STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. BAILEY

2023 OK 34
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 4, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 OK 34 (STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. BAILEY) 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 ASSOCIATION v. BAILEY, 2023 OK 34 (Okla. 2023).

Opinion

STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. BAILEY
2023 OK 34
Case Number: SCBD-6776
Decided: 04/04/2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA


Cite as: 2023 OK 34, __ P.3d __

NOTICE: THIS OPINION HAS NOT BEEN RELEASED FOR PUBLICATION. UNTIL RELEASED, IT IS SUBJECT TO REVISION OR WITHDRAWAL.


STATE OF OKLAHOMA ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION, Complainant,
v.
MARK KENDALL BAILEY, Respondent.

PROFESSIONAL DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDING

¶0 Respondent is an attorney licensed to practice law as a member of the Oklahoma Bar Association. The Oklahoma Bar Association's Second Amended Complaint against respondent alleged eight counts of professional misconduct. A hearing was held before a trial panel of the Professional Responsibility Tribunal. The panel found the allegations on all counts to be established and recommended respondent be suspended for the practice of law for two years and one day. We hold: The evidence is clear and convincing respondent violated several provisions of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct and Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings, and the proper discipline is to disbar respondent and order him to pay the costs of the proceeding.

RESPONDENT DISBARRED; RESPONDENT'S NAME STRICKEN FROM
ROLL OF ATTORNEYS; AND ORDERED TO PAY COSTS

Loraine Dillinder Farabow, First Assistant General Counsel, Oklahoma Bar Association, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Complainant.

Tom M. Cummings, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Respondent.

EDMONDSON, J.

¶1 Respondent is currently a lawyer licensed by this Court. Allegations of professional misconduct against respondent are made in a second amended complaint filed by the Bar Association. This complaint is fifty pages long with 233 numbered paragraphs, and in its eight Counts it lists numerous violations of various ethical rules for lawyers.

¶2 Respondent states no misconduct occurred, raises issues of both fact and law, and challenges facts raised by the Bar as well as the Bar's understanding of rules of professional conduct. Respondent also makes a procedural challenge as well as raising an affirmative defense. The controverted issues of fact and law presented by Bar and respondent for this Court to adjudicate involve all of the allegations made by the Bar against respondent in the fifty-page complaint.

¶3 We conclude the evidence presented shows respondent violated various rules: Count One, RGDP, Rule 1.3 and a diversion agreement; Count Two, ORPC, Rules 1.4, 1.5, 1.15, 1.16(d), 8.1 (b), and RGDP, Rules 1.3, and 5.2; Count Three, ORPC, Rules 1.1, 1.4, 1.5, 1.15(c) & (d), 1.16(d), 3.1, 8.4(c) & (d), and RGDP, Rules 1.3 and 5.2; Count Four, ORPC, Rules 1.4, 1.5, 5.3, 8.1(b), 8.4(c), and RGDP, Rules 1.3 and 5.2; Count Five, ORPC, Rules 1.1, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.16(d), 3.1, 5.3, 8.1(b), 8.4(d) & (e), and RGDP, Rules 1.3 and 5.2; Count Six, ORPC, Rules 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 8.1(b), and RGDP, Rules 1.3 and 5.2; Count Seven, ORPC, Rules 1.1, 1.3, 1.4. 1.5, 1.16(d) 8.1(b), 8.4(c), and RGDP, Rule 1.3; Count Eight, ORPC, Rules 3.4, 8.4(b) and (d), and RGDP, Rule 1.3.

¶4 We conclude the appropriate discipline required is to disbar respondent and strike his name from the roll of attorneys. The Bar filed a motion to tax costs in the amount of $24,797.81, and the motion is granted. Respondent is ordered to pay costs of the proceedings in the sum of $24,797.81.

I. Court's Review of the Record

¶5 A trial panel of the Professional Responsibility Tribunal held a hearing during nine days and found each of the eight Counts to be established by clear and convincing evidence. The trial panel recommended discipline in the form of respondent's suspension from the practice of law for two years and one day.

¶6 This Court possesses an exclusive, original, and nondelegable constitutional responsibility to regulate the practice of law and the licensure, ethics, and discipline of legal practitioners in this state.de novo every aspect of a disciplinary inquiry, and the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendation of discipline made by a trial panel of the Professional Responsibility Tribunal are neither binding nor persuasive for this Court's review.

¶7 This Court's de novo review includes the evidence presented, stipulations, trial panel report, pleadings, briefs, and additional filings by the parties to determine whether the Bar Association met its burden for showing a respondent's professional misconduct.

¶8 Respondent's brief may be summarized: (1) The Bar's Second Amended Complaint is improper and should be stricken; (2) Laches should apply to a grievance made against him; (3) Testimony against respondent by former clients, former employees, and witnesses for the Bar Association is not credible, or inaccurate, or fails to show misconduct; (4) No professional misconduct occurred and the proceeding against him should be dismissed; (5) If the Court determines professional misconduct occurred, then such conduct does not warrant the recommended discipline of a suspension from the Bar Association for two years and one day. Respondent agrees we must weigh the value of all testimony for the purpose of applying a clear and convincing evidentiary standard, and he asserts his testimony should be viewed as credible and the testimony against him as not clear and convincing.

II. Respondent's Procedural and Due Process Challenges
to the Second Amended Complaint, and Assertion of Laches

¶9 Respondent's post-hearing brief argues the Bar's Second Amended Complaint is a procedural nullity. He alleges this amendment was untimely, without leave of a court, and without his consent. He relies upon Rule 6.5 of the Disciplinary Rules, 12 O.S. § 2015

¶10 Respondent's procedural challenge to the second amended complaint is without merit, and some of the reasons why this is so include the following: (1) Respondent consented to the second amendment to the complaint,

¶11 Certain procedural rights in litigation may be defined as primarily personal rights and may be waived by the person possessing the right,

¶12 Respondent's brief does not refer to any argument before the trial panel, or in the brief itself, relating to prejudice caused by the procedure for filing the amended complaints. Alleged procedural errors are usually examined to determine the presence of prejudice to the interests of an objecting party.

¶13 Respondent's reliance upon laches is without merit. Assuming laches, an equitable affirmative defense to a claim in equity,sui generis proceeding,

¶14 Respondent's brief states that one of the allegations made against him could be resolved by a courthouse surveillance video. Respondent's brief does not point to evidence before the trial panel concerning the existence, storage, and maintenance of security videotapes, or their relation to the time and location of the events.

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2023 OK 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-oklahoma-bar-association-v-bailey-okla-2023.