Legal Research AI

State Ex Rel. Indiana State Bar Ass'n. v. Miller

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2002-06-26
Citations: 770 N.E.2d 328
Copy Citations
Click to Find Citing Cases

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT

Steven C. Shockley
Maggie L. Smith
Indianapolis, Indiana

Mitchell R. Heppenheimer
South Bend, Indiana




ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE

Jon R. Pactor
Indianapolis, Indiana

AMICUS CURIAE
NATIONAL COUNCIL OF
PROPERTY TAXATION

Alice McKenzie Morical
Indianapolis, Indiana
__________________________________________________________________


                                   IN THE



                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA

__________________________________________________________________

STATE EX REL. INDIANA STATE  )
BAR ASSOCIATION,             )
                                  )
      Appellant (Relator Below),        )
                                  )     Indiana Supreme Court
            v.                    )     Cause No. 94S00-0001-MS-40
                                  )
M. DREW MILLER,              )
                                  )
      Appellee (Respondent Below).      )
__________________________________________________________________


                               ORIGINAL ACTION

__________________________________________________________________

                                June 26, 2002
BOEHM, Justice.
      This case is an original action  brought  by  the  Indiana  State  Bar
Association (“ISBA”), pursuant to Admission and Discipline Rule 24.[1]  ISBA
contends that in 1996 M. Drew Miller, who is not  an  attorney,  engaged  in
the unauthorized practice of  law  when  he  represented  a  taxpayer  in  a
property tax appeal before the State  Board  of  Tax  Commissioners.   Since
that time, the Board has promulgated  rules  that  clearly  distinguish  the
roles of a “tax representative” and an attorney.  A “tax representative”  is
limited in the services he or she may perform before the  Board,  and  those
services do not include acts that by themselves constitute the  practice  of
law.  ISBA’s requested relief is an injunction  against  Miller  permanently
enjoining him from representing  taxpayers  before  the  Board.   Compliance
with the new rules established by the Board will avoid  unlicensed  practice
of law.  For that reason, ISBA’s request for  injunctive  relief  is  denied
without prejudice to ISBA’s ability to renew its request in  the  event  the
Board’s current rules are not followed.
      For  some  time,  the  Board’s  rule  on  non-attorney  representation
essentially permitted any  person  to  represent  taxpayers  in  proceedings
before the Board.  Ind. Admin. Code tit. 50, r. 4.2-1-7  (1996).   In  1997,
the General Assembly directed the Board to promulgate rules  regulating  the
practice of representatives in proceedings before it.  Ind. Code § 6-1.1-31-
11 (1998).  The Board published a draft  rule  in  response.   Although  the
rule  established  educational  and  certification  requirements,  it  still
permitted non-attorneys to represent  taxpayers  in  any  aspect  of  a  tax
appeal before the Board.  21 Ind. Reg. 4241 (August 1,  1998).   ISBA  filed
suit under Rule 24 to  enjoin  the  implementation  of  the  proposed  rule,
contending that representing taxpayers  before  the  Board  constituted  the
practice of law.
      This Court dismissed the first suit on two grounds: (1) ISBA  had  not
alleged specific acts constituting the  unauthorized  practice  of  law,  as
Rule 24 requires; and (2) the Board and ISBA had  negotiated  to  develop  a
new set of rules that would expressly prohibit the practice  of  law  before
the Board.  State ex rel. Ind. State Bar Ass’n v. State Bd. of Tax  Comm’rs,
714 N.E.2d 128, 129 (Ind. 1999).  The dismissal  was  without  prejudice  to
ISBA, and expressly provided that “ISBA [may] commence a new  action  should
the rules actually adopted substantially deviate from those  the  Court  has
reviewed, or should the ISBA seek to enjoin a  person,  persons,  or  entity
from specific acts constituting the unauthorized practice of law before  the
Board.”  Id. at 131.
      ISBA filed a second petition under  Rule  24  to  enjoin  Miller  from
engaging in the  practice  of  law  based  on  his  1996  representation  of
Hoogenboom-Nofziger, a real estate development company, in an appeal  before
the Board.  On September  19,  2000,  this  Court  appointed  the  Honorable
Charles O’Connor, Judge of the Shelby  Circuit  Court,  as  Commissioner  to
conduct a fact-finding hearing.  On August 28, 2001, Judge  O’Connor  issued
his findings of fact.  The case is now before this Court for resolution.
      On July 11, 1992, Hoogenboom contracted with Landmark Appraisals, Inc.
to challenge the assessed valuation  of  several  of  its  properties.   The
contract provided that Landmark would research, examine,  and  evaluate  the
properties to determine whether the assessed value  was  excessive  and,  if
so, seek a reduction where such an attempt was warranted.  Landmark  was  to
