Respondent, Harry T. Spikes, has filed exceptions to the report of the Board on Professional Responsibility (“the Board”) finding that he violated Rules 3.1 and 8.4(d) of the District of Columbia Rules of Professional Conduct by filing a frivolous defamation claim, based on a privileged communication to Bar Counsel alleging attorney misconduct and other similarly privileged statements. The Board recommends that respondent should be suspended from the practice of law for thirty days. We hold that the record supports the Board’s finding that respondent violated Rule 3.1 by bringing a defamation suit in the face of consistent and clear case law holding that an absolute privilege attaches to complaints made to Bar Counsel. Respondent’s persistence in maintaining this frivolous suit, including an appeal, also “seriously interfere[d] with the administration of justice,” in violation of Rule 8.4(d). In light of these ethical violations and respondent’s disciplinary history, we adopt the Board’s recommended sanction and order respondent suspended from the practice of law for thirty days.
I.
Respondent has been licensed to practice law in the District of Columbia since 1983. In the Spring of 1997, he represent
Dr. Taylor, the medical director at the Lorton facility, had helped secure a room for the deposition of Mr. Byars in connection with his suit against the District. According to Mr. Grossman’s letter, Dr. Taylor stated, in the presence of respondent and Mr. McCabe, that she had observed Mr. Byars moving his legs and standing, which obviously undermined his allegations that the claimed abuse had left him paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. Mr. Grossman further stated in the letter that Dr. Taylor later reported to Mr. McCabe that:
[respondent] told Dr. Taylor the following: that she did not have to express her view regarding Mr. Byars’ injuries, that he was hoping to get a large judgment from the District of Columbia in the lawsuit, and that she could be a part of that judgment, and could retire comfortably.
Mr. Grossman’s letter also reported that respondent had a conflict of interest in the Byars case, see supra note 1, and that respondent had been delinquent in paying his bar dues. In addition to the letter to Bar Counsel, Mr. Grossman also mailed a similar letter to the United States Attorney on the same day.
It appears that in the course of defending the
Byars
case, Mr. McCabe tried for some time — before Mr. Grossman sent the letters — to secure an affidavit from Dr. Taylor that confirmed her allegations that respondent was trying to unlawfully influence her potential testimony concerning Mr. Byars’s injuries. It is undisputed that Mr. McCabe prepared and transmitted a proposed affidavit to Dr. Taylor for her signature. For reasons which are not found in the record, Dr. Taylor never signed the affidavit. Dr. Taylor’s deposition was taken on June 30, 1997, as part of Byars’s federal lawsuit. Although the record does not contain the transcript of this deposition, there are a few short quotes in various pleadings filed by respondent in the defamation lawsuit he filed against the District (discussed
infra)
which tend to support Mr. McCabe’s representations
On November 28, 1997, respondent filed suit in the United States District Court against Messrs. Grossman and McCabe, as well as various other members of the Office of Corporation Counsel, and the District of Columbia. The suit alleged that the defendants had conspired to defame respondent, and had thereby deprived him of his civil rights, in violation of 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1988 and 1985 (2000). In his complaint, respondent claimed that the same defamatory statement was published on four occasions: (1) in the draft affidavit which Mr. McCabe sent to Dr. Taylor; (2) in a memorandum filed by the Office of Corporation Counsel on April 1, 1997 in support of a motion for a continuance in the Byars case; (3) in the letter mailed to Bar Counsel on June 5, 1997; and (4) in the letter of the same date mailed to the United States Attorney. The suit sought damages in the amount of $5,000,000, as well as punitive damages in the same amount. 3
The U.S. District Court dismissed respondent’s complaint for failure to state a claim, noting that the allegedly defamatory statements in the continuance motion and the draft affidavit were privileged as they were made in the context of a judicial proceeding, and that a “privilege applied to [the defendants’] referral of the matter to the D.C. Bar.” The court concluded that once the defamation claims were dismissed, the conspiracy claims and the civil rights claims also would fail because they were premised on the underlying allegations of defamation. The United States Court of Appeals for District of Columbia summarily affirmed in an unpublished opinion, holding that “[t]he merits of the parties’ positions are so clear as to warrant summary affirmance.”
