FILED
June 10, 2022
No. 18-0363 – Lawyer Disciplinary Board v. Doheny released at 3:00 p.m.
EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
OF WEST VIRGINIA
WOOTON, J., dissenting:
As the majority correctly observes, this Court declared private discipline of
attorneys in West Virginia unconstitutional in 1984 as a violation of the open courts
provision of the West Virginia Constitution art. III, § 17. See Daily Gazette Co. v. Comm.
on Legal Ethics of the W. Va. State Bar, 174 W. Va. 359, 326 S.E.2d 705 (1984).
Accordingly, when thereafter crafting the Rules of Lawyer Disciplinary Procedure, the
Court authorized only forms of public discipline against members of the State Bar. See
Rule 3.15 (outlining permissible sanctions). Commensurately, the Court crafted its
“Reciprocal discipline” Rule 3.20 to authorize mutual discipline in this State upon
notification of “any form of public discipline” rendered against a Bar member elsewhere.
See Rule 3.20(b) (emphasis added); see also Rule 4.4 (authorizing Disciplinary Counsel to
“seek reciprocal discipline when informed of any public discipline imposed in any other
jurisdiction” (emphasis added)). This was plainly a deliberate and common sensical
limitation; the same Rule requires, as its name suggests, that “the same discipline be
imposed” in West Virginia, absent extenuating circumstances. Simply stated, since West
Virginia permits only public discipline, West Virginia can only reciprocally impose “the
same discipline” where the discipline received elsewhere is likewise public. Because the
majority fails to observe the plain language of this Court’s procedural Rules in this regard,
I respectfully dissent.
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I take no issue with the majority’s conclusion that this Court maintains
jurisdiction over every lawyer admitted in the State and that procedural violations do not
necessarily serve to strip the Court of disciplinary “jurisdiction.” Further, it is clear that
respondent Doheny’s Pennsylvania convictions could have properly formed the basis of
disciplinary action under Rule 3.19 (providing for charges based upon conviction of
felony), as was initially instituted. Therefore, any concern that a strict construction of the
reciprocal discipline rules would allow sanctionable misconduct to elude the disciplinary
process is entirely unwarranted. The Office of Disciplinary Counsel properly initiated
proceedings under Rule 3.19; had it simply followed through with that action without then
seeking the abridged procedures permitted through reciprocal discipline, respondent’s
felony conviction would have been afforded proper treatment under our Rules of Lawyer
Disciplinary Procedure. 1
However, by choosing to institute reciprocal discipline under Rule 3.20, the
Office of Disciplinary Counsel relegated this matter to the construct and limitations placed
upon that truncated disciplinary process in our Rules of Lawyer Disciplinary Procedure.
As per Rule 3.20(a) and (d), in reciprocal proceedings the Hearing Panel Subcommittee is
permitted to take action without a formal hearing and the respondent may only challenge
the validity of the disciplinary order in the foreign jurisdiction. Further, reciprocal
1
In fact, since that proceeding was stayed, no party offers any rationale why that
proceeding could not simply recommence, affording a procedural remedy to this errant
reciprocal proceeding that serves all interests and circumvents the majority’s tortured
interpretation of our own disciplinary rules.
2
discipline under Rule 3.20 makes no provision for a mitigation hearing as in Rules 3.18
and 3.19. Very clearly, the procedural protections afforded under Rules 3.18 and 3.19
differ meaningfully from the abbreviated proceedings outlined in Rule 3.20.
Recognizing that the plain language of Rule 3.20 limits reciprocal discipline
proceedings to public discipline received elsewhere, the Hearing Panel Subcommittee
correctly found this matter could not proceed against respondent who was privately
reprimanded. Before this Court, counsel for the Lawyer Disciplinary Board effectively
conceded as much. Yet the majority concludes that despite Rule 3.20 and Rule 4.4’s
references tying reciprocal proceedings to only “public” discipline, the subsections of Rule
3.20 operate independently. It finds that while a lawyer may only have a duty to notify the
Office of Disciplinary Counsel of public discipline, it may still proceed with reciprocal
proceedings based upon private discipline. 2 However, to read the various subsections—all
of which exist under the umbrella of the “Reciprocal discipline” rule—as being unrelated
runs afoul of any reasonable concepts of construction: “The rule concerning construction
of statutory provisions in pari materia applies with at least as much force to subsections of
2
The majority fails to explain how the Office of Disciplinary Counsel would even
become aware of private discipline. The voluntary reporting of private discipline in this
case would certainly not be expected to be the norm. If rendering discipline in West
Virginia for private discipline elsewhere is of such paramount importance that we must
distort our Rules to allow it, it would seem the Rule would have required notification of
any discipline rendered elsewhere.