be compensated in the amount of fifty percent of any tax savings.
      Miller is the sole shareholder in Landmark and carried  the  title  of
“Valuation Director” for Landmark.  He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree  from
Anderson College, where he majored in accounting  and  business  management.
In 1997, he received Level I Indiana Assessor-Appraiser  certification  from
the Board and, in 1998, received  Level  II  certification.   He  has  taken
several appraisal courses through the American Society  of  Appraisers,  and
has been certified in real property/ad valorem[2] appraisals, which  measure
a property’s market value.  Miller is not an attorney  and  has  never  held
himself out as  such.   He  is  not  trained  in  interpreting  or  applying
statutes or case law, nor  is  he  trained  in  identifying,  gathering,  or
introducing admissible evidence, in examining or cross-examining  witnesses,
or in applying techniques of advocacy in adversarial proceedings.
      In May 1996,  Miller,  acting  for  Landmark,  represented  Hoogenboom
before the Board, challenging  the  township  assessor’s  valuation  for  an
office building owned by Hoogenboom.  The assessor assigned the  property  a
grade of C-1, an obsolescence depreciation factor of  zero  percent,  and  a
physical depreciation factor of twenty-five percent.  The  county  board  of
review upheld the assessment.  To prepare for the appeal hearing before  the
Board, Miller inspected the property, reviewed the county board of  review’s
determination   and   Board   regulations,   spoke   with    a    Hoogenboom
representative, and compiled an Assessment Review  and  Analysis  containing
the evidence Miller intended to present.
      Miller’s arguments before the Board contained four separate challenges
to the assessment: (1)  a  constitutional  challenge  based  on  Article  X,
Section  1  of  the  Indiana  Constitution;  (2)  a   challenge   that   the
obsolescence depreciation factor was too  low;  (3)  a  challenge  that  the
grade of C-1 was improperly assigned to the property; and  (4)  a  challenge
that the physical depreciation factor was too low.  We agree that the  first
challenge clearly involved questions of law.  ISBA  contends  the  remaining
three  issues  also  required  the  analysis  of  case  law  because   Board
regulations did not fully explain the  evidence  necessary  to  prove  those
factors and interpretation of Indiana Tax Court opinions was required.   The
Board ultimately rejected all of Miller’s arguments and determined that  the
assessment  was  correct.   Hoogenboom  attempted  to  appeal  the   Board’s
determination to the Tax Court, but that appeal proved unsuccessful in  part
due to Miller’s failure to place certain responses to  interrogatories  into
the record at the Board hearing.  Hoogenboom-Nofzinger v. State Bd.  of  Tax
Comm’rs, 715 N.E.2d 1018, 1023 n.2 (Ind. Tax Ct. 1999).
      ISBA contends that Miller’s conduct amounted to the practice  of  law,
and we are inclined to agree, at least as to the  constitutional  claim  and
where the preservation of issues for  appeal  was  at  stake.   We  are  not
convinced that turning to court opinions to answer  the  questions  of  what
constitutes obsolescence  or  depreciation,  for  example,  constitutes  the
practice of law.  Many non-lawyers are as qualified, if not  more  so,  than
most lawyers in the understanding of those terms.  Even if a  court  opinion
has elucidated those  terms,  their  use  does  not  necessarily  constitute
practicing law.  Cf. State ex rel. Pearson  v.  Gould,  437  N.E.2d  41,  43
(Ind. 1982) (representation requiring only  the  use  of  general  knowledge
regarding the legal consequences involved does not constitute  the  practice
of law).  In any event, as Hoogenboom’s  failed  appeal  in  the  Tax  Court
demonstrated, to adequately represent Hoogenboom,  Miller  was  required  to
perform tasks amounting to the practice of law.
      Although the Board’s rules that were  proposed  after  ISBA’s  initial
attempt to enjoin non-attorneys from practicing before the  Board  were  not
in effect as of the Hoogenboom appeal, they are now in effect.   See  I.A.C.
50-15-5 (2001).  I.A.C. 50-15-5-5  defines  a  “tax  representative”  as  “a
person who represents another person at a  proceeding  before  the  property
tax assessment board of appeals, the division of  appeals,  or  the  Board.”
Attorneys are explicitly exempted from that definition  and  may  provide  a
full  range  of  services  before  those  bodies.   “Tax   representatives,”
however, must be certified by the Board, and may  not  practice  before  the
Board in:
      (1) matters relating to real and personal property exemptions  claimed
      on a Form 132 or 136 [exemptions for property  used  for  educational,
      fraternal, literary, charitable or scientific purposes];
      (2) claims that assessments or taxes are “illegal as a matter of  law”
      . . .;
      (3) claims regarding the constitutionality of an assessment; or
      (4) any other representation that involves the practice of law.


