In the Matter of Alan W. Johnson
In the Matter of Alan W. Johnson (Review Dept. 2000) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 179
The Review Department significantly increased discipline after finding an attorney engaged in a widespread pattern of client neglect, dishonesty, confidentiality breaches, and failure to comply with prior discipline conditions across multiple matters.
Facts
Alan W. Johnson was admitted to the California bar in 1980 and practiced primarily in consumer and civil litigation matters. Over several years, Johnson committed misconduct in multiple client matters involving misrepresentations, neglect, and mishandling of client funds.
In several cases, Johnson accepted advance fees but failed to perform meaningful legal services. He neglected to file pleadings, missed court appearances, failed to respond to discovery, and allowed cases to be dismissed. Clients frequently could not reach him, and he repeatedly failed to return phone calls or provide updates.
Johnson also engaged in serious dishonesty. In one matter, he signed a client’s name to a declaration under penalty of perjury without authorization. He later presented documents to courts bearing simulated client signatures. In other matters, he falsely told clients he had filed lawsuits or scheduled hearings when he had not.
In an additional violation, Johnson disclosed confidential information about one client’s felony conviction to another client without permission, breaching the strict confidentiality duty imposed by Business & Professions Code section 6068(e).
Johnson had previously been disciplined and was required to comply with restitution, reporting, and professional responsibility exam requirements. He failed to meet those obligations, which became an additional basis for discipline.
Charges & Violations
- §6106 — Moral turpitude (dishonesty and false documents)
- §6068(e) — Breach of client confidentiality
- §6068(m) — Failure to communicate with clients
- Rule 3-110 — Failure to perform competently
- Rule 3-700 — Failure to refund unearned fees
- Rule 1-110 — Failure to comply with prior discipline
Defenses Raised
Johnson argued that many of the alleged failures resulted from heavy workload, administrative disorganization, and staffing problems rather than intentional misconduct. He also contended that some client complaints were exaggerated and that he believed he had authority to sign certain documents on behalf of clients.
The Review Department rejected these defenses. It held that an attorney’s duty of competence and honesty cannot be excused by poor office management, and that signing a client’s name to legal documents without explicit authorization constitutes serious misconduct.
Mitigation
- Some character testimony from colleagues
- Long career in practice
- Limited cooperation during proceedings
The Review Department gave limited weight to mitigation because Johnson demonstrated minimal recognition of wrongdoing and failed to fully cooperate with disciplinary authorities.
Aggravation
- Prior disciplinary record
- Multiple acts of misconduct
- Pattern of client neglect
- Dishonesty toward clients and courts
- Significant client harm
Sanctions Table
| Violation | Conduct | Authority | Discipline Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moral Turpitude | Signing client names, false statements | §6106 | Primary discipline basis |
| Confidentiality Breach | Disclosure of client conviction | §6068(e) | Serious ethical violation |
| Client Neglect | Failure to perform services | Rule 3-110 | Pattern misconduct finding |
| Failure to Refund Fees | Retained unearned fees | Rule 3-700 | Client harm factor |
| Prior Discipline Violations | Non-compliance with reproval | Rule 1-110 | Major aggravation |
Outcome
The Review Department increased discipline substantially, recommending a five-year stayed suspension, five years of probation, and two years of actual suspension. Johnson was also required to make restitution, complete law office management training, and demonstrate rehabilitation before reinstatement.
