In the Matter of Phillips (Review Dept. 1999)
In the Matter of Phillips (Review Dept. 1999) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 47
The Review Department held that amendments to Business & Professions Code section 6007(c)(4) providing for automatic inactive enrollment upon a disbarment recommendation cannot be applied retroactively to disciplinary proceedings initiated before the amendment’s effective date.
Facts
Respondent Emir A. Phillips was admitted to the California bar in 1991. In April 1996, the State Bar filed disciplinary charges against him. After a lengthy trial, the hearing judge recommended disbarment and ordered Phillips automatically enrolled as an inactive member under the amended version of Business and Professions Code section 6007(c)(4), effective January 1, 1997. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
Phillips sought interlocutory review, arguing the automatic inactive enrollment provision should not apply because his disciplinary proceeding began before the amendment took effect. He contended the prior version of the statute required notice and an opportunity for a hearing before inactive enrollment could occur. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
The Review Department agreed, finding that applying the amended statute retroactively would improperly affect Phillips’s substantive rights and deprive him of procedural protections.
Legal Issue
Whether a statutory amendment mandating automatic inactive enrollment upon a disbarment recommendation can be applied to disciplinary proceedings initiated before the amendment’s effective date.
Court’s Analysis
The court held that applying the amendment retroactively would be impermissible because it substantially affected an attorney’s right to practice law. Automatic inactive enrollment eliminates an attorney’s ability to request a hearing to challenge the necessity of enrollment, which existed under prior law. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
The Review Department emphasized that inactive enrollment functions similarly to a preliminary injunction, focusing on public protection. Because the amended statute dramatically changed the attorney’s legal status and procedural rights, it could not be applied retroactively.
The court also noted that reasonable notice is essential to due process. Phillips never received notice that his disciplinary hearing could result in immediate inactive enrollment, which independently supported reversal. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
The disciplinary hearing itself could not substitute for a separate inactive enrollment hearing because the issues differ—discipline concerns misconduct, while inactive enrollment focuses on immediate public protection risks.
Holding
The Review Department reversed the hearing judge’s order automatically enrolling Phillips as inactive under the amended statute. The court held the amendment could not be applied retroactively to proceedings initiated before January 1, 1997. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Sanctions Table
| Issue | Conduct | Legal Authority | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inactive Enrollment | Automatic enrollment ordered under amended statute | Bus. & Prof. Code §6007(c)(4) | Order reversed |
| Retroactivity | Amendment applied to pre-1997 proceeding | Retroactivity principles | Impermissible |
| Due Process | No notice or hearing opportunity | Procedural due process | Violation found |
Outcome
The Review Department terminated Phillips’s automatic inactive enrollment but left open the possibility of enrollment under the former statute after proper notice and hearing procedures. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
