Overview
In In the Matter of Rose, the Review Department affirmed a disbarment recommendation based on repeated violations of disciplinary probation conditions and an extensive prior disciplinary record. The case is a leading authority on probation violation discipline, rejecting defenses based on substantial compliance, administrative suspension, and alleged ambiguity in probation orders.
Facts
Mason Harry Rose V was admitted to the State Bar in 1971 and had an extensive disciplinary history. He was placed on a three-year probation requiring completion of Ethics School, a law office management plan, and a law office management course within one year.
Rose received notice of these requirements but failed to timely comply with any of them. He eventually completed the conditions nearly a year late, after being notified that disciplinary proceedings would be initiated.
This proceeding represented Rose’s fourth disciplinary matter. His prior discipline included numerous violations such as failure to perform legal services, failure to communicate with clients, trust account misconduct, and failure to comply with previous probation conditions.
Charges
- Willful violation of probation conditions (Bus. & Prof. Code § 6103)
- Failure to comply with disciplinary probation
- Failure to obey State Bar orders
Key Legal Principles
1. Administrative Suspension Does Not Excuse Probation Compliance
An attorney remains obligated to comply with probation conditions even if simultaneously suspended under separate disciplinary orders.
2. Substantial Compliance Is Not a Defense
Disciplinary probation serves public protection and rehabilitation goals, making distinctions between substantial and technical violations inappropriate for determining culpability.
3. Belated Compliance Is Limited Mitigation
Late compliance after being notified of violations does not constitute meaningful mitigation because it is not a spontaneous acknowledgment of wrongdoing.
4. Probation Violations Significantly Related to Underlying Misconduct
Violations of probation conditions directly addressing the misconduct that led to discipline warrant greater sanctions.
5. Prior Discipline Drives Disbarment
Repeated disciplinary violations demonstrate that probation and suspension have failed to protect the public, justifying disbarment under Standard 1.7(b).
Mitigation
- Cooperation during disciplinary proceedings
- Extensive community service
- Belated compliance with probation conditions
Aggravation
- Extensive prior disciplinary record
- Multiple acts of misconduct
- Long-term pattern of disciplinary violations
- Failure to understand ethical obligations
Key Holding
Repeated violations of probation conditions, especially when combined with an extensive disciplinary history, demonstrate an inability or unwillingness to conform to professional standards and warrant disbarment to protect the public.
Outcome
The Review Department recommended disbarment and ordered respondent’s inactive enrollment pending final discipline.
Sanctions Table
| Violation Type | Finding |
|---|---|
| Probation Violations | Multiple willful failures to comply |
| Prior Discipline | Extensive and repeated |
| Mitigation | Limited |
| Public Protection Risk | High likelihood of future misconduct |
| Final Discipline | Disbarment |
