William A. Calvo, III, appeals the district court’s order that disbarred him from practicing law in the Southern District of Florida. In disbarring Calvo, the district court relied upon the Florida Supreme Court’s disbarment of him. That reliance was improper, Calvo contends, because the proceedings that resulted in his state court disbarment were constitutionally deficient. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the district court’s order.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1988, a federal district court granted the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (“SEC”) motion for an injunction prohibiting Calvo from violating the federal securities laws.
SEC v. Elec. Warehouse, Inc.,
Thereafter, the Florida Bar instituted disciplinary proceedings against Calvo, based upon his having committed securities fraud. An evidentiary hearing was held, after which the Florida Bar referee recommended that Calvo be disbarred. Calvo challenged that recommendation before the Florida Supreme Court on several grounds, all of which that court rejected; it ordered Calvo disbarred.
The Florida Bar v. Calvo,
In 1994, the federal district court entered an order directing Calvo to show cause within thirty days “why the imposition of the identical discipline by this court would be unwarranted and the reasons therefor.” In his response to that order, Calvo alleged numerous constitutional defects in the Florida state court proceedings, and requested an evidentiary hearing before the district court. Calvo attached several documents to his response, including: (1) a forty-six page “certified narrative” "written by Calvo regarding the Florida proceedings, (2) copies of the briefs that both parties filed before the Florida Supreme Court, (3) a copy of the Florida Supreme Court’s decision, (4) a copy of the SEC’s decision, and (5) Calvo’s motion for rehearing before the Florida Supreme Court. The district court declined to conduct a hearing, and, in 1995, pursuant to its local rules of disciplinary enforcement, ordered that Calvo be disbarred from practice before it. See S.D.Fla. Rules Governing Attorney Discipline, Rule V.E. Calvo appeals that order.
II. DISCUSSION
A.
We must first decide whether we have jurisdiction over Calvo’s appeal. The jurisdictional question focuses on whether there is a case or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution. In supplemental briefs filed in this Court, both Calvo and the government contend that we have jurisdiction. We agree. Although neither the Supreme Court nor this Court has ever expressly held that we have jurisdiction over an appeal from a district court’s disbarment order, there is an abundance of authority from the Supreme Court and this Court that strongly suggests that we do.
First, the Supreme Court explicitly has held that state court bar admissions and bar disciplinary decisions present “cases or controversies” under Article III. In
In re Summers,
Where relief is thus sought in a state court against the action of a committee, appointed to advise the court, and the court takes *965 cognizance of the complaint without requiring the appearance of the committee or its members, we think the consideration of the petition by the Supreme Court, the body which has authority itself by its own act to give the relief sought, makes the proceeding adversary in the sense of a true case or controversy.
Id.
at 567-68,
Similarly, in
District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
Summers
and
Feldman
are instructive in the present case, and inform us that bar admissions, bar disciplinary actions, and disbarments are essentially judicial in nature and thus present a ease or controversy under Article III.
See Summers,
It matters not that this case involves the disbarment of an attorney instead of the denial of admission to a bar, or that this case involves a federal bar rather than a state bar. The district court’s actions were as judicial in nature as those of the state supreme court in Summers. Prior to ordering Calvo disbarred, the district court judges met and considered Calvo’s response to the order to show cause. The district court had before it Calvo’s forty-six page description of the state court proceedings, various briefs and memo-randa he had filed in the state court proceedings, a copy of the SEC’s decision, a copy of the Florida Supreme Court’s decision, and a copy of Calvo’s petition for writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court.
That the district court did not conduct a hearing regarding Calvo’s disbarment does not mean it lacked jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Summers,
Second, in addition to the Supreme Court cases that explicitly hold that the Court has jurisdiction over appeals from
state
bar admission and disciplinary decisions, the Supreme Court and this Court have reviewed
federal
court bar admission and disciplinary decisions on a number of occasions, which suggests that jurisdiction over these types of appeals is proper despite the lack of explicit holdings to that effect. In
In re Snyder,
Similarly, this Court has reviewed numerous district court orders regarding bar disciplinary matters. In
Greer’s Refuse Serv., Inc. v. Browning-Ferris Indus.,
Two other courts of appeals recently have expressly held that jurisdiction exists to decide an appeal of a federal disbarment order.
In re Palmisano,
These cases lead to one conclusion: Calvo’s appeal presents a justiciable “case or controversy.” The Second Circuit aptly summarized this jurisdictional issue in In re Jacobs — a case which raised issues identical to this case:
The Supreme Court and circuit courts appear to have concluded that while regulation of attorney behavior should remain primarily within the discretion of each district court, it is contrary to fundamental notions of fairness to close off all avenues of review, even if only for the most glaring irregularities.
B.
Having held that this appeal is properly before us, we must decide whether the district court’s order to disbar Calvo was proper. The Supreme Court has held that “disbarment by federal courts does not automatically flow from disbarment by state courts.”
Theard v. United States,
The burden is on the disbarred attorney to show good cause why he should not be disbarred, and the district court is not required “to conduct a
de novo
trial in the first instance of [the attorney’s] fitness to practice law.”
Wilkes III,
In his response to the district court’s order to show cause, Calvo raised several arguments concerning alleged defects in the Florida disbarment proceeding, including: (1) lack of notice that the charges could lead to disbarment; (2) lack of proof of misconduct because of (a) improper introduction of judgments of the SEC and the District Court for the District of Connecticut, (b) improper introduction of hearsay testimony, and (c) lack of credibility of witnesses; (3) deprivation of right to counsel; and (4) intervening change in the law. 2
None of Calvo’s arguments identify any of the three types of infirmities that
Selling
identified. The first prong of
Selling
concerns due process, which is narrowly defined, in this context, as “want of notice or opportunity to be heard.”
Selling,
Under the second prong of
Selling,
which concerns the sufficiency of the state court’s proof, Calvo argues that the Florida proceedings suffered from an infirmity of proof because the referee permitted hearsay testimony, considered the judgments in the SEC actions, and allowed the testimony of witnesses who lacked credibility. Disbarment proceedings are not criminal proceedings, and relaxed rules of evidence apply. For example, in
The Florida Bar v. Vannier,
Under the third prong of
Selling,
which considers whether disbarment is improper “under the principles of right and justice,” Calvo makes several contentions. First, he contends that he was deprived of counsel at the disbarment hearing, and that that constitutes the type of “grave reason” that should have convinced the district court not to follow the state court’s conclusion. Calvo argues that he was deprived of his right to counsel
*968
because the Florida Bar referee disqualified one of his attorneys, after that attorney was designated as a potential rebuttal witness for the Florida Bar. Even if true, that allegation does not amount to the type of grave injustice to which the third prong of
Selling
refers. Calvo concedes that he was represented by another attorney; he was not without counsel at the hearing. And even if he had not been represented, Calvo fails to demonstrate that he had a right to counsel at the hearing.
See, e.g., Lassiter v. Dep’t of Social Servs.,
Second, Calvo contends that the district court should not have followed Florida’s disbarment order, because there was an intervening change in the law regarding securities fraud, which came after Florida disbarred Calvo and before the district court disbarred him. He argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Central Bank v. First Interstate Bank,
ill. CONCLUSION
We conclude that this appeal is justiciable because the district court’s disbarment order constitutes a ease or controversy under Article III. Although “disbarment by federal courts does not automatically flow from disbarment by state courts,”
Theard,
Notes
.
Wilkes III
was preceded by
In re Wilkes,
. Calvo made several other arguments in his response, all of which we reject without further discussion.
