In the Matter of Robert Aaron Gorman (Review Dept. 2003) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 567

State Bar Defense Attorneys Published Cases In the Matter of Robert Aaron Gorman (Review Dept. 2003) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 567
0 Comments

In the Matter of Robert Aaron Gorman

4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 567 (Review Dept. 2003)

Probation Revocation – Failure to Timely Pay Restitution – 30-Day Actual Suspension Imposed

Overview

This probation revocation proceeding addressed whether attorney Robert Aaron Gorman willfully violated two conditions of his disciplinary probation: (1) timely completion of restitution and (2) timely attendance at State Bar Ethics School.

Although the hearing judge recommended two years’ stayed suspension with no actual suspension, the Review Department concluded that actual suspension was warranted. The court imposed a 30-day period of actual suspension as a condition of continued probation.

Underlying Discipline

Respondent was admitted to practice in 1995. His prior discipline arose from trust account violations, including failure to properly maintain client funds. A $620 trust account check issued to a medical provider was dishonored.

The Supreme Court imposed:

  • One-year stayed suspension
  • Two years’ probation
  • Restitution of $620 plus 10% interest
  • Completion of Ethics School
  • Passing the Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE)

Probation Violations

Failure to Timely Pay Restitution

Restitution was due April 7, 2001. Respondent paid the $620 principal in June 2001 but failed to pay the required interest until January 7, 2002 — approximately nine months late.

The record showed repeated reminders and intervention by the State Bar’s Probation Unit before full payment was completed.

Failure to Timely Complete Ethics School

Ethics School was required to be completed by January 7, 2002. Respondent completed it February 21, 2002, approximately six weeks late.

Aggravating Factors

  • Prior record of discipline (trust account violations)
  • Repeated State Bar intervention required to secure restitution compliance
  • Late payment of even the principal amount
  • Improper listing of the Yolo County District Attorney’s Office in the caption of pleadings when that office had no role in the matter

Mitigating Factors

  • Participation in proceedings and stipulation to facts
  • Expression of remorse
  • Death of respondent’s father following prolonged illness
  • Financial pressures and disciplinary cost obligations
  • Timely passage of the MPRE
  • Timely filing of quarterly probation reports

The Review Department gave mitigation some weight, but concluded it did not outweigh the seriousness of the restitution violation.

Legal Analysis

The court emphasized that willfulness in probation violations does not require bad intent. Failure to timely comply with significant probation conditions — particularly restitution — supports actual suspension absent compelling mitigating circumstances.

Restitution is central to rehabilitation because it forces attorneys to confront the consequences of misconduct. Where prior discipline involved trust account violations, failure to timely pay restitution is closely tied to the underlying misconduct and to the attorney’s rehabilitation.

The court also reiterated that potential employment consequences do not excuse discipline otherwise warranted.

Discipline Summary

Probation Condition Violated What Happened Court’s Concern Result
Restitution (Principal + 10% Interest) Principal paid late; interest paid nine months after deadline. Full payment occurred only after repeated State Bar reminders. Restitution is central to rehabilitation. Repeated intervention showed lack of timely self-compliance. 30 Days Actual Suspension
Ethics School Completion Completed approximately six weeks after deadline. Delay in fulfilling rehabilitative probation requirement. Included in overall sanction
Total Discipline Ordered 1 Year Stayed Suspension
2 Years Probation (Extended)
30 Days Actual Suspension
Costs Awarded
Categories:
In the Matter of Jeffrey Jason Olin (Review Dept. 2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 166
In the Matter of Jeffrey Jason Olin Review Department (2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct.
In the Matter of Gregory Daniel Trimarche (Review Dept. 2025) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 145
In the Matter of Gregory Daniel Trimarche Review Department (2025) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct.
In the Matter of Rossana Pilar Mitchell (Review Dept. 2025) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 135
In the Matter of Rossana Pilar Mitchell Review Department (2025) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct.
In the Matter of Respondent EE (Review Dept. 2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 127
In the Matter of Respondent EE Review Department (2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr.
In the Matter of Linda Darlene Lucero (Review Dept. 2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 101
In the Matter of Linda Darlene Lucero Review Department (2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct.
In the Matter of Respondent DD (Review Dept. 2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 90
In the Matter of Respondent DD Review Department (2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr.
In the Matter of Anthony Aanand Patel (Review Dept. 2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 84
In the Matter of Anthony Aanand Patel Review Department (2024) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct.
In the Matter of Elana Thibault (Review Dept. 2023) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 64
In the Matter of Elana Thibault Review Department (2023) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr.
In the Matter of George Martin Derieg (Review Dept. 2023) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 46
In the Matter of George Martin Derieg Review Department (2023) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct.
In the Matter of Respondent CC (Review Dept. 2023) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 36
In the Matter of Respondent CC Review Department (2023) 6 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr.