Valeriano Diviacchi v. Board of Overseers of the Bar

2025 ME 67
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 29, 2025
DocketCum-24-12
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 ME 67 (Valeriano Diviacchi v. Board of Overseers of the Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valeriano Diviacchi v. Board of Overseers of the Bar, 2025 ME 67 (Me. 2025).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2025 ME 67 Docket: Cum-24-12 Submitted On Briefs: November 25, 2024 Decided: July 29, 2025

Panel: STANFILL, C.J., and HORTON, LAWRENCE, and DOUGLAS, JJ.

VALERIANO DIVIACCHI

v.

BOARD OF OVERSEERS OF THE BAR

PER CURIAM

[¶1] Valeriano Diviacchi appeals from a judgment of a single justice

(A. Murray, J.) denying his petition for reinstatement to the bar. We conclude

that the single justice committed no error or abuse of discretion and therefore

affirm the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Original Suspension in Massachusetts

[¶2] Diviacchi, a Massachusetts attorney, was admitted to the practice of

law in Maine in 1990. Bd. of Overseers of the Bar v. Diviacchi, BAR-16-2, 1

(Jan. 20, 2017) (Mead, J.). He initially registered in Maine as a nonresident

attorney practicing law in Massachusetts. Id. 2

[¶3] In 2015, a single justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court

entered a judgment suspending Diviacchi’s right to practice law in

Massachusetts for twenty-seven months. Adopting the findings of the

Massachusetts Board of Bar Overseers, the single justice found that, in an

attempt to collect from a former client a fee to which he was not entitled,

Diviacchi filed actions against his client in municipal court and federal court

based in part on false statements that Diviacchi made under oath.1 The single

justice found that Diviacchi offered no evidence to demonstrate that the

statements were true and no evidence showing that he had conducted a

1 In May 2012, Diviacchi began representing a client in a case in federal court filed against her by

a lender. After the attorney-client relationship broke down, Diviacchi filed actions against his client in September 2012 in the Boston Municipal Court and in federal court. In the filings, Diviacchi swore under oath that his client had, in violation of the fee agreement, failed to pay him certain sums and that she had settled the lender case “without notice and completely behind [his] back.” In April 2013, Diviacchi amended his pleadings and swore under oath that it was his client’s “standard habit and business routine” to engage in “deceit” when dealing with attorneys. He alleged that over a period of ten years, his client had hired more than fifteen attorneys to represent her in various matters and that she would work the attorney “until she stop[ped] paying the bill,” fire the attorney, dispute the bill, and file a board complaint against the attorney. The single justice found that the sworn statements that Diviacchi had made about his client were false.

In addition to finding that Diviacchi had violated the Massachusetts Rules of Professional Conduct by knowingly making false statements to two courts, see Mass. R. Prof. C. 3.3(a)(1), 8.4(c), the single justice found that Diviacchi had violated the rules by (i) failing to inform his client that he had modified the standard contingency fee agreement; (ii) failing to pursue his client’s lawful objectives because doing so may have undermined his prospects for recovering attorney fees on a counterclaim that he asserted; (iii) failing to represent his client completely and diligently; (iv) refusing to meet with his client; (v) unilaterally limiting his representation of the client despite statements to the contrary during an appearance in court; and (vi) attempting to charge and collect an excessive fee for work that he did not perform and that he claimed occurred on dates after the attorney-client relationship had effectively ended, see Mass. R. Prof. C. 1.1, 1.2(a), 1.3, 1.5(a), 1.5(f). 3

reasonably diligent inquiry prior to making them. The court observed that

Diviacchi “did not merely write down his falsehoods and then passively allow

them to enter into the litigation” but rather “swore to them,” “repeated them

to two different courts,” and “actively sought relief based on them.”

B. Reciprocal Suspension in Maine

[¶4] Following Diviacchi’s suspension in Massachusetts, the Maine Board

of Overseers of the Bar filed a petition for reciprocal discipline pursuant to

Maine Bar Rule 26(c), seeking to suspend Diviacchi from the practice of law in

Maine for twenty-seven months. See M. Bar R. 26(c) (allowing for the

imposition of “substantially identical” disciplinary terms as those imposed by

another jurisdiction).

[¶5] The matter was assigned to a single justice of the Maine Supreme

Judicial Court (Jabar, J.), who issued an order dated February 3, 2016, pursuant

to Maine Bar Rule 26(c) directing Diviacchi to inform the single justice in

writing within thirty days of “any claim by him that imposition of a substantially

identical order in Maine would be unwarranted and the reasons for that claim.”

After Diviacchi notified the single justice that he had appealed his

Massachusetts suspension to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, the 4

Maine proceeding was put on hold pending resolution of the Massachusetts

appeal.

[¶6] On November 2, 2016, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court

affirmed the judgment of the Massachusetts single justice, In re Diviacchi,

62 N.E.3d 38 (Mass. 2016), and also denied Diviacchi’s petition for rehearing.

[¶7] With the original Massachusetts suspension final, on January 20,

2017, the single justice (Mead, J.) entered an order granting the Maine Board of

Overseers’s petition for reciprocal discipline, which, “[e]ffective immediately,”

suspended Diviacchi for twenty-seven months from the practice of law in Maine

for violations of “those portions of Maine’s Rules of Professional Conduct that

are analogous to his violations of Rules 3.3(a)(1) and 8.4(c) of [the]

Massachusetts Rules of Professional Conduct.”2 Bd. of Overseers of the Bar v.

2Diviacchi filed an “objection” to the reciprocal order of suspension, stating that, in February 2016, he had requested more than just a stay pending resolution of his Massachusetts appeal and had “invoked this Court’s Rule 26(e) as a basis for not issuing reciprocal discipline,” attaching “hundreds of pages of argument and facts.” The single justice issued an order explaining that Diviacchi’s February 2016 response focused on his contention that the order of suspension by the single justice in Massachusetts was “wrong” and that Diviacchi’s sole request of the single justice was to stay any reciprocal discipline until the Massachusetts order was final following appeal. The order further provided:

Rule 26(e) of the Maine Bar Rules places the burden on any party seeking discipline different from that of the foreign jurisdiction to demonstrate that imposition of the same discipline is not appropriate. Should there be any remaining uncertainty, this court’s Order of January [20], 2017 is predicated upon a finding that Mr. Diviacchi has not met his burden to demonstrate, and the “record from which the [foreign] order is 5

Diviacchi, BAR-16-2, 2-3 (Jan. 20, 2017). Diviacchi did not appeal from the

order of reciprocal discipline.

C. Petitions for Reinstatement in Massachusetts

[¶8] In January 2018, Diviacchi filed a petition for reinstatement in

Massachusetts. A hearing committee of the Massachusetts Board of Bar

Overseers conducted a hearing and recommended that the petition be denied.

The hearing committee found that Diviacchi, “in substantial part, does not

acknowledge that the conduct that resulted in his suspension was in violation

of the rules of professional conduct” and “had not met his burden of

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Licari v. Ferruzzi
22 F.3d 344 (First Circuit, 1994)
Paradis v. Webber Hospital
409 A.2d 672 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1979)
Petition of Williams
2010 ME 121 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2010)
F. Lee Bailey v. Board of Bar Examiners
2014 ME 58 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2014)
In re Jonas
2017 ME 115 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2017)
Cynthia (Pray) Wood McKenna v. Thomas Pray
2024 ME 58 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 ME 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valeriano-diviacchi-v-board-of-overseers-of-the-bar-me-2025.