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one section as it does to more than one section of statutory provisions.” Courtney v. State
Dep’t of Health of W. Va., 182 W. Va. 465, 470 n.6, 388 S.E.2d 491, 496 n.6 (1989). 3
More to the point, the requirement that reciprocal discipline procedures be
limited to public discipline rendered elsewhere is a simple matter of practicality: because
West Virginia does not recognize private discipline, rendering reciprocal, identical
discipline in West Virginia is an impossibility. This Court has repeatedly held in reciprocal
discipline cases that “[t]he provisions of Rule 3.20 of the West Virginia Rules of Lawyer
Disciplinary Procedure require the imposition of the identical sanction imposed by the
3
The majority not only untethers the various subsections from each other but
extends subsection (a) beyond the context of reciprocal proceedings. Isolating subsection
(a)’s provision that final adjudication conclusively establishes conduct for purposes of
proceedings under “these rules,” it extrapolates that phrase to mean that reciprocal
proceedings are not limited by the Rule’s language generally. However, this Court has
previously held just the opposite, expressly limiting subsection (a) to the context of
reciprocal proceedings: “Pursuant to Rule 3.20 of the West Virginia Rules of Lawyer
Disciplinary Procedure, a final adjudication of professional misconduct in another
jurisdiction conclusively establishes the fact of such misconduct for purposes of reciprocal
disciplinary proceedings in this state.” Syl. Pt. 1, Law. Disciplinary Bd. v. Post, 219 W.
Va. 82, 631 S.E.2d 921 (2006) (emphasis added).
Further, any suggestion that subsection (a)—which contains no “public”
restriction— is the authorizing and governing provision for reciprocal discipline misreads
the Rule altogether. Subsection (a) is fairly described as making simply an evidentiary
allowance, i.e. where the misconduct is proven elsewhere, it is proven here. Subsection
(b) is the notice provision, limited only to “public discipline.” (Emphasis added).
Subsection (c), if any, is the enabling provision for reciprocal discipline, stating that upon
notice that an attorney has been “publicly disciplined” the Office of Disciplinary Counsel
“shall” refer the matter to the Hearing Panel Subcommittee. (Emphasis added). Nowhere
does the Rule allow, much less mandate, action under the reciprocal discipline rule upon
notification of private discipline. However, as indicated supra, notification of respondent’s
felony conviction alone permits discipline under Rule 3.19.
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foreign jurisdiction unless one of the four grounds provided for challenging the discipline
imposed by a foreign jurisdiction is both asserted and established.” Syl. Pt. 4, Law.
Disciplinary Bd. v. Post, 219 W. Va. 82, 631 S.E.2d 921 (2006) (emphasis added); see also
Comm. on Legal Ethics of the W. Va. State Bar v. Battistelli, 185 W. Va. 109, 116, 405
S.E.2d 242, 249 (1991) (finding that discipline initiated under the reciprocal discipline
procedures “requires imposition of the identical sanction imposed by the other jurisdiction
in the absence of one of the enumerated exceptions” and collecting cases). As indicated
above, at the time the Rules of Lawyer Disciplinary Procedure were adopted, this Court
had long since held that private discipline was unconstitutional. It is no surprise therefore
that the Rule permitting a “short-cut,” reciprocal proceeding designed to simply mirror the
discipline issued elsewhere must be limited to discipline which this Court can mimic under
its disciplinary authority.
Further, the exceptions to the imposition of “the same discipline” under Rule
3.20(e) provide no escape hatch to impose reciprocal discipline which differs from the
other jurisdiction in respondent’s case. Exceptions (1) through (3) to imposition of “the
same discipline” are designed to mitigate any unfairness to a respondent attorney through
strict application of the same discipline imposed in the other jurisdiction. If the procedure
in the other jurisdiction did not comply with due process, if the proof was “infirm,” or the
same discipline here would result in a “grave injustice,” the same discipline need not be
recommended by the Hearing Panel Subcommittee. See Rule 3.20(e). Only the final
exception—where “the misconduct proved warrants [] a substantially different type of
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discipline be imposed”—may the Hearing Panel Subcommittee recommend anything other
than identical discipline. Here, the Lawyer Disciplinary Board sought an enhanced
discipline—public reprimand, rather than private—not because the “misconduct . . .
warrant[ed]” it, but because our Court simply has not authorized a private reprimand.
(Emphasis added).
Because West Virginia has no disciplinary measure “identical” to the private
reprimand issued by the Pennsylvania Disciplinary Board, it cannot effectuate reciprocal
discipline pursuant to and as authorized by our Rules of Disciplinary Procedure. The
proper mechanism was the one chosen and then abandoned by Office of Disciplinary
Counsel: Rule 3.19. It is simply unnecessary to torturously read our own Rules of
Disciplinary Procedure in order to hold respondent to account in West Virginia.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent to the majority’s remand for further proceedings and
would adopt the Hearing Panel Subcommittee’s recommendation to dismiss the
proceedings.
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