Board of Law Examiners v. Gabriel

HECHT, Justice, delivered the opinion of the Court, joined by PHILLIPS, Chief Justice, SPECTOR, OWEN and ABBOTT, Justices.

The principal question in this original mandamus proceeding is whether the Board of Law Examiners is authorized by the Rules of Disciplinary Procedure to investigate the moral character and the mental and emotional fitness to practice law of a person petitioning for reinstatement to membership in the State Bar of Texas. The answer is no.

Jack G. Neal was disbarred in 1985 as a result of his conviction of a felony (official misconduct). Neal now seeks reinstatement. *228The Rules of Disciplinary Procedure prescribe the process for reinstatement after disbarment or resignation in lieu of disciplinary action. Tex.R. DISCIPLINARY P. 11.01-11.08, reprinted in Tex. Gov’t Code Ann., tit. 2, subtit. G app. A-l (Vernon Supp.1997). A person must file a verified petition in the district court containing, among other things, “[a] statement that at the time of the filing of the petition, the petitioner is of good moral character, possesses the mental and emotional fitness to practice law, and during the five years immediately preceding the filing of the petition, has been living a life of exemplary conduct.” Id. 11.02(E). The petitioner must serve notice of the petition for reinstatement on the State Bar’s Chief Disciplinary Counsel and publish notice as a paid classified announcement in the Texas Bar Journal. Id. 11.04.

Neal fully complied with these rules. He filed a verified petition in the district court alleging: “At the time of the filing of this petition, Jack G. Neal is of good moral character and possesses the mental and emotional fitness to practice law. Jack G. Neal has lived a life of exemplary conduct during the five years immediately preceding the filing of this petition.” He served the Chief Disciplinary Counsel, who filed an answer on behalf of the Bar. Neal’s classified announcement was published in the Texas Bar Journal. 58 Tex. Bar J. 860 (Sept.1995).

The rules further provide that at trial, “petitioner has the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that the best interests of the public and the profession, as well as the ends of justice, would be served by his or her reinstatement.” Tex.R. DISCIPLINARY P. 11.03. The rule requires the court to “deny the petition for reinstatement if it contains any false statement of a material fact or if the petitioner fails to meet the burden of proof.” Id. The rules also prescribe the requisite findings and the available relief:

If the court is satisfied after hearing all the evidence, both in support and in opposition to the petition, that the material allegations of the petition are true and that the best interests of the public and the profession, as well as the ends of justice, will be served, the court may render judgment authorizing the petitioner to be reinstated upon his or her compliance within eighteen months from the date of the judgment with Rule II of the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar of Texas in effect as of the date upon which judgment authorizing reinstatement is entered. The judgment shall direct the Board of Law Examiners to admit the petitioner to a regularly scheduled bar examination in accordance with that board’s rules and procedures relating to the examination of persons who have not previously been licensed as lawyers in Texas or in any other state.

Id. 11.06.

Thus, to grant a petition for reinstatement, the district court must find two things. First, the court must find that the petitioner has proven true by a preponderance of the evidence the material statements in the petition. Because the petition must state that petitioner is of good moral character, is fit to practice law, and has led an exemplary life for the preceding five years, the court must find these things to be true before it can grant the petition. Second, the court must find that reinstatement will serve the public’s and profession’s best interests as well as the ends of justice.

Neal and the Bar appeared at trial by counsel and presented evidence and argument The district court then made the following findings:

The Court has considered the pleadings and all of the evidence both in support and in opposition to the petition. The Court finds that the material allegations of the petition are true and that all prerequisites to the filing and maintaining of same have been met. The Court also finds that at the time of the filing of this petition, Jack G. Neal is of good moral character and possesses the mental and emotional fitness to practice law and he has lived a life of exemplary conduct during the five years immediately preceding the filing of the petition and that the best interests of the public and the profession, as well as the ends of justice, will be served, if the court renders a judgment authorizing the Petitioner, Jack G. Neal, to be reinstated upon *229passing a bar examination regularly administered by the Texas Board of Law Examiners within eighteen months from the date of this judgment.

Based on these findings, the court rendered judgment as follows:

1. That the license to practice law of Petitioner Jack G. Neal, be reinstated upon passing a bar examination regularly administered by the Texas Board of Law Examiners within eighteen months from the date of this judgment.
2. That the Board of Law Examiners admit the Petitioner, Jack G. Neal, to a regularly scheduled bar examination for the examination of persons who have not previously been licensed as lawyers in Texas or in any other state.
3. That the Board of Law Examiners not make additional inquiry into the moral fitness or character of Petitioner, Jack G. Neal.
4. That upon successfully passing a regularly scheduled bar examination Petitioner, Jack G. Neal, shall be admitted to the practice of law in the State of Texas.
5. That all costs are adjudged against Petitioner, Jack G. Neal.

The Bar did not appeal, and the judgment has become final.

