In Re: Stamps

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit F I L E D In the January 25, 2006 United States Court of Appeals Charles R. Fulbruge III for the Fifth Circuit Clerk _______________ m 05-30621 Summary Calendar _______________ IN THE MATTER OF: JERRY JACKSON STAMPS AND THERESA LYNN WITT-STAMPS, Appellants, _________________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana m 2:04-MC-1831 ______________________________ Before SMITH, GARZA and PRADO, I. Circuit Judges. The order arises from the Stampses’ disbar- ment by the Louisiana Supreme Court. The PER CURIAM:* principal basis for the state disbarment deci- sion is that court’s finding that the Stampses Jerry Stamps and Theresa Witt-Stamps, a purposefully excluded, from their Louisiana married couple, challenge the district court’s bar applications, information regarding past order disbarring them from the practice of law legal employment. The court also found that in the Eastern District of Louisiana. Finding the legal employment the Stampses sought to no error, we affirm. conceal constituted the unauthorized practice of law and that disbarment was the only appro- priate sanction. * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has de- After being notified of the state disbarment termined that this opinion should not be published order, the federal district court directed the and is not precedent except under the limited cir- Stampses to show cause why an identical sanc- cumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4. tion should not be imposed on them in the pressly employed by this circuit.1 Eastern District of Louisiana. After holding an oral hearing and considering the Stampses’ III. objections to the state disbarment proceeding, The Stampses’ main objection to the district the district court ordered them disbarred. court’s order is that, they claim, the state court proceedings on which it was based denied II. them due process. They argue that the evid- The Stampses correctly point out that disci- entiary standards used by the Louisiana Su- pline imposed by federal courts does not auto- preme Court were unconstitutionally lax, and matically flow from discipline in state courts. they urge this court to require that state dis- Theard v. United States, 354 U.S. 278, 282 barment proceedings employ evidentiary (1957). A federal court, however, should rec- standards akin to criminal prosecutions if they ognize, and give effect to, the “condition cre- are to be afforded deference by the federal ated by the judgment of the state court unless, courts. The Stampses also argue, without any from an intrinsic consideration of the state re- elaboration, that the state decision was based cord,” it appears that on insufficient proof of misconduct. (1) the state proceeding was wanting A. in due process; On the due process claim, the Stampses contend that the Louisiana Supreme Court (2) the proof of facts relied on by the should have strictly employed the state’s rules state court to establish want of fair char- of evidence throughout the disbarment procee- acter was so infirm as to give rise to a dings. They object to the introduction of a clear conviction on the federal court’s part variety of hearsay evidence that would prob- that it could not, consistent with its duty, ably not have been admitted in a criminal trial; accept the state court’s conclusion as fi- they contend that their rights under the United nal; or States Constitution to confrontation and cross- examination were repeatedly violated by the (3) that to do so would, for some other Louisiana Supreme Court’s procedures. They grave and sufficient reason, conflict with also attack the disbarment procedures used in the court’s duty not to disbar except upon their case as inconsistent with that court’s the conviction that, under the principles rules. or right and justice, it is constrained to do so. This latter contention is irrelevant. Wheth- er the procedures were adequate under Louisi- Selling v. Radford, 243 U.S. 46, 51 (1917). ana law is not a proper question for this court. The Selling factors continue to be the standard The Stampses concede as much in their brief by which federal courts determine whether when they note that we have no authority, at they will impose reciprocal discipline based on a state court proceeding and have been ex- 1 In re Wilkes, 494 F.2d 472, 476-77 (5th Cir. 1974); In re Dawson, 609 F.2d 1139, 1142 (5th Cir.1980); see In re Watson, 2000 WL 34507666, at *2 (5th Cir. 2000) (unpublished). 2 this stage, to review directly the propriety of certain evidence because of its potential to a state court disbarment order. See Selling, influence their decision improperly. We de- 243 U.S. at 50. The question properly posed cline to do so; that court is eminently qualified by this appeal is whether we should decline to to consider any and all evidence before it in a give reciprocal force to the state court’s dis- disbarment proceeding and to ascribe the ap- barment order because it allegedly is based on propriate weight to that evidence. There is no procedures that fall short of the due process reason, in the record before us, to doubt that guarantees of the United States Constitution. the court did exactly that in the Stampses’ proceeding. Attorneys facing disciplinary proceedings are not entitled to receive all the guarantees af- Regarding their rights to cross-examination forded the accused in a criminal case. Sealed and confrontation of witnesses, the Stampses Appellant 1 v. Sealed Appellee 1, 211 F.3d ask this court to announce a new rule of law 252, 254 (5th Cir. 2000). Although due pro- granting such rights to attorneys facing disci- cess does include notice and an opportunity to plinary action. As stated above, we have nev- be heard in these cases, only rarely will more er required more than notice and an opportu- be required. Crowe v. Smith, 151 F.3d 217, nity to be heard in these cases. It is undisput- 229 (5th Cir.1998). “That attorney discipline ed that the Stampses received notice and a proceedings require proof only by clear and hearing at the state court and federal district convincing evidence, as opposed to ‘beyond a court levels. reasonable doubt,’ is indicative of the mere quasi-criminal nature of such proceedings, There is no justification to depart from our which nature would not implicate all of the due precedent. The Stampses were afforded all the process requirements attendant purely criminal process that is due to attorneys facing disbar- proceedings.” Sealed Appellant 1, 211 F.2d at ment. 254. B. In its opinion disbarring the Stampses, the The Stampses contend, without serious ex- Louisiana Supreme Court correctly noted the planation or elaboration, that their disbarment principal justification for allowing relaxed evi- was based on insufficient proof of misconduct. dentiary rules in disbarment proceedings: Our standard of review on this claim is height- “Unlike a lay jury, this court, in its role as trier ened by Supreme Court law. Under Selling, of fact in disciplinary cases, has the ability to such a challenge will succeed only if the evi- consider the entire record and evaluate and dence relied on by the state court was “so weigh the probative value of evidence based infirm as to give rise to a clear conviction on on the totality of the circumstances.” In re the federal court’s part that it could not . . . Stamps, 874 So. 2d 113, 123 (La. 2004). accept the state court’s decision . . . .” Sell- ing, 243 U.S. at 51. By adopting the rule urged by the Stamps- es, requiring strict application of the rules of The summary of the evidence against the evidence, we essentially would be telling the Stampses provided in the Louisiana Supreme members of the Louisiana Supreme Court that Court’s opinion accurately reflects the con- they are not able objectively to weigh the evi- tents of the state court record. Our review of dence before them and should be shielded from that record does not reveal evidence so scant 3 as to give rise to a clear conviction that the state court decision was faulty. The evidence accumulated against the Stampses is sufficient under Selling to allow us to accept the state court’s finding that the Stampses lied on their bar exam applications to hide the fact that they had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. C. The third Selling factor requires this court not to defer to the state disbarment order if “to do so would, for some other grave and suffi- cient reason, conflict with the court’s duty not to disbar except upon the conviction that, un- der the principles or right and justice, it is con- strained to do so.” Id. Other than the alleged due process violations and insufficient evi- dence claim, the Stampses provide no rationale why we should doubt the state court’s rea- soning. Finding no “grave and sufficient” rea- sons ourselves, we are constrained by law to defer to the decision of the Louisiana Supreme Court. AFFIRMED. 4