In the Matter of The Suspension of Judith Ward Smith MATTOX,
Attorney, Appellant,
v.
The DISCIPLINARY PANEL OF the UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
for the DISTRICT OF COLORADO, Appellee.
No. 83-2116.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
April 1, 1985.
Judith Ward Mattox, Englewood, Colo., pro se.
Kathryn A. Nielson, Denver, Colo. (James A. Clark and John B. Moorhead, also of Baker & Hostetler, Denver, Colo., on the brief), for appellee.
Before LOGAN, DOYLE and SEYMOUR, Circuit Judges.
LOGAN, Circuit Judge.
Judith Ward Smith Mattox appeals from the judgment of the Disciplinary Panel for the United States District Court for the District of Colorado denying her application for readmission to the bar of that court. Mattox makes several contentions on appeal: (1) because there were no allegations that she was guilty of misconduct in the federal court system, reinstatement by the Colorado Supreme Court automatically qualifies her for reinstatement to practice in the federal court; (2) the federal court was required to apply the same discipline imposed by the state court; (3) the Disciplinary Panel abused its discretion in failing to follow the decision of the Colorado Supreme Court; and (4) the federal court reinstatement proceeding denied Mattox her right to procedural due process.
In January 1982 the Colorado Supreme Court suspended Mattox from the practice of law in the courts of that state for a period of one year. See People v. Mattox,
When Mattox was reinstated by the Colorado Supreme Court in February 1983, she filed her application for readmission to the bar of the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. That court appointed a Committee on Conduct, a panel of nine lawyers, to investigate the application and make a recommendation. The Committee on Conduct interviewed Mattox in person and four others by telephone, reviewed the file compiled by the Colorado Supreme Court Disciplinary Committee, and filed its report recommending reinstatement. After review, but without a hearing or the taking of additional evidence, a three-judge Disciplinary Panel of the district court denied the application for reinstatement. See In re Mattox,
As Mattox admits, there is no doubt that the federal district court has a right to establish its own standards for admission to practice. See In re Ruffalo,
Mattox asserts that her readmission is governed by the district court's local Rule 25 in effect at the time she was disciplined (predecessor to current Rule 309), which provided that she should be disciplined to the same extent as imposed by the state court unless the imposition of the same discipline by the federal district court would result in "grave injustice," or the misconduct was held to warrant "substantially different discipline." Thus, she argues, because the district court made no special findings, it was required to suspend her for the same period as imposed by the Colorado Supreme Court. The district court's disciplinary order for suspension, however, did not impose a one-year period, rather it declared suspension "for an indefinite period of time and until further Order of [the] Court." R. I, 8. Mattox did not appeal that order; at this time she must be treated as having acquiesced in the district court's order of indefinite suspension.
The local rules in effect at the time Mattox filed for reinstatement do little to clarify the procedures applicable to reinstatement. The only reference to reinstatement was in Rule 23(o), which provided:
"(o) Application for Reinstatement.
An attorney who has been disbarred may not apply for reinstatement until the expiration of five years from the effective date of the disbarment. Motions for reinstatement of disbarred attorneys shall be heard by the Disciplinary Panel and in all proceedings upon such a motion the cross-examination of the attorney's proof and the submission of evidence if any in opposition to the motion for reinstatement shall be conducted by one or more members of the Committee on Conduct appointed for such purpose by the Chairperson thereof."
Mattox argues that this rule demonstrates that she was entitled to a hearing before the court. The district court obviously did not consider this rule applicable to Mattox' case, and we agree. The procedures for reinstatement that Rule 23(o) describes apply to "disbarred" attorneys. If the court deemed Mattox disbarred, it could not, according to its own rule, have considered her application prior to the expiration of five years. Further, the other provisions within Rule 23, which require more rigorous proceedings, including a hearing following the filing of a formal complaint and answer, apparently are intended to cover disbarment or other disciplinary proceedings rather than requests for readmission. See Local R. of Practice 23(d)-(k), (n), (p) (D.Colo.) (1983) (revoked).1
The district court purported to act under Local Rule 1, which covered general requirements for admission to its bar, see
Therefore, the principal issue we must decide is whether the constitutional requirements of procedural due process mandate more, in the way of notice and hearing, than this applicant was afforded. It is clear that federal courts must afford attorneys some due process rights before suspending or disbarring them.2 We view Mattox' petition for reinstatement, however, as more akin to a case involving initial admission than to one involving suspension or disbarment.