II.
Respondent was charged by Bar Counsel with violating D.C. Bar Rule XI,
This court “shall accept the findings of fact made by the Board unless they are unsupported by substantial evidence of record,” and shall adopt the recommended discipline “unless to do so would foster a tendency toward inconsistent dispositions for comparable conduct or would otherwise be unwarranted.” D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 9(g);
In re Herndon,
III.
Rule 3.1 of the Code of Professional Conduct provides that:
A lawyer shall not bring or defend a proceeding, or assert or controvert an issue therein, unless there is a basis for doing so that is not frivolous, which includes a good-faith argument for an extension, modification, or reversal of existing law.
The Board found that respondent violated Rule 3.1 by bringing a frivolous defamation suit based on Mr. Grossman’s letter to the Office of Bar Counsel. The suit was frivolous, the Board concluded, in light of the immunity granted by Rule XI, § 19(a), which provides that “complaints submitted to the Board or Bar Counsel shall be absolutely privileged, and no claim, or action predicated thereon may be instituted or maintained.” (Emphasis added.)
Taking exception to the Board’s findings, respondent argues that his lawsuit was based on four defamatory publications, 6 and not solely on the letter to Bar Counsel. 7 Thus, he contends that even if that letter was privileged — which he contests — it was merely one of four alleged publications, and the defamation suit as a whole was therefore not frivolous. We disagree. All four publications were privileged, rendering his defamation suit frivolous, in violation of Rule 3.1.
Statements made in the course of a judicial proceeding.
In his defamation case, Mr. Spikes alleged that he was defamed when Mr. McCabe attempted to secure an affidavit from Dr. Taylor concerning respondent’s attempted bribery and when the District sought a continuance in the
Byars
case
Submitting a memorandum of law in support of a motion filed in the course of a legal proceeding is cloaked with the absolute privilege that attaches to statements made within the judicial process.
See, e.g., Arneja v. Gildar,
The privilege for statements made in the course of judicial proceedings “is more than a defense to liability. The privilege is intended to afford an attorney absolute immunity from actions in defamation for communications related to judicial proceedings.” Id. at 340 (internal quotation and brackets omitted). As absolute immunity attached to the submission to the court of the memorandum of law, and the attempt to secure an affidavit from Dr. Taylor related to the Byars case, it was clearly in contravention of existing law for respondent to predicate his defamation suit upon these statements.
Complaints to Bar Counsel
Respondent also based his claims of defamation on Mr. Grossman’s letter to Bar Counsel. The consistent decisional law of this court has held that D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 19(a) prohibits a litigant from maintaining a cause of action based on an ethical complaint to Bar Counsel.
See, e.g., Weaver v. Grafio,
As noted above, the plain text of Rule XI, § 19(a) makes clear' that “no claim or action predicated” on complaints to bar counsel “may be instituted or maintained.” Respondent fails to cite a single case which has held that an attorney may maintain a legal action based on an ethical complaint to Bar Counsel. And with good reason; the case law of this court weighs entirely against a suit such as the one respondent filed against the District and its attorneys. This court has held that it has “the authority to declare immune from suits or action under the law of the District of Columbia, the conduct of those who provide information or make complaint to the Board. Our rule does so.”
In re Nace,
Respondent nonetheless maintains that Rule XI, § 19(a) is “ambiguous” because in contrast to the term “absolute privilege” used in the Rule, no similar adjective modifies the word “immunity.” He therefore argues that the immunity granted by the rule is not necessarily absolute. As a matter of textual interpretation, it would be difficult to give effect to the term “absolute privilege” without similarly construing the word “immunity.” “Privilege” is defined as “a special legal right, exemption, or immunity granted to a person or class of persons.” Blaok’s Law Dictionary, 1234 (8th ed. 2004) (emphasis -added). The phrase employed in the rule, “absolute privilege,” is defined as “a privilege that immunizes an actor from suit, no matter how wrongful the action might be.” Id. Therefore, whether one turns to the plain meaning of the terms employed in Rule 19(a), or the interpretation of the Rule found in our cases, it cannot seriously be maintained that Rule 19(a) is ambiguous in its provision of an unqualified immunity resulting from its grant of absolute privilege. Under the circumstances, such an argument would not be made in “good faith” as required by the permissive clause of Rule 3.1.