Having completed the process prescribed by the Rules of Disciplinary Procedure, Neal next requested and received from the Board of Law Examiners an application for admission to the bar exam. The Board accepted Neal’s application and allowed him to take the bar exam, which he passed. However, the Board has refused to recommend Neal for reinstatement because it believes that it cannot do so under the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar without first investigating his character and fitness as it would every other applicant’s, and such an investigation is prohibited by the district court’s order. To resolve the conflict between what the Board perceives as its duty and the district court’s order, the Board petitioned this Court for mandamus directing the district court to modify its order to remove the prohibition against the Board’s investigation of Neal’s character and fitness.

The Board’s duty to investigate character and fitness derives from Rule IV of the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar, which states in part:

(a) No one shall be eligible for admission to the Texas Bar or for certification as a Foreign Legal Consultant until the investigation of such person’s moral character and fitness has been completed, and it has been determined by the Board that such individual possesses good moral character and fitness.

Tex.R. GOVERN. Bar Admis. IV (West Supp. 1997) (emphasis added). By its own terms, Rule IV applies only to persons applying for admission, not persons applying for reinstatement.

Rule II of the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar states in pertinent part:

(a) To be eligible for admission or reinstatement as a licensed attorney in Texas, the Applicant shall:
(1) comply with all applicable requirements of these Rules;
‡ ‡ ‡ ‡
(3) be of present good moral character and fitness....

Id. II (emphasis added). Unlike Rule IV, Rule II does not provide for the Board to investigate an applicant’s character and fitness. Rule II provides only that an applicant for admission or reinstatement be of good moral character and fitness, not that the Board make a determination to that effect. A judicial finding in a reinstatement proceeding that petitioner is of good character and fitness satisfies Rule II.

This, of course, only makes sense. To require the Board to investigate the character and fitness of petitioners for reinstatement would lead to absurd results. One of the two core findings a district court must make in granting reinstatement is that “petitioner is of good moral character, possesses the mental and emotional fitness to practice law, and during the five years immediately preceding the filing of the petition, has been living a life of exemplary conduct.” Tex.R. *230DISCIPLINARY P. 11.02(E). If the Board of Law Examiners were required to redetermine petitioner’s character and fitness immediately after the district court has made its finding, the Board, considering all the same evidence, might disagree with the district court. If the Board is to make the final decision, why have a court proceeding? The district courts have better things to do than screen reinstatement petitions for the Board of Law Examiners. If the court’s decision is final, why have the Board redetermine it? The Board certainly has better things to do than reinvestigating, to no avail, issues that courts have just tried.

The scheme of the Rules of Disciplinary Procedure is to require a petitioner for reinstatement to obtain a judicial determination of the essential conditions for reinstatement. The district court’s role in the process is certainly not essential. The Board of Law Examiners is as capable as the district court of determining character and fitness; after all, the Board makes such determinations for everyone admitted to the State Bar. But if the Board is the entity that should make character and fitness findings for reinstatement, then there is no reason to require the district court to make them. There is certainly no reason for the Board to make findings de novo after a court has rendered judgment.

There is a good reason for the reinstatement procedures to be as they are. Besides character and fitness, the other core finding that must be made is that reinstatement serves public’s and profession’s interests and the ends of justice. The Board of Law Examiners is not incapable of making such a finding, but the issue is more appropriately addressed to the court. If the court should make this finding, it only makes sense that the court would also determine character and fitness. It would not do for the court to determine that reinstatement served the public, the profession, and justice, only to have the Board find that petitioner was not fit to practice law. If one entity should make both determinations, there are reasons why that entity should be the court rather than the Board.

The dissent argues that to allow district courts to determine the character and fitness of petitioners for reinstatement allows for “home-town” justice which could be prevented if the determinations were made by the Board. If this is a legitimate concern, the Rules of Disciplinary Procedure should be changed. But the argument does not justify ignoring the existing rules. The dissent also argues that the Board has an interest in reinstatement proceedings that is not protected by the presence of the State Bar as a party. Again, if this is true, the rules should be changed to make the Board a party to reinstatement proceedings either in addition to or in lieu of the Bar. The argument does not justify allowing the Board to second-guess district judges or collaterally attack their findings. Finally, the dissent argues that we should “find it a comfort” that both a district court and the Board would be “checking and rechecking a disbarred lawyer’s character”. We do not. We think the court and the Board are both able to perform this function, but we see absolutely no reason to burden both of them with the same inquiry, nor can we accept that the Board can choose not to be bound by the court’s determination.

The district court in Neal’s case was not authorized to prohibit the Board from inquiring into Neal’s character and fitness, but since the Board has no power to make such inquiry, the court’s error was inconsequential. If the Board were impeded from exercising its responsibilities, of course, mandamus might be appropriate. State Bar of Texas v. Jefferson, 942 S.W.2d 575 (Tex.1997). But that, as we have explained, is not the case. The court should also have ordered that Neal not be reinstated until he complied with Rule II of the Rules Governing Admission to the Bar. However, since Neal has fully complied with Rule II, that error is moot.

Accordingly, without hearing oral argument, the Court concludes that the Board is not entitled to mandamus relief. Tex. R.App.P. 170. The Board should certify Jack G. Neal to this Court for reinstatement to membership in the State Bar upon his passing the bar exam and without further investigation into his character and fitness.