In the Matter of Stansbury
In the Matter of Stansbury (Review Dept. 2000) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 103
The Review Department held that when recommending actual suspension in a default discipline case, the State Bar Court must specify a definite and measurable period of suspension under Rule 205. Indefinite suspension tied solely to completion of conditions is impermissible.
Facts
John Owen Stansbury was admitted to the California bar in 1969. In an earlier disciplinary matter, he was publicly reproved for failing to return unearned client fees. As a condition of reproval, he was required to pay restitution of $750 plus interest and attend Ethics School.
Stansbury failed to comply with these reproval conditions and did not participate in subsequent disciplinary proceedings. After receiving proper notice, he defaulted. The hearing judge found him culpable of failing to comply with reproval conditions and recommended suspension until he completed restitution, Ethics School, and other requirements.
However, the hearing judge did not specify a definite period of actual suspension, instead recommending suspension until Stansbury completed certain tasks.
Charges & Violations
- Rule 1-110 — Failure to comply with conditions of reproval
- Section 6103 — Failure to comply with court orders (dismissed as duplicative)
Court’s Analysis
The Review Department emphasized that Rule 205 requires discipline recommendations in default matters to include a clearly defined and measurable period of actual suspension. A suspension tied only to completion of future conditions is indefinite and violates the rule’s plain language.
The court explained that specific suspension periods provide necessary notice to attorneys and ensure the Supreme Court retains proper authority over disciplinary sanctions.
The Review Department also held that probation conditions should generally be considered only when an attorney seeks termination of suspension, not at the initial recommendation stage.
Aggravation & Mitigation
Aggravation
- Prior disciplinary record
- Failure to participate in proceedings
- Lack of remorse
Mitigation
- None presented due to default
Sanctions Table
| Issue | Finding | Authority | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Default Discipline | Suspension must be definite | Rule 205 | Major holding |
| Failure to Comply | Violation of reproval conditions | Rule 1-110 | Basis for discipline |
| Prior Record | Public reproval | Std. 1.7 | Aggravating factor |
Outcome
The Review Department modified the discipline recommendation to impose a two-year stayed suspension with a minimum ninety-day actual suspension and additional conditions, including restitution, Ethics School attendance, and compliance with Rule 955.
