In re: Herbert Moncier v. , 488 F. App'x 57 ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •                   NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 12a0640n.06
    No. 09-5227                                      FILED
    Jun 18, 2012
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT                             LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
    In re: HERBERT S. MONCIER,                                 )
    )   On Appeal from the United States
    Petitioner-Appellant.                            )   District Court for the Eastern
    )   District of Tennessee
    )
    Before:          BOGGS and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges; BARZILAY, Judge.*
    BOGGS, Circuit Judge. No means no. The suspended and oft-sanctioned Herbert Moncier
    does not seem to grasp this point. Moncier’s case returns to the Sixth Circuit, this time as a result
    of his filing motions in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee, after
    having been told repeatedly after his suspension by that court that he could not do so. The issues on
    this appeal are limited to two orders that Chief Judge Collier issued on January 16 and February 11,
    2009. First, Moncier asserts that he was denied notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to the
    entering of these two orders; second, he asserts that Chief Judge Collier improperly received and
    considered ex parte information; third, he asserts that the district court exceeded its jurisdiction and
    authority; fourth, he alleges that the evidence does not support the district court’s findings. All of
    these claims are without merit. We affirm the district court’s orders.
    *
    The Honorable Judith M. Barzilay, Senior Judge of the United States Court of International
    Trade, sitting by designation.
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    I
    A
    On April 29, 2008, Chief Judge Collier issued an order prohibiting Moncier from
    representing any clients and filing any documents with the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Tennessee. This order followed a lengthy history of Moncier filing frivolous
    pleadings and exhibiting contemptuous conduct in court.1 Moncier appealed this suspension order,
    and we affirmed. In Re: Herbert S. Moncier, 329 F. App’x 636 (6th Cir. 2009).2
    At the time of the suspension order, Moncier claims that he represented clients in 23 federal
    cases. Between May and September of 2008, Moncier filed numerous motions with the court
    regarding the suspension order, allegedly seeking to clarify the scope of what he could and could not
    do with respect to his cases. With each motion, the court placed further restrictions on Moncier. In
    September 2008, notices for a show cause hearing for failure to prosecute were issued by Judge Leon
    Jordan in three cases—Stidham v. Hutchison, 3:04-cv-139; Harvey v. Evans, 3:04-cv-192; and
    Green v. Hutchison, 3:05-cv-214—in which Moncier was previously counsel of record. Moncier
    filed various motions in these three cases, allegedly “to protect Moncier’s employment contracts in
    those cases, to advise the Court as to the status of Moncier’s appeal of Judge Collier’s suspension
    1
    For background, see United States v. Moncier, 
    571 F.3d 593
    , 594-98 (6th Cir. 2009).
    2
    This court decided the appeal of the suspension order, as well as the case of United States
    v. Moncier, 
    571 F.3d 593
    (6th Cir. 2009) (vacating the conviction for contempt of court), on July
    8, 2009, six days after Moncier filed his appellant brief in the instant case.
    -2-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    order, and to prevent those cases from being dismissed.” Appellant Br. at 8. In each case, Judge
    Jordan ruled that Moncier could not file those motions.
    In United States v. Oakley, 3:07-cr-88, a magistrate judge ruled that Moncier could confer
    with new counsel appointed to represent Oakley, consistent with the suspension order. On October
    22, 2008, Moncier “appealed the Magistrate-Judge’s ruling to the District Court to make certain that
    he would not be in violation of Judge Collier’s orders and that Moncier would not be violating a
    directive Moncier had received during his representation of Oakley.” Appellant Br. at 8.
    In another criminal case, Moncier claimed that newly appointed counsel requested that
    Moncier confer with the defendant prior to a trial. United States v. Newman, 3:07-cr-89. “Moncier
    had conflicting orders from Judge Collier and a Magistrate-Judge as to whether Moncier could
    confer with Ms. Newman or the attorney that had been appointed to act as elbow counsel for Ms.
