In the Matter of Aulakh (Review Dept. 1997) 3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 690

State Bar Defense Attorneys Published Cases In the Matter of Aulakh (Review Dept. 1997) 3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 690
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Overview

In In the Matter of Aulakh, the Review Department addressed attorney discipline arising from incompetence, improper withdrawal from representation, and failure to refund unearned fees. The case is an important authority on the independence of State Bar disciplinary proceedings from civil settlements, the duties of counsel to incarcerated clients, and standards governing summary review proceedings.

Facts

Respondent represented a client who had been convicted of a misdemeanor and was incarcerated after his appeal was deemed in default. The client hired respondent to handle the appeal. Respondent failed to timely file a required proposed statement on appeal, resulting in the appeal being dismissed.

After the court denied an extension request, the client was jailed. Respondent then withdrew from representation, leaving the client without counsel while incarcerated. The client remained in jail for ten days until successor counsel secured his release through habeas corpus proceedings.

Respondent also failed to refund unearned fees and failed to provide an accounting of client funds.

Charges

  • Failure to perform legal services competently (Rule 3-110)
  • Improper withdrawal from employment (Rule 3-700)
  • Failure to refund unearned fees
  • Failure to render an accounting

Key Legal Principles

1. Civil Settlement Does Not Bar Discipline

A client’s settlement and release of claims against an attorney does not prevent State Bar disciplinary proceedings because discipline protects the public rather than vindicating private claims.

2. Disciplinary Proceedings Are Public Actions

The complaining client is not a party to the disciplinary proceeding and cannot compromise or release disciplinary charges.

3. Duty to Incarcerated Clients

Attorneys must continue to competently represent clients even after adverse court rulings. Withdrawing while a client is jailed constitutes serious incompetence.

4. Laches Defense Requires Prejudice

Delay in filing disciplinary charges does not constitute a defense absent a showing of specific prejudice to the respondent.

5. Discovery and Summary Review Standards

Procedural rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion, and in summary review proceedings the Review Department considers only issues raised by the parties without the full record.

6. Restitution Enforcement

An attorney’s residence outside the United States does not affect the enforceability of restitution orders.

Mitigation

  • 20 years of discipline-free practice
  • Poor financial condition

Aggravation

  • Significant harm to client (10 days incarceration)
  • Lack of cooperation during disciplinary proceedings

Key Holding

State Bar disciplinary proceedings are independent of civil settlements, and attorneys may not withdraw from representation in a manner that leaves incarcerated clients without counsel.

Outcome

The Review Department affirmed the hearing judge’s recommendation of a one-year stayed suspension, three years probation, restitution, and 45 days actual suspension.

Sanctions Table

Violation Type Finding
Incompetence Failure to perfect appeal and withdrawal
Improper Withdrawal Left client jailed without counsel
Fee Violations Failure to refund and account
Client Harm 10 days wrongful incarceration
Final Discipline 45-day actual suspension
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