In the Matter of Kuo-Jen Felix Wu (Review Dept. 2001) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 263

State Bar Defense Attorneys Published Cases In the Matter of Kuo-Jen Felix Wu (Review Dept. 2001) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 263
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In the Matter of Kuo-Jen Felix Wu

In the Matter of Kuo-Jen Felix Wu (Review Dept. 2001) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 263

This case establishes that reimbursement rights for exonerated attorneys in State Bar proceedings are strictly limited by statute and rule, and clarifies that transcript costs are recoverable only when ordered by the court.

Facts

The State Bar charged attorney Kuo-Jen Felix Wu with three counts of professional misconduct. After a full trial, the hearing judge found Wu culpable on one count but dismissed the remaining two counts.

Wu sought plenary review under State Bar Rule of Procedure 301, which required him to obtain and pay for a transcript of the trial proceedings. The Review Department later reversed the single culpability finding, concluding the evidence was insufficient and dismissing all charges with prejudice. As a result, Wu was fully exonerated.

Following his exoneration, Wu moved for reimbursement of reasonable expenses incurred in preparation for trial under Business and Professions Code section 6086.10(d). The hearing judge awarded him $2,569.50, including $1,260 for the cost of obtaining the trial transcript used to pursue review.

The State Bar appealed only the transcript reimbursement award, arguing it was unauthorized under the governing reimbursement rule.

Issue

Whether an exonerated attorney may recover transcript costs incurred in seeking review when the transcript was required for appellate review but not specifically ordered by the court.

Legal Framework

  • Business & Professions Code §6086.10(d) — reimbursement for exonerated attorneys
  • State Bar Rule of Procedure 283 — allowable reimbursable expenses
  • Rule 301 — requirement to obtain transcript for plenary review

Defenses & Arguments

Attorney’s Position

Wu argued transcript costs should be reimbursable because they were necessary to obtain review and thus functionally “ordered” by the court.

State Bar’s Position

The State Bar argued reimbursement rights are strictly statutory and that Rule 283 allows transcript reimbursement only when the court expressly orders the transcript.

Key Legal Holdings

Cost Recovery Is Strictly Statutory

The court held the right to recover costs exists only where authorized by statute. Courts have no discretion to award costs not expressly permitted by law.

Rule 283 Provides Exclusive Categories

The allowable reimbursable expenses for exonerated attorneys are limited to nine categories listed in Rule 283. Expenses outside those categories cannot be reimbursed.

Transcript Costs Require Court Order

The court ruled that transcript costs are reimbursable only if the transcript was ordered by the court. A transcript obtained voluntarily by a party—even if required for appellate review— does not qualify.

Necessity ≠ Court Order

The court clarified that a transcript’s necessity for review does not make it “ordered by the court.” The requirement to obtain the transcript arises from procedural rules, not a judicial directive.

Mitigation & Equitable Considerations

The court acknowledged that denying reimbursement may seem unfair because disciplined attorneys can recover transcript costs when seeking review. However, fairness considerations cannot override statutory limitations on cost recovery.

The Review Department encouraged the State Bar to consider future rulemaking or legislative changes to address this inequity.

Sanctions / Relief Table

Issue Ruling Authority Impact
All disciplinary charges Dismissed after review Rule 301 review Attorney exonerated
Reimbursement eligibility Allowed generally §6086.10(d) Partial recovery permitted
Transcript cost reimbursement Denied Rule 283(b)(5) Not recoverable without court order
Final reimbursement amount Reduced by $1,260 Review Dept. ruling Modified order

Outcome

The Review Department modified the hearing judge’s reimbursement order by deleting the $1,260 award for transcript costs, holding the award was unauthorized as a matter of law.


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