Statements to law enforcement authorities
The fourth instance of defamatory publication alleged in respondent’s civil suit was the letter sent by Mr. Grossman to the United States Attorney. This letter was sent on the same day, and included the same allegations that were made in, the letter to Bar Counsel.
Unlike the three publications made to the court and Bar Counsel, only a qualified privilege attaches to reports made to law enforcement authorities for investigation.
See Carter v. Hahn,
We have not previously considered what constitutes a “frivolous” proceeding or issue that warrants sanction under Rule 3.1. We have, however, considered analogous provisions in other rules which we find instructive. In determining whether a pleading is frivolous and subject to sanction under Superior Court Civil Rule 11 we have said that “consideration should be given to the clarity or ambiguity of the law.”
District of Columbia v. Fraternal Order of Police,
We recognize that “the law is not always clear and never is static,” Rule 3.1,
cmt.
[1], and that in zealously arguing their clients’ causes lawyers must be able to press for change and reform in the law. Rule 3.1 expressly provides that lawyers are not subject to sanction if “there is a basis for doing so that is not frivolous, which includes a good-faith argument for an extension, modification, or reversal of existing law.” But that “safe harbor” requires a position that is reasoned and supported. Respondent maintains that he brought suit in a good-faith effort to vindicate his reputation as a practicing attorney, and as a challenge to the privilege afforded under D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 19(a) to complaints made to Bar Counsel. However, nothing in the record of the defamation suit indicates that this was the purpose of the case. It was a straightforward defamation action brought in spite of, and not in challenge to, the privileges afforded the statements at issue.
8
Respondent’s argument, therefore, appears to be merely a
post hoc
justification as to why he should not be sanctioned for bringing the defamation action.
See In re Alexander,
We make special note of the fact that respondent’s defamation complaint was centered on the letter sent to Bar Counsel by Mr. Grossman. As we said in
In re Nace,
this court has exercised its authority “to declare immune from suits or action under the law of the District of Columbia, the conduct of those who provide information or make complaint to the Board.”
IV.
The Board also found that by bringing a defamation action based on privileged communications, respondent had “engage[d] in conduct that seriously interferes with the administration of justice” in violation of Rule 8.4(d). We have established a three-pronged analysis to determine whether an attorney has engaged in conduct which interferes with the administration of justice. First, “the conduct must be improper.... [It] may be improper ... because it violates a specific statute, court rule or procedure.”
In re Hopkins,
The Board concluded that respondent’s actions in filing the defamation suit met the three prongs of the
Hopkins
analysis, and therefore violated Rule 8.4(d). By filing suit despite the grant of immunity in Rule XI, § 19(a) and cases outlining the privilege for judicial proceedings and statements to law enforcement authorities, respondent engaged in conduct that was “improper ... because it violates a specific statute, court rule, or procedure.”
In re Hopkins,
In discussing the impact of frivolous actions, we have noted in our appellate context that frivolous actions “waste the time and resources of this court, delay the hearing of cases with merit and cause appellees unwarranted delay and added expense.”
Slater,
We therefore conclude that the record supports the Board’s finding that respondent’s conduct has “seriously interfere[d] with the administration of justice” in violation of Rule 8.4(d).
y.
The Board recommends that respondent be suspended from the practice of law for thirty days. This is a recommendation to which we defer, “unless to do so would foster a tendency toward inconsistent dispositions for comparable conduct or would otherwise be unwarranted.” Bar Rule XI, § 9(g). Under the circumstances of this case, we find the sanction warranted.
Sanctions have been imposed under Rule 8.4(d) when an attorney refuses to cooperate with Bar Counsel in the investigation of ethical complaints made against that attorney. A review of our recent cases imposing sanctions for that conduct shows that a thirty-day suspension has been imposed several times within the past few years for such conduct.
See, e.g., In re Beller,
We also consider that this is not respondent’s first ethical infraction. Bar Counsel has advised the court — without contradiction from respondent — that it has issued informal admonitions to respondent
We adopt the Board’s recommendation that respondent be suspended from the practice of law for thirty days, and hereby suspend him for such a period of time, effective thirty days after the date of this order. See D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 14(f). We direct respondent’s attention to the requirements of D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 14(g), and their effect on his eligibility for reinstatement. See D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 16(c).
So ordered.
Notes
. Mr. Byars claimed to have been stabbed on one occasion by another inmate, who also claimed to have been stabbed in retaliation by Mr. Byars. Respondent candidly admits that he represented both Mr. Byars and the other inmate in their respective legal actions against the District, but added that he did so after obtaining signed consent from both clients.
. The District Court opinion, dismissing respondent’s defamation action that is the subject of this disciplinary proceeding notes that the Byars case was eventually settled, but the record does not provide any information regarding the terms of that settlement.
. Respondent produced two pieces of evidence in the federal lawsuit in support of his claim of defamation, and he continues to rely on these two documents in the disciplinary case. The first is an unsigned, anonymous two-page letter dated June 5, 1997, which is written on Corporation Counsel stationery, and addressed to the U.S. Attorney and to Bar Counsel. The anonymous letter alleges that Mr. Grossman directed Mr. McCabe to delay the Byars trial "in any way [he] could,” and that "it became clear that Mr. McCabe had lied about what Dr. Taylor had said to him.” The letter also alleges that members of the Office of Corporation Counsel harbored personal animus against respondent. The letter is printed on two pages, both of which have the Corporation Counsel’s letterhead. Mr. Grossman testified before the hearing committee that the fact that both pages are on letterhead stationery makes the letter of dubious authenticity, because it is office practice for only the first page of a multi-page letter to be printed on letterhead stationery.
The second letter purports to be from Mr. McCabe to Dr. Taylor. The letter advises Dr. Taylor that she "may face criminal charges for obstructing a criminal investigation involving Harry T. Spikes" if she does not sign the affidavit which Mr. McCabe has prepared. This letter also is unsigned, and Mr. McCabe has denied writing the letter, or even knowing of its existence until confronted by it during the litigation.
Because the complaint filed in federal court was dismissed for failure to state a cause of action, there has been no determination on the authenticity of these documents. In the disciplinary action, the Board similarly had no need to come to a definitive ruling on the issue, but it expressed grave reservations about the authenticity of the documents upon which respondent rested his complaints.
. Respondent’s alleged misconduct in the Byars case that was the subject of Mr. Gross-man’s letter Bar Counsel is not the subject of this disciplinary proceeding.
. The hearing committee found that respondent violated D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 19(a). Bar Counsel agrees with the Board’s determination that the Bar Rule does not provide an independent basis for disciplinary action.
. The alleged publications occurred (1) in the draft affidavit which Mr. McCabe sent to Dr. Taylor; (2) in a memorandum filed by the Office of Corporation Counsel on April 1, 1997, for a continuance in the Byars case; (3) in the letter mailed to Bar Counsel on June 5, 1997; (4) in the letter mailed to the United States Attorney on the same date.
.While it is fair to say that the Board was primarily focused on the letter to Bar Counsel, the Board also acknowledged that there were three other claimed instances of defamation, and that these also were privileged.
. Nowhere, for example, either in District Court or in the present proceeding has respondent cited relevant authority challenging the lawfulness of such privileges.
. As Bar Counsel notes, and our research confirms, we have never before had occasion to impose sanctions for a violation of Rule 3.1. Thus, without cases to guide the imposition of sanctions, we defer to the Board’s recommended sanction, which is not challenged by Bar Counsel. We do take notice, however, that other jurisdictions have imposed harsher sanctions on attorneys who have brought defamation actions based on ethical complaints made by former clients, despite privileges afforded to those complaints,
see, e.g., In re Adams,
