Lead Opinion
In this case we are called upon to determine whether the district court properly sanctioned an attorney for conduct that occurred outside the courtroom and after the attorney had ceased to represent any of the parties involved with the proceedings before the court. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
This matter arose during the course of a criminal tax prosecution brought by the United States against three defendants, William and Beverly Wunsch and their daughter, Teri Sowers. Shortly after Sowers’s arrest by federal agents on March 18, 1993, Frank Swan telephoned Assistant United States Attorney Elana Artson, counsel for the United States. Swan identified himself as Sowers’s lawyer and asked about the charges pending against his client, including the conditions for her release. Swan also told Artson that he would be unable to attend Sowers’s bail hearing that afternoon, but would send another attorney, Gerald Wilson, in his stead.
On March 24, 1993, Artson moved to disqualify Swan and Wilson from representing Sowers, arguing that their representation of both Sowers and her parents, who at that time were the targets of a grand jury investigation, amounted to a conflict of interest. In a memorandum in opposition filed five days later, Sowers argued that disqualifying Swan would adversely affect her ability to present an effective defense, because Swan had represented both her and her parents since November 1990 in connection with the underlying Internal Revenue Service civil audit and summons enforcement hearings. Sowers also declared that she and her parents were prepared to waive any conflict. On March 29, 1993, Artson filed a supplement to her motion, noting that Swan had previously represented two accountants the government intended to call as witnesses during its case-in-chief.
On April 5, 1993, the district court conducted a hearing at which both Swan and Wilson appeared and argued against the government’s motion. The court granted the motion, finding that a serious potential for conflict of interest existed. Sowers filed a motion to reconsider four days later. The following week (i.e., April 15,1993), a federal grand jury handed down a 14-count superseding indictment containing additional charges against Sowers as well as new charges against the Wunsches. On April 20,
On May 6, 1993, Artson received a letter from Swan. The letter was dated May 3, 1993, and read as follows:
Dear Elana: I have something here that I think applies to you.
Your disqualification of Wilson and me was neither just nor fair to the defendants. Surely, it serves your interests because now it will be easy for you.
Very truly yours,
/s/ Frank Swan
FRANK L. SWAN, INC.
Appended to the letter was a single sheet of paper with the following photocopied words, all enlarged and in capital letters:
MALE LAWYERS PLAY BY THE RULES, DISCOVER TRUTH AND RESTORE ORDER. FEMALE LAWYERS ARE OUTSIDE THE LAW, CLOUD TRUTH AND DESTROY ORDER.1
On May 10, 1993, the government filed a motion asking the district court to punish Swan for violating Rules 2.5.1
On September 13, 1993, the district court issued its Memorandum Opinion on Order Sanctioning Attorney for Gender-Based Discrimination. Matter of Swan,
By published opinion filed April 28, 1995, we reversed the district court’s decision on the grounds that two of the Local Rules in question were inapposite, and the state law provision relied upon by the district court was unconstitutionally vague. United States v. Wunsch,
ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
This Circuit has not squarely decided the question of what standard of review should govern appeals from decisions imposing sanctions for attorney conduct found to violate local rules. Compare United States v. Lopez,
We have held in the context of Fed. R.Civ.P. 11 that a district court’s decision to impose sanctions against an attorney for violating the court’s local rules is subject to three levels of review: First, we examine for clear error the court’s findings of historical fact; second, we review de novo the determination that counsel violated the local rules; and third, we apply an abuse of discretion standard to the district court’s choice of sanctions. Warren v. Guelker,
With respect to the First Amendment, however, the scope of our review is clear: “Legal and constitutional questions are reviewed de novo. In eases ... raising First Amendment issues, an appellate court has an obligation to make an independent examination of the whole record in order to make sure that the judgment does not eonsti-tute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free expression.” United States Dist. Court v. Sandlin,
Discussion
The district court cited as authority for its disciplinary action Local Rules 2.2.6,
I. Local Rule 2.2.6
Swan first argues that his removal from the case placed him beyond the reach of Local Rule 2.2.6, the basis upon which the district court relied in asserting disciplinary authority. Matter of Swan,
A. Appearance
Swan argued before the district court, and maintains on appeal, that he never formally entered an appearance on behalf of either Sowers or the Wunsehes in the underlying criminal proceeding, and therefore never “appeared” before the district court in connection with that litigation. We reject this contention as finding no support in the record.
