In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: October 5, 2015
S15Y1852. IN THE MATTER OF PAUL R. KOEHLER.
PER CURIAM.
This disciplinary matter is before the Court on the Report and
Recommendation of Special Master Brian D. Burgoon, filed in response to the
Formal Complaint of the State Bar, which seeks the disbarment of Paul R.
Koehler (State Bar No. 427600). The State Bar’s Formal Complaint was filed
in August 2014, and, following a timely answer to the complaint, Koehler
suffered an injury that resulted in his filing requests for a leave of absence from
the proceedings. On January 20, 2015, the special master entered an order
giving Koehler leave until January 31, 2015, informing him of the Bar’s
expressed intention to move for summary judgment and setting a time period for
his response, and instructing him of what to do should he require further leave,
which he subsequently did not seek. The State Bar filed its motion for summary
judgment on January 27, 2015, and, following proceedings concerning
Koehler’s request to depose the grievant in this disciplinary action and the
grievant’s co-defendant in the civil litigation out of which this matter arose, the
deadline for Koehler to respond to the motion for summary judgment was
repeatedly extended until a April 13, 2015 deadline was established. On April
6, 2015, Koehler submitted, among other filings, a motion to dismiss this matter,
which the special master denied in an order issued May 1, 2015, that also
granted the State Bar's motion for summary judgment. Koehler submitted two
untimely-filed documents in response to the May 1 order, both of which raised
issues from the underlying civil litigation and challenged the special master’s
decision not to allow the requested depositions.
The facts, as found by the special master, show that Koehler, who was
admitted to practice law in 1963, represented a woman in a civil action against
the grievant in this matter and his son, who had been married to the plaintiff and
who the complaint alleged had engaged in a fraudulent transfer of real property
to shield assets from being used to satisfy his child support obligations.
Summary judgment was granted against the plaintiff in that action and, while the
appeal of that judgment was pending in the Court of Appeals, the plaintiff died.
The Court of Appeals remanded the case to the superior court in May 2009 for
the substitution of a proper party, but no motion to substitute was filed, and, in
2
March 2011, the court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to
timely substitute. Koehler appealed the dismissal, but the Court of Appeals
dismissed the appeal and the subsequent motion for reconsideration, and this
Court denied Koehler’s petition for writ of certiorari, the initial motion for
reconsideration, and a motion to allow a second motion for reconsideration. As
noted by the special master, as of November 5, 2012, the date of this Court’s
order denying the motion to allow a second motion for reconsideration, the issue
concerning substitution was fully and finally decided against Koehler and the
decisions of this Court and the Court of Appeals were binding as to future
proceedings.
During the pendency of the underlying proceedings, the Fulton County
Probate Court appointed the County Conservator, Ann Herrera, as conservator
and then administrator of the deceased client’s estate. Koehler was engaged by
Herrera to continue the then-pending litigation, but the engagement granted
Koehler no further authority to act on Herrera’s behalf. Despite that lack of
authority, during the pendency of the appeal of the March 2011 order, Koehler
sought in the superior court to substitute Herrera as the party plaintiff in her
capacity as administrator of the estate, which the superior court denied for lack
3
of jurisdiction, as well as denying a subsequent motion for new trial, which
sought to challenge the denial of the motion to substitute. Koehler also filed,
without first consulting Herrera, a federal civil action naming Herrera as the
plaintiff and alleging a conspiracy among the defendants and the trial judge to
prevent the estate from asserting its rightful claims. The federal civil action,
which was dismissed by Koehler at Herrera’s behest after she learned that the
action had been filed, omitted relevant details from the complaint and made
materially deceitful and misleading statements. After this Court’s November 5,
2012, order denying Koehler leave to file a second motion for reconsideration,
he continued filing motions in the superior court attempting to contest its
resolution of the issues already definitively disposed of by this Court and the
Court of Appeals on appeal, and filed notices of appeal to the Court of Appeals
regarding the denials of two of those motions. On October 10, 2013, Herrera
discharged Koehler from representation of the estate, but when Koehler moved
to withdraw the appeals he had filed, the Court of Appeals imposed sanctions
against Herrera, as the resolution of the prior appeal rendered these subsequent
appeals frivolous. Furthermore, despite having been discharged by Herrera,
Koehler continued to file frivolous motions on behalf of the estate and hold
4
himself out in those filings as the attorney for the estate.
Based on these facts, the special master found that Koehler had committed
violations of Rules 1.2, 1.4, 3.1, 3.3, 4.4, and 8.4 (a) (4) of the Georgia Rules of
Professional Conduct, see Bar Rule 4-102 (d). The maximum sanction for a
violation of Rules 1.2, 3.3, and 8.4 (a) (4) is disbarment, and the maximum
sanction for a violation of Rules 1.4, 3.1, and 4.4 is a public reprimand. In
mitigation, the special master noted only that Koehler lacked a prior disciplinary
record, but in aggravation, the special master noted that Koehler had a dishonest
or selfish motive, that the facts showed multiple offenses indicative of a pattern
of misconduct, that Koehler had engaged in bad faith obstruction of the
disciplinary proceeding, and that Koehler had failed to acknowledge his
wrongful conduct. After reviewing all issues pertinent to the resolution of this
matter, the special master recommends that Koehler be disbarred.
Koehler has filed in this Court a response to the special master’s report
and recommendation, much of which is given over to a discussion of the
substitution issue in the underlying civil litigation and accusations concerning
the actions of the grievant and his co-defendant in that litigation. Koehler
continues to state that he has done nothing warranting the imposition of the
5
suggested punishment. Koehler’s arguments against the specific accusations of
the Formal Complaint are largely unresponsive to the claims presented there.
Having reviewed the record, we conclude that disbarment is the
appropriate sanction in this matter. Accordingly, it is hereby ordered that the
name of Paul R. Koehler be removed from the rolls of persons authorized to
practice law in the State of Georgia. Koehler is reminded of his duties pursuant
to Bar Rule 4-219 (c).
Disbarred. All the Justices concur.
6