STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. SMALLEY
This text of 2018 OK 97 (STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. SMALLEY) 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 ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. SMALLEY
2018 OK 97
Case Number: SCBD-6548
Decided: 12/11/2018
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA
Cite as: 2018 OK 97, __ 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.
RICHARD E. SMALLEY, III, Respondent.
BAR DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDING
¶0 The complainant, Oklahoma Bar Association, commenced disciplinary proceedings against the respondent, Richard E. Smalley, III. Based on evidence presented during a hearing, the Trial Panel concluded that his sexual involvement with a client, and inappropriate personal interaction with the mother of children whom he represented as court appointed Guardian Ad Litem, brought discredit to the professional of law, violating RGDP 1.3, was prejudicial to the administration of justice in violation of ORPC Rule 8.4(d), and violated other ORPC rules as well.
Gina L. Hendryx, General Counsel of the Oklahoma Bar Association, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for complainant.
Thomas C. Reisen, CRABB, FERGUSON & RIESEN, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for respondent.
Dan Murdock, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for respondent.
THE RESPONDENT IS SUSPENDED FROM THE PRACTICE OF LAW FOR
SIX MONTHS, REPRIMANDED, AND ORDERED TO PAY COSTS.
¶1 The complainant, Oklahoma Bar Association, filed its complaint against the respondent, Richard E. Smalley, III, pursuant to Rule 6, Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings.1 The Trial Panel heard this disciplinary matter, found the respondent had violated Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct (ORPC) and Rules Governing Disciplinary Proceedings (RGDP), and his actions warranted discipline. The Panel recommended that the respondent be suspended from the practice of law for a period of one year, receive public censure, and be required to pay the costs associated with these proceedings.
I. FACTS
Count 1
¶2 Mr. Smalley received his license to practice law in Oklahoma in 1988. In 2012, a woman we shall call Ms. A, hired Mr. Smalley's law firm to represent her in a paternity action. After confirmation of the paternity of the child, Mr. Smalley continued his representation of Ms. A on custody issues. The trial panel concluded in its report to this Court that by 2013, the professional relationship had turned into a friendship.
¶3 The Bar Association called Ms. A's psychologist, Dr. C, as a witness, who testified that he had diagnosed Ms. A as bipolar. The Bar also offered an exhibit, admitted by agreement between the parties, of a written report from a second psychologist, Dr. H. That exhibit, dated November 5, 2014, was addressed to the attorneys in Ms. A's child custody case. Dr. H reported that Ms. A said she had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2009.
¶4 Ms. A's testimony reveals that she has a degree in petroleum engineering, a master's degree in Native American Studies, and she was in her last semester of law school at the time she testified before the trial panel on June 18, 2018.
¶5 In April 2014, Mr. Smalley filed an Application for Emergency Custody Order after Ms. A reported her son's father verbally and physically assaulted her. In late October Mr. Smalley prepared for a pretrial conference in the custody case.
¶6 The complainant and respondent agree that Ms. A came to Mr. Smalley's office after hours on three nights, October 27th, 28th, and 30th, during the time Mr. Smalley was preparing for the pretrial conference. On each occasion the two engaged in a sexual act.
¶7 Regarding contested facts, Ms. A testified that Mr. Smalley used force on that first night. She also testified that she did not resist on those three nights because she wanted Mr. Smalley to continue to represent her and also because she did not have the funds to pay for that representation. Mr. Smalley testified that Ms. A was the aggressor and that he told her to stop, tried to push her away, told her "no, no," but she would not stop. He testified that to stop her he would have had to use force and he did not want to do that.
¶8 During that week of settlement negotiations and trial preparation, Ms. A testified Mr. Smalley told her she did not have sufficient funds left in his lawyer's trust account to go to trial. On October 31, 2014, Ms. A testified he told her that he reached a settlement based upon the custody evaluator and guardian ad litem's recommendation that the child's father should receive custody of their child. She testified she did not agree with such a settlement, and then she retained new counsel that weekend.
¶9 Ms. A testified that she had been dating her new counsel and that she had sexual relations with him before and during the time he represented her. She paid him $5,000.00 by cashing out a retirement account. She testified that he took the case on the condition she was not lying.
¶10 Mr. Smalley presented evidence from another man with whom she had a child. He testified they had been engaged. But, for the previous fourteen months, he had sole custody of their child. Ms. A did not have visitation rights. He testified that in the fall of 2015 Ms. A revealed to him, "She went to his [Mr. Smalley's] place of business and almost had to force herself on him. And she said that she performed oral sex on him." He said she told him it took more than one attempt. Mr. Smalley's attorney asked about her demeanor, and he answered, "She was smirking." He continued,
"She told me that she had planned this long before she actually acted on it. She told me that the first step that she did was she would grab his hand in court while they were having hearings on her son's case. And she had set the whole thing up so that she could have -- she could declare a mistrial in her son's case if she were to lose. She also brought up civil suits."
He further testified that Ms. A said this was a way to get out of paying her attorney's fee.
Count 2
¶11 MP is a single mother of four children, between the ages of 4 and 12 in 2009, when she filed for divorce. One child, who had severe muscular dystrophy, died in 2017. In March 2010, Judge Barry Hafar appointed Mr. Smalley Guardian Ad Litem in the case. During that time Mr. Smalley met with MP and her children several times.
¶12 MP testified that while serving as Guardian Ad Litem, Mr. Smalley invited MP and her children to his home for a pool party. MP reluctantly accepted after he assured her that the invitation was not improper. Nevertheless, this invitation upset MP's husband when he learned about it. Mr. Smalley assured MP that the family's presence at the party would not cause a problem, and that the judge had assured him that he would not be removed from his court role. MP feared losing custody of her children. He told her he had known the judge for years, that they went to law school together, spent time together, attended holiday parties and golfed together. In other words, they were good friends. Mr. Smalley questioned some of the details in MP's testimony, but not her veracity.
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