IAC  50-15-5-2.   “Tax   representatives”   must   meet   certain   training
requirements, which include being a certified  Level  II  assessor-appraiser
and completing educational course requirements of all rules adopted  by  the
Board  related  to  procedures  for  practice.   Id.    Additionally,   “tax
representatives” must inform their prospective clients in writing that  they
are not attorneys, may not present legal  arguments,  and  may  not  address
legal issues relating to the assessment.  IAC  50-15-5-5.   They  must  also
disclose that legal issues, if not raised properly before the  property  tax
assessment board of appeals, may not be raised at a later stage.   Id.   The
disclosure must be signed by the prospective client.  Id.
      These regulations appear to address  ISBA’s  concerns  about  Miller’s
1996 representation of Hoogenboom.  We noted in ISBA’s earlier challenge  to
non-attorney practice before the Board that “[t]he  Court  is  of  the  view
that the  parties,  by  working  together,  have  developed  proposed  rules
reasonably designed to address the interests of all concerned.”  714  N.E.2d
at 131.  With those proposed rules taking effect last  year,  our  view  has
not changed.  We have no reason to believe Miller will not comply  with  the
Board’s rules.  Nor can we assume that the Board itself will take no  action
if it finds nonconforming representation.  Accordingly,  although  we  agree
with ISBA  that  Miller’s  1996  representation  of  Hoogenboom  encompassed
several aspects of the practice of law,  we  do  not  agree  that  enjoining
Miller from practicing before the Board in the future is appropriate.
      This cause is dismissed without prejudice.


      RUCKER, J., concurs.
      SULLIVAN, J., concurs in result, believing that petitioner’s complaint
seeking injunctive relief should have been dismissed at the outset of  these
proceedings as failing to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
      SHEPARD, C.J., dissents with separate opinion in  which  DICKSON,  J.,
concurs.
SHEPARD, Chief Justice, dissenting.



      Like Judge Charles O’Connor, who acted as our hearing officer in  this
matter, the Court declares itself satisfied that respondent M.  Drew  Miller
practiced law without a license.

      I agree.  Miller used, or attempted to  use,  all  the  tools  of  the
legal profession to represent a client before  a  state  adjudicative  body.
He deployed regulations and appellate court case law; he  tendered  evidence
and made legal argument about it; he  even  presented  state  constitutional
claims.

      Miller’s decision  to  practice  law  without  a  license  was  not  a
victimless crime.  By the time the client’s appeal reached the  Indiana  Tax
Court, it became apparent that  the  client’s  interests  had  been  damaged
because Miller had failed to do for the  client  the  things  most  licensed
lawyers would have done.  Hoogenboom-Nofziger v. Bd.  of  Tax  Comm’rs,  715
N.E.2d 1018, 1023 n.3, 1024 n.4 (Ind. Tax 1999) (describing points  lost  to
client by Miller’s representation).  As the Court says, the client’s  appeal
“proved unsuccessful in part due to Miller’s failure . . . .”  Slip  op.  at
5.

      In spite of all this, the Court renders judgment in favor  of  Miller.
It does so because the Board has new rules governing  what  non-lawyers  may
do and because “[w]e have no reason to believe Miller will not  comply  with
the Board’s rules.”  Slip op. at 7.

      I see little basis for this  confidence,  inasmuch  as  Miller  stands
before us today firmly asserting that he has never  done  anything  remotely
constituting the practice of law and demanding that fees be imposed  on  the
Indiana State Bar Association for  suggesting  that  he  has.   Someone  who
refuses to recognize his violation  is  not  a  plausible  risk  for  future
compliance, especially when  he  has  been  prosecuted  once  before,  found
guilty, and let off scot-free.

      DICKSON, J., concurs.
-----------------------
[1] Rule 24 states, in part: “Original actions . . . to restrain  or  enjoin
the unauthorized practice of law in this state may be brought in this  court
by . . . the Indiana State Bar Association or any duly authorized  committee
thereof, without leave of court . . . .”
[2] An ad valorem tax is “[a] tax imposed proportionally  on  the  value  of
something . . . , rather than  on  its  quantity  or  some  other  measure.”
Black’s Law Dictionary 1469 (7th ed. 1999).