The Appellant, who was the plaintiff in a civil case in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, seeks to appeal, or obtain mandamus review of, a January 27, 2010 decision of that court’s Committee on Grievances declining to take disciplinary action against the Appellant’s former attorney, referred to here as Attorney l. 1 The challenged decision took the form of a letter to the Appellant, simply informing him that the Committee was “of the view that no disciplinary action is warranted.”
The Appellant’s papers in this Court further allege that an Assistant U.S. Attorney, referred to here as Attorney 2, also engaged in misconduct, although it is not clear if those allegations are new or were first presented to the district court.
Discussion
We have not yet addressed the issue of whether a complainant has standing to appeal a district court grievance committee’s
In support of our standing ruling in
Phillips,
we relied on two opinions that are relevant to the present issue. The first, an Eighth Circuit decision, held that an individual lacks standing to bring a federal action seeking an attorney’s disbarment from a state bar or federal district court bar, or to bring an appeal from the district court’s dismissal of the purported disbarment action.
See Mattice v. Meyer,
The
Phillips
decision also cited
Ginsburg v. Stern,
Plaintiffs petition, just as any other complaint of professional misconduct, merely supplied information for the court’s consideration.... If the court considers that no offense has been committed; or that the allegations of the complaint are insufficient, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous; or that the complaint has been filed from an improper motive; or for any other reason decides not to proceed with the matter, the complainant has no recourse.
Plaintiff is an informer and nothing more, and as such, has no right to be heard at any stage of the proceeding, save as the court or its committee may call upon him to testify. The plaintiff has averred nothing to show that his interest in the matter before the [Pennsylvania] Supreme Court differed in any particular from the interest of any other citizen and member of the bar, none of whom have any standing as a party in interest.
Id.,
Aside from the Eighth Circuit’s decisions in
Mattice
and Stan; the First, Seventh, and Tenth Circuits also have found that an individual lacks standing to appeal a district court’s decision not to discipline an attorney.
See In re Lynn,
In the present case, the district court’s local rule governing attorney disciplinary proceedings in that court explicitly limits the types of “[discipline or [ojther [rjelief’ that may be ordered by that court’s Committee on Grievances. S.D.N.Y. Local Civil Rule 1.5(c). The Committee may impose “a letter of reprimand or admonition, censure, suspension, ... an order striking the name of the attorney from the roll of attorneys admitted to the bar of th[e] courtf,] ... or an order precluding [a non-admitted] attorney from again appearing at the bar of th[e] court.” Id., Local Civil Rule 1.5(c)(l)-(3). 3 Such relief is intended to vindicate the interests of the public, the bar, and the district court.
In light of the limited measures permitted by Local Civil Rule 1.5(c), there is nothing about the Committee’s January 27, 2010 decision that directly affects any cognizable interest of the Appellant. While the Appellant has an interest in the Committee’s disciplining of attorneys who engage in misconduct, that interest results only from the Appellant’s status as a member of the public at large. Thus, the Appellant lacks standing to bring this appeal or to pursue mandamus relief.
See Aurelius Capital Partners, LP v. Republic of Argentina,
To the extent that the Appellant requests that this Court itself investigate or discipline either of the attorneys at issue, his request is denied, because the alleged misconduct relates primarily or exclusively to district court proceedings.
Consequently, the present proceeding is dismissed in its entirety. The Appellant’s motions for in forma pauperis status and other relief are denied as moot.
Notes
. Since discipline was not imposed by the district court, we refer to the two attorneys at issue as "Attorney 1" and "Attorney 2.”
. Several years after its decision in
Teitelbaum,
the Seventh Circuit held that a United
. The "other relief” noted in the title of Local Civil Rule 1.5(c) consists of a nondisciplinary suspension which the Committee on Grievances may impose, under Local Civil Rule 1.5(c)(3), after determining that a "member of the bar of th[e] court has an infirmity which prevents the attorney from engaging in the practice of law,” Local Civil Rule 1.5(b)(4).
. In contrast to the district court’s disciplinary rule, New York State law permits, under limited circumstances, the appellate divisions to order restitution in conjunction with the censure, suspension or disbarment of an attorney in a disciplinary proceeding.
See
New York Judiciary Law § 90(6-a)(a)(''Where the appellate division ... orders the censure, suspension from practice or removal from office of an attorney ... following disciplinary proceedings at which it found ... that such attorney ... wilfully misappropriated or misapplied money or property in the practice of law, its order may require him or her to make monetary restitution in accordance with this subdivision.”). However, at least one appellate division has found that a complainant did not have standing to challenge a departmental disciplinary committee’s determination not to institute proceedings against the complainant’s former attorney.
See Morrow v. Cahill,