The materials before us show that Swan identified himself as Sowers’s attorney in his initial telephone contact with Artson on March 18, 1993, and the Designation and Appearance of Counsel form filed later that same day identified Swan as one of Sowers’s attorneys. Moreover, the clerk’s criminal minutes for Sowers’s arraignment listed both Swan and Wilson as defense counsel, and further noted that Wilson was appearing for Swan. In addition, Defendant’s Opposition to Motion to Disqualify Defense Counsel, filed March 29, 1993, identified both Swan and Wilson as defense counsel. Further, Swan appeared with Wilson at counsel table during the April 5, 1993 hearing, where he was not sworn as a witness and argued against his own disqualification. We also note that it was Swan, not Wilson, who signed the substitution of attorney forms for the Wunsehes, and Swan himself expressly referred to “[yjour disqualification of Wilson and me ...” (emphasis added) in his letter to Artson. Finally, Swan never objected to his being identified as Sowers’s attorney.
Swan’s every action was consistent with his being exactly what he appeared, and what everyone else took him to be, viz., counsel for the accused. Moreover, Swan could have resolved any doubts concerning his status— and thereby rendered moot all of the government’s efforts to have him disqualified—by the simple expedient of telling the court that he was not one of the defense attorneys for either Sowers or the Wunsehes. Finally, it is disingenuous for Swan to argue that he had no connection with a ease in which he fought so hard against his own disqualification. Accordingly, we find no error in the district court’s ruling that Swan had “appeared” before the court during the course of the ongoing litigation.
B. Nexus
Similarly, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion by concluding that Swan’s actions had the requisite nexus with the conduct of the litigation before the court. See Professional Programs Group,
To shield Swan from potential discipline the moment he was disqualified would effectively immunize conduct that was not unconnected with the ongoing prosecution. In light of the great deference we must accord the district court’s interpretation of its own Local Rules, see Guam Sasaki Corp.,
II. Local Rule 2.5.2
As already noted, one of the bases upon which the district court relied in imposing sanctions was Local Rule 2.5.2, which provides that “[n]o attorney shall engage in any conduct which degrades or impugns the integrity of the Court or in any manner interferes with the administration of justice therein.” See Matter of Swan,
A. Impugning the Integrity of the Court
We begin by noting that, “[Ojnce a lawyer is admitted to the bar, although he does not surrender his freedom of expression, he must temper his criticisms in accordance with professional standards of conduct.” Sandlin,
No reference to any court or judge appears or is even hinted at in the letter or attachment. Moreover, Swan’s criticism “cannot be equated with an attack on the motivation or the integrity or the competence of the judge[ ].” In re Sawyer,
B. Interference with the Administration of Justice
The district court cited to two published decisions in support of its conclusion that Swan’s sexist communication constituted an interference with the administration of justice under Local Rule 2.5.2. See Matter of Swan,
In In re Plaza Hotel Corp., a bankruptcy court disqualified debtor’s male counsel in part because of “the gender bias that counsel has exhibited toward the women who represent the chapter 11 trustee and the United States Trustee[.]” Ill B.R. at 891-92. However, the court’s criticism of debtor’s lawyer was based on more than a display of gender bias. Although he had made slighting oral and written references during the proceedings to the designee as “office help” even though aware that she was a lawyer, debtor’s attorney had also refused to assist
Similarly, in Principe, the court sanctioned an attorney for unprofessional conduct in the litigation process, based on a series of demeaning remarks directed against a female attorney at deposition.
In both cases the courts imposed sanctions based on facts showing that each attorney’s sexist behavior was not only deplorable, but clearly interfered with the administration of justice. In the instant case, however, we have a single incident involving an isolated expression of a privately communicated bias with no facts that would show how that communication adversely affected the administration of justice, either in this or in any other case. While we decline to hold that a single egregious act of bigotry could never subject an officer of the court to disciplinary sanctions, there has been no showing that Swan’s action adversely affected the administration of justice within the meaning of Rule 2.5.2.
III. Local Rule 2.5.1
The bulk of Swan’s argument on appeal involves a challenge to the constitutionality of section 6068(f) of California’s Business and Professions Code as incorporated by Local Rule 2.5.1. Matter of Swan,
A. Inapplicability of Section 6068(f)
California cites to numerous state law decisions in support of its contention that, over the past century, the California courts had sufficiently narrowed the interpretation of section 6068(f) to make clear that Swan’s conduct in the instant ease fell outside the scope of that statute. We disagree. Our review of the California ease law dealing with “offensive personality” in the context of the administration of justice fails to reveal a single controlling decision — much less a clear line of authority — that either specifically discusses the scope of section 6068(f) or explicitly limits its applicability to, e.g., courtroom interactions.