State courts must afford attorneys due process rights before denying their admission to the state bar on grounds of questionable moral character. See Willner v. Committee on Character and Fitness,
"The constitutional requirements in this context may be simply stated: in all cases in which admission to the bar is to be denied on the basis of character, the applicant, at some stage of the proceedings prior to such denial, must be adequately informed of the nature of the evidence against him and be accorded an adequate opportunity to rebut this evidence. As I understand the opinion of the Court, this does not mean that in every case confrontation and cross-examination are automatically required. It must be remembered that we are dealing, at least at the initial stage of proceedings, not with a court trial, but with a necessarily much more informal inquiry into an applicant's qualifications for admission to the bar. The circumstances will determine the necessary limits and incidents implicit in the concept of a 'fair' hearing. Thus, for example, when the derogatory matter appears from information supplied or confirmed by the applicant himself, or is of an undisputed documentary character disclosed to the applicant, and it is plain and uncontradicted that the committee's recommendation against admission is predicated thereon and reasonably supported thereby, then neither the committee's informal procedures, its ultimate recommendations, nor a court ruling sustaining the committee's conclusion may be properly challenged on due process grounds, provided the applicant has been informed of the factual basis of the conclusion and has been afforded an adequate opportunity to reply or explain. Of course, if the denial depends upon information supplied by a particular person whose reliability or veracity is brought into question by the applicant, confrontation and the right of cross-examination should be afforded. Since admission to the bar is ultimately a matter for the courts, there is ample power to compel attendance of witnesses as required."
We must consider whether the constitutional requirements of procedural due process applicable to state court admissions are equally applicable to admission or readmission to the bars of federal district courts. The district court in the case before us inferred that there is a difference between required federal and state procedures when it emphasized that the Supreme Court of Colorado had to concern itself with Mattox' right to sustain a livelihood, but spoke of the federal court as one of limited jurisdiction in which the purpose of bar membership is only to engage in litigation.
The reasons for procedural protection in the fact-finding process for bar admission decisions advanced in Willner, we believe, apply equally to federal and state courts. Indeed the seminal case establishing the principle that lawyers do not hold office as a matter of grace or favor, Ex parte Garland,
We perceive no rational basis for differentiating, for constitutional due process purposes, between litigating lawyers for whom federal admission may be essential, and office practitioners, who only need a state license to carry on their law practice. Garland noted that the right of an attorney to practice law "confers upon him [the right] to appear for suitors, and to argue causes...."
The Supreme Court long ago recognized in an analogous case the importance of procedural protections as a necessary check upon federal courts' independence in reaching separate determinations of a person's moral character. In Goldsmith v. United States Board of Tax Appeals,
The issue of whether an applicant for admission to the bar of a federal district court has an interest protected by the Due Process Clause has seldom been litigated in recent years because the courts have afforded applicant attorneys rather full hearings. See, e.g., Lark v. West,
The only case we have found that might be read to imply that applicants for federal bar admission have no due process rights is Leis v. Flynt,
The case before us is in a peculiar posture because the district court's investigative Committee on Conduct recommended Mattox' admission to the bar of the federal district court, and it was the court itself, through its three-judge Disciplinary Panel, that denied admission without notice or hearing. A substantially identical situation, however, was recently before the First Circuit, In re Berkan,
"[The applicant] had a right to a hearing on the denial of her application before either the district court's Committee on Admissions or before the district court itself. Since it was only the court, not the Committee, that acted unfavorably in Berkan's case, it was the court's duty to provide Berkan with notice of the grounds for its action and an opportunity for a suitable hearing. Willner,
Mattox here received an explanation of the basis for the district court's denial of her application for readmission. The court said that she "engages in recurrent episodes of dissimulation," "is incapable of candor," and "her explanations of questionable conduct even when under oath amount at best to an insouciant disregard for accuracy and consistency."
Like the Willner dictum and the First Circuit in Berkan, we do not intend to impose a rigid format upon the district court, so long as the procedures afford an opportunity for notice and hearing prior to a final decision and provide a record sufficient for appellate review. But the process given to Mattox here was insufficient to satisfy constitutional requirements. Had the Committee on Conduct recommended denial of her application for admission, we think due process would have been satisfied if the Committee had notified her of its intended recommendation, the reasons therefor, and afforded her an opportunity to make a record why the court should not adopt the Committee's recommendation. The district court Disciplinary Panel, in such a situation, could act on the basis of the record so developed and would not have to afford a hearing before the court itself. Cf. Razatos v. Colorado Supreme Court,
REVERSED AND REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
Rule 23 was amended and renumbered several months after the district court disposed of Mattox' petition. The new rule sets out procedures applicable to applications for reinstatement after suspension, describing a process similar to the procedure followed in the case before us. See Local R. of Practice 307(N) (D.Colo.) (1985)
See In re Ruffalo,
