. The latter is that which (1) is consistent with the discipline imposed upon other lawyers who have committed similar acts of professional misconduct and (2) avoids the vice of visiting disparate treatment on the respondent-lawyer. 15

¶ 7 We have carefully scrutinized the extensive record and conclude that it is adequate for this court’s de novo consideration of respondent’s professional misconduct in contest.

III

BE NOVO ANALYSIS AND CONSIDERATION OF PRT’S EVIDEN-TIARY RULINGS

¶ 8 PRT rejected the testimony of two witnesses 16 as well as several exhibits proffered by respondent. Its ruling rests on the conclusion that neither the tendered witnesses’ names nor the exhibits were submitted before the PRT deadline for identification of documentary and testimonial evidence intended to be offered in the hearings. 17

¶ 9 Respondent argues that the exclusion of this critical proof has denied him a fair and impartial hearing in conformity to the standards of due process and to the RGDP rules. According to him, this court’s de novo review cannot be conducted without an examination of the complete record. The excluded evidence, respondent reasons, is crucial where, as here, he alone “rebuts the allegations of disgruntled former clients.” Respondent claims that the documentary and *44 testimonial evidence should have been admitted (a) on his direct examination to bolster both his credibility and the weight of the evidence as well as (b) on cross examination of his former clients for purposes of impeachment. Its exclusion, he asserts, was an abuse of discretion. While the evidentiary rules operate as a shield to protect opposing parties from surprise and to facilitate the disciplinary process, respondent urges, they should not be used as a sword to sap crucial evidence from a party’s case. Because the hearings were conducted over a period of several months, 18 respondent argues, the record’s enlargement after the first two days of testimony would not have inconvenienced either the Bar or PRT. Respondent explains that the two witnesses whose names were not timely tendered had been identified to the Bar earlier but were later “inadvertently” dropped from the pretrial order.

¶ 10 Respondent appears to excuse his failure timely to submit the testimonial and documentary evidence either by inadvertence or by ambiguity in the disciplinary rules.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 OK 103, 976 P.2d 38, 1998 WL 730177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-oklahoma-bar-assn-v-busch-okla-1999.