To be sure, there are a few reported decisions which give some hint at the limits of section 6068(f). See, e.g., People v. Espinoza,
California argues in the alternative that the enforcement policy recently adopted (i.e., on October 5, 1995) by the California State Bar Association concerning section 6068 limits the application of the statute to conduct adversely affecting the administration of justice. See Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
[T]o avoid constitutional challenges, application of section 6068(f) is limited to conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice, such as conduct unbecoming a lawyer in the courtroom and comments made therein. Purely personal conduct and conduct outside the courtroom are not grounds for section 6068(f) charges. Consistent with case law, section 6068(f) charges are most defensible when narrowly applied to conduct occurring in the courtroom or in any directly related setting, like at a deposition....
Conduct which is deemed “offensive,” but not within the parameters of section 6068(f), may be addressed by directional letter emphasizing civility.
We are not persuaded by the above. California has failed to show that this new policy represents an authoritative and binding construction of section 6068(f) rather than a mere enforcement strategy, which would not be binding on the courts. See, e.g., City of Mesquite v. Aladdin’s Castle, Inc.,
B. Void for Vagueness
California first contends that Swan must show that section 6068(f) is vague in all of its possible applications in order to sustain a constitutional challenge on the ground of vagueness. This contention is based on a misreading of the standard announced in Hoffman Estates, in which the Court actually said:
In a facial challenge to the overbreadth and vagueness of a law, a court’s first task is to determine whether the enactment reaches a substantial amount of constitutionally protected conduct. If it does not, then the overbreadth challenge must fail. The court should then examine the facial vagueness challenge and, assuming the enactment implicates no constitutionally protected conduct, should uphold the challenge only if the enactment is imper-missibly vague in all of its applications.
perhaps the most important factor affecting the clarity that the Constitution demands of a law is whether it threatens to inhibit the exercise of constitutionally protected rights. If, for example, the law interferes with the right of free speech or of association, a more stringent vagueness test should apply.
Id. at 499,
A statute is void for vagueness when it does not sufficiently identify the conduct that is prohibited. Thus, the Fifth Amendment due process clause requires a statute to be sufficiently clear so as not to cause persons “of common intelligence ... necessarily [to] guess at its meaning and [to] differ as to its applieation[.]” Connally v. General Constr. Co.,
Clearly, “offensive personality” is an unconstitutionally vague term in the context of this statute. See, e.g., Cohen v. California,
Citing Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire,
California next argues that section 6068(f) has specific content because it effectively requires the type of conduct mandated by the ethical codes that bind all lawyers. See In re Sawyer,
We find a certain circuity in California’s argument. Attorneys are on notice of the reach of section 6068(f) because they are attorneys, and the reach of section 6068(f) is defined by the conduct demanded of those same attorneys. While we have little trouble with the notion that “conduct unbecoming a member of the bar” has some definable substance, we find no such limits to “offensive personality.” The cases cited by California in support of its contention that the word “offensive” in other statutes has been upheld against similar vagueness challenges are inapplicable, because what is specific in one context need not be specific in another. See, e.g., Diaz v. Watts,
Because we find no merit to any of California’s remaining arguments, we conclude that Cal.Bus. & Prof.Code § 6068(f)’s provision regarding “offensive personality” is unconstitutionally vague, and its incorporation by Local Rule 2.5.1 requires us to set aside that portion of the district court’s holding in reliance thereon.
CONCLUSION
The question before us is not whether Swan displayed a deplorable lack of sensitivity, but whether the district court’s decision to impose sanctions on Swan, in addition to whatever sanction(s) the Central District’s Standing Committee on Discipline may choose to impose, can be upheld as a matter of law based on the authorities cited. For the reasons set forth above, we conclude that it cannot.
The district court’s judgment imposing sanctions against Swan under Local Rules 2.5.1 and 2.5.2 is REVERSED. The parties will bear their own costs on appeal.
Notes
. Swan copied the attachment from “No Way to Treat a Lawyer,” an article from the December 1992 issue of California Lawyer that discussed negative gender stereotyping of female attorneys in movies and television.
. That Rule reads, in relevant part: “Rules of Professional Conduct of the State Bar of California-State Bar Act. Each attorney shall ... comply with the standards of professional conduct required of members of the State Bar of California and contained in the State Bar Act[.] ... Those statutes, rules and decisions are hereby adopted as the standards of professional conduct of this Court.”
