The First Department's New Rules for Attorney Discipline

For those interested in the procedural nuances of bar discipline in the First Department, this column focuses on that court's amended procedural rules (the First Department rules), issued contemporaneously with the new, statewide Rules for Attorney Disciplinary Matters, 22 NYCRR Part 1240, effective Oct. 1, 2016 (the statewide rules). In essence, the amended First Department rules incorporate by reference the new statewide rules set forth in Part 1240, but also contain important additions that either effectuate or amplify the statewide rules. This columnist's prior articles assessing the statewide rules will be helpful to better understand the context and background for the First Department's procedural rule changes.1

Structural Changes

Perhaps the most radical changes are structural. The First Department has now established two Attorney Grievance Committees (heretofore, there was only one, the Departmental Disciplinary Committee (DDC)), each consisting of 21 members, of which at least three must be non-lawyers residing or working in the First Department. 22 NYCRR 603.4(a)(1) and (2). Each of the Attorney Grievance Committees shall have a chairperson and a vice-chairperson who must be lawyers. 22 NYCRR 603.4(a)(3). Every member will serve for a three-year term and is eligible for reappointment for not more than one additional term of three years. 22 NYCRR 603.4(a)(2). The Committees also have the power to appoint their members to subcommittees. 22 NYCRR 603.4(a)(1).

These changes effectively abolish the former organizational arrangement in two important ways: (1) by creating two working committees in place of the previous, single committee which had a chairperson, 10 Policy Committee members, and approximately 48 other members; and, (2) by eliminating the Policy Committee (i.e., the executive committee), to be replaced by, as noted, two chairpersons, two vice-chairpersons, and subcommittees. The First Department rules do not specify what functions the subcommittees are to perform; presumably they will review individual cases and then recommend dispositions to the full Committees.

The other important alterations relate to meetings, quorums and, pursuant to the statewide rules, informal determinations. 22 NYCRR 603.4(b); 22 NYCRR 1240.7. Under the old system in the First Department, the DDC met no more than once a year as a Committee of the whole. However, the Policy Committee generally convened monthly. Approval of Formal Charges, or the issuance of Admonitions and Letters of Dismissal with Guidance, were authorized by two members of the Policy Committee, while dismissals of complaints could be confirmed by a single member of the DDC.