In the Matter of Chesnut
4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 166 (Review Dept. 2000)
Attorney was disciplined for knowingly misrepresenting to two courts that he had personally served an opposing party. The case clarifies the scope of Business & Professions Code §6068(d), the burden of proving good faith in false statements, and standards for reviewing Rule 219 dismissal motions.
Facts
Daniel Chesnut represented a client in a California marital dissolution proceeding. He told both a Texas court and a California court that he personally served the opposing spouse with the summons and complaint.
Evidence later showed the spouse was on an airplane at the time of the alleged service, and a tenant at the property testified that no one entered the premises that day. School attendance records also indicated Chesnut was teaching at the time he claimed to have served the papers.
Despite this evidence, Chesnut repeatedly maintained that he served the individual or someone resembling him.
Charges & Violations
- §6068(d) — Misleading a court by false statements
- §6106 — Moral turpitude (duplicative finding)
Key Legal Holdings
1. Misrepresentation Does Not Require Success
A violation of §6068(d) occurs when an attorney attempts to mislead a court — it does not require that the court actually be misled.
2. Half-Truths and Concealment Qualify
The statute covers concealment and misleading statements, not just explicit falsehoods.
3. Intent Presumed From False Statements
Presenting a statement known to be false creates a presumption of intent to deceive.
4. Good Faith Is an Affirmative Defense
The attorney bears the burden of proving good faith when claiming mistaken belief.
5. Rule 219 Review Standard
Denial of a motion to dismiss under Rule 219 is reviewed de novo, with great weight given to credibility findings by the hearing judge.
Aggravation
- Prior discipline involving deceptive conduct
- Lack of candor during State Bar proceedings
Mitigation
- Extensive character testimony
- Community and military service
Sanctions Table
| Violation | Conduct | Authority | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Misleading Court | False service statements | §6068(d) | Primary violation |
| Moral Turpitude | Dishonest conduct | §6106 | Duplicative finding |
| Lack of Candor | False testimony in proceedings | Std. 1.2(b) | Major aggravation |
Outcome
The Review Department imposed a two-year stayed suspension, three years of probation, and six months of actual suspension, along with ethics conditions and passage of the MPRE.
