Overview
In In the Matter of Mason, the Review Department addressed discipline for an attorney who knowingly practiced law while suspended by the California Supreme Court. The case is a key authority on willful violation of suspension orders, moral turpitude arising from unauthorized practice, and the limits of mitigation based on lack of client harm or later disclosure.
Facts
Jan Stanley Mason was placed on a 75-day suspension effective January 29, 1993. Six days into the suspension, he appeared in Orange County Superior Court as counsel in a domestic relations matter. He requested a continuance and signed and filed pleadings and a trial brief while under suspension.
Mason did not disclose his suspended status to the court or opposing counsel. He later claimed he believed his attorney was seeking an extension of the suspension’s effective date, but the record showed no such extension had been obtained.
Months later, Mason informed the court he had appeared while suspended, but the timing of that disclosure suggested it may have been prompted by fear that opposing counsel would reveal the misconduct.
Charges
- Practicing law while suspended (Bus. & Prof. Code §§ 6125, 6126)
- Failure to support the law (Bus. & Prof. Code § 6068(a))
- Moral turpitude (Bus. & Prof. Code § 6106)
Key Legal Principles
1. Practicing While Suspended Constitutes Moral Turpitude
Knowingly appearing in court while suspended is a willful violation of a Supreme Court order and constitutes moral turpitude.
2. Reckless Disregard Equals Willfulness
An attorney acts willfully when appearing in court despite knowing of a suspension order, even if he claims uncertainty about whether the suspension was in effect.
3. Harm to the Judicial System Counts
Lack of client harm is not mitigation where the misconduct harms the court itself by undermining the integrity of judicial proceedings.
4. Candor Mitigation Requires Spontaneity
Disclosure of misconduct does not constitute mitigating candor if it appears motivated by fear of imminent exposure rather than voluntary admission.
5. Judicial Notice Limits
Unpublished State Bar hearing decisions cannot be relied upon as precedent or evidence, even if a Supreme Court order referencing them exists.
Aggravation
- Prior disciplinary record
- Multiple acts of misconduct
- Failure to promptly disclose suspension
Mitigation
- Extensive pro bono work
- Community service
Key Holding
An attorney who knowingly appears in court while suspended commits moral turpitude, and such misconduct warrants actual suspension even absent client harm.
Outcome
The Review Department recommended a three-year stayed suspension, three years probation, and a 90-day actual suspension.
Sanctions Table
| Violation Type | Finding |
|---|---|
| Unauthorized Practice | Yes — court appearance while suspended |
| Moral Turpitude | Yes |
| Mitigation | Pro bono work only |
| Aggravation | Prior discipline, multiple acts |
| Final Discipline | 90-day actual suspension |