. That Rule reads in its entirety: “Other Standards. No attorney shall engage in any conduct which degrades or impugns the integrity of the Court or in any manner interferes with the administration of justice therein.”
. See 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b); Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(c); Fordyce v. City of Seattle,
. That Rule reads in its entirety: “Jurisdiction of Court. Any attorney who appears for any purpose submits to the discipline of this Court with respect to conduct of the litigation.”
. Section 6068(f) of California’s Business and Professions Code reads, in relevant part: “It is the duty of an attorney ... [t]o abstain from all offensive personality!)]”
. The government also contends that, by failing to present this jurisdictional argument to the district court, Swan has waived his right to pursue it on appeal. Regardless of whether or not the issue turns on a question of waivable person
. Pursuant to the Local Rules, an attorney cannot appear before the district court unless he or she is first "admitted to the Bar of or permitted to practice before this Court.” Local Rule 2.1. The nature of this "admission or permission” Rule is laid out in Local Rule 2.2. Admission to the Central District Bar requires that the attorney be a person of good moral character who is an active member of, and in good standing with, the State Bar of California. Local Rule 2.2.1. An attorney not otherwise eligible for admission to the Central District Bar may nonetheless be granted permission to practice before the district court, either on a pro hac vice basis or for the limited purpose of representing the United States or its agencies, provided certain conditions not here relevant are first met. See Local Rule 2.2.3 (Pro Hac Vice Appearance); Local Rule 2.2.4 (Attorneys for the United States).
. The argument as framed is implied in Swan's contention that the district court's application of Local Rule 2.5.2 to the facts of his case amounted to a violation of his First Amendment rights. Because resolution of this1 particular constitutional question is unnecessary to the disposition of this issue, we decline to reach the merits of Swan’s argument on this point. See In re Snyder,
. In a general sense, all manifestations of gender bias related in any way to the adjudicative process affect the administration of justice. See, e.g., Ninth Circuit Gender Bias Task Force, Final Report, "The Effects of Gender in the Federal Courts”, 67 S. Cal. L.Rev. 745 (1993). Equally clearly, however, the courts cannot punish every expression of gender bias by attorneys without running afoul of the First Amendment. Rule 2.5.2’s prohibition of conduct which "interferes with the administration of justice” must be given an interpretation consistent with First Amendment limits on the Court’s power.
. The government effectively ignored this contention by arguing that the district court’s imposition of sanctions could be upheld on an alternative, nonconstitutional basis, viz., Local Rule 2.5.2. Because of our conclusion that the district court’s imposition of sanctions cannot be upheld under Rule 2.5.2, and owing to the fact that the sanctions rested in part on Rule 2.5.1, which incorporates section 6068(f), we turn to Swan's argument that the statute is unconstitutionally vague. See Jean v. Nelson,
. Moreover, if the judicial narrowing claimed by California was so obvious, we must ask ourselves how a talented First Assistant United States Attorney for the Central District of California and a learned California federal district court judge could have both missed that interpretation and concluded that section 6068(f) did apply to Swan's conduct.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part, dissenting in part:
I concur in Parts I & II of the opinion. I disagree with Part III. Since § 6068(f) does not apply to Swan’s conduct, there is no reason to decide whether § 6068(f) is void for vagueness.
“The void for vagueness doctrine is concerned with a defendant’s right to fair notice and adequate warning that his conduct runs afoul of the law.” Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada,
“[T]here are limitations in the English language with respect to being both specific and manageably brief, .... [and statutes] will not be struck down as vague, even though marginal cases could be put where doubts arise.” Arnett v. Kennedy,
The Supreme court has recognized that lawyers may be subjected to restrictions on speech that an ordinary citizen cannot. “[T]he speech of lawyers representing clients in pending cases may be regulated under a less demanding standard[.]” Gentile,
Further, attorneys are charged with a knowledge of the legal profession’s “lore” or “code of behavior.” In United States v. Hearst,
The majority rejects this argument by finding “a certain circuity” in it. The majority holds that: “While we have little trouble with the notion that ‘conduct unbecoming a member of the bar’ has some definable substance, we find no such limits to ‘offensive personality.’ ” The rationale offered to support this distinction is that “what is specific in one context need not be specific in another.” I find this rationale inadequate to support the distinction.
. See In re Beaver,
