Overview
In the Matter of Anderson is a landmark First Amendment discipline case establishing that attorneys cannot be disciplined for disparaging statements about judges unless the State Bar proves the statements are false and were made knowingly or with reckless disregard for truth. The case emphasizes constitutional protections for attorney speech and clarifies the burden of proof in disciplinary proceedings.
Facts
Respondent represented clients in civil litigation involving disputes over a medical center lease. During multiple proceedings between 1987 and 1990, respondent made 116 statements in pleadings and related documents alleging corruption, dishonesty, and unethical conduct by judges of the Orange County Superior Court.
These statements included accusations that judges knowingly protected opposing counsel, ignored perjury, and used sanctions to punish litigants exposing misconduct. Respondent maintained the statements were truthful and based on his understanding of events.
The State Bar introduced only the pleadings containing the statements and offered no evidence proving the allegations were false.
Charges
- Failure to maintain respect for courts (Bus. & Prof. Code § 6068(b))
- Offensive personality conduct (§ 6068(f))
Key Legal Principles
1) First Amendment protects attorney criticism of judges
Attorneys retain free speech rights, and disciplinary rules cannot punish protected expression. Restrictions must serve an important governmental interest and be narrowly tailored.
2) Discipline requires proof of falsity
An attorney cannot be disciplined for statements impugning judicial integrity unless the statements are false. Truth is an absolute defense.
3) State Bar bears burden of proof
The Office of Chief Trial Counsel must prove falsity by clear and convincing evidence. The respondent does not bear the burden of proving truth.
4) Reckless disregard standard is objective
Recklessness is determined by whether a reasonable attorney would have had a factual basis for the statements under the circumstances.
5) Opinion and rhetorical hyperbole are protected
Statements not capable of being proven true or false, or that constitute rhetorical hyperbole, cannot form the basis for discipline.
6) Offensive personality rule is constitutionally limited
Section 6068(f) was found unconstitutionally vague and cannot support discipline absent proof of harm to the administration of justice.
Aggravation
- Large number of disparaging statements
Mitigation
- No proof statements were false
- Protected First Amendment interests
Outcome
The Review Department held that the State Bar failed to prove falsity and remanded the matter to the Hearing Department to allow the State Bar an opportunity to present such evidence. Charges under section 6068(f) were dismissed with prejudice.
Sanctions Table
| Issue | Finding |
|---|---|
| Disparaging judicial statements | Protected unless proven false |
| Burden of proof | State Bar must prove falsity |
| Reckless disregard | Objective reasonable attorney standard |
| § 6068(f) charges | Dismissed as unconstitutional / duplicative |
| Disposition | Remanded for further proceedings |