    Newman.” Appellant Br. at 10. On January 12, 2009, Moncier filed a motion, “seeking clarification
    regarding whether Moncier could comply with Ms. Newman’s request to confer with her to prepare
    for her trial on January 16, 2009.” 
    Ibid. B This appeal
    is from two orders that Chief Judge Collier then entered. The first order was
    entered on January 16, 2009, as a result of Moncier filing the motions in Oakley and Newman. R.
    90. Chief Judge Collier found that Moncier’s filing of motions in these two cases violated the
    suspension order, and abused his authorization to act as a pro se litigant. The district court
    “deem[ed] it necessary to take additional steps to vindicate the Suspension Order.” Monicer was
    ordered not to file any document in any case in the United States District Court for the Eastern
    -3-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    District of Tennessee without the prior written authorization of the Chief Judge of the district. The
    order extended not only to Moncier, but also to his attorney, Ralph E. Harwell (who represents
    Moncier on this appeal), or any other attorney acting on behalf of Moncier. The district court further
    ordered the clerk of court not to accept any pleadings from Moncier, or from Harwell or any other
    attorney acting on behalf of Moncier.
    On February 6, 2009, Harwell filed with Chief Judge Collier a motion for leave to file a
    motion on behalf of Carl Seider, who had previously been represented by Moncier in Seider v.
    Hutchinson, 3:06-CV-215. R. 94. Harwell stressed that the motion was filed “at Mr. Seider’s
    request and not at the behest of or on behalf of Hebert S. Moncier.” Harwell sought permission to
    file the “attached pleading on behalf of Mr. Seider.” Moncier also filed a request, pro se, for written
    authorization to file a pro se motion to intervene in Seider v. Hutchinson.
    Chief Judge Collier was not pleased. In response to Harwell’s motion, on February 11, 2009,
    the district court entered an order striking the motion for leave, and denied the request for permission
    to file the motion. R. 96. The court noted that Harwell “cannot do anything as Respondent’s
    [Moncier’s] agent that Respondent is prohibited from doing,” and cannot act “as a ‘front’ for a
    suspended attorney.”
    This was not the first time Harwell had sought to act on behalf of Moncier’s former clients.
    On September 2, 2008, Moncier moved to allow Harwell to file motions on behalf of Moncier’s
    former clients in a civil case. R. 84. The brief—somewhat circuitously—was submitted from
    “Respondent [Moncier], through the undersigned [Harwell]” but was signed by Harwell “For
    -4-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    Respondent Herbert S. Moncier.” The district court denied this motion on October 20, 2008, finding
    that:
    [F]or the Court to authorize Mr. Harwell to file the motion would have the Court
    approving unethical conduct. Mr. Harwell represents Respondent. He does not
    represent the former clients. Mr. Harwell owes a duty of undivided loyalty to
    Respondent and must act in Respondent’s best interest. The interest of the former
    clients are not parallel to those of Respondent and may even be in conflict with
    Respondent’s interest in being reinstated to practice law in this district and in
    rehabilitating his reputation. Thus, the filing of any pleading by Mr. Harwell in a
    case of former clients of Respondent might have him engaging in unethical conduct
    which the Court is unable to authorize. Moreover, permitting Mr. Harwell to act on
    Mr. Moncier’s behalf for the benefit of Respondent’s former clients would also
    violate the Suspension Order. As the Court previously stated, “Assisting a suspended
    attorney in [representing clients] would at the very least have the member of the bar
    committing a serious ethical violation and perhaps would even be aiding and abetting
    the suspended attorney in disobeying the orders of this court, which could constitute
    criminal contempt of court” (Court File No. 71, p. 7). For Mr. Harwell to file a
    motion on behalf of former clients of Respondent where obviously he is acting on
    behalf of Respondent is a contempt of court and is unethical. Therefore, neither
    Respondent nor Mr. Harwell has any authority to act on behalf of Respondent’s
    former clients in an Eastern District of Tennessee case (Court File No. 71) and this
    Court has no authority to authorize unethical conduct. Any other result contradicts
    the basic tenets of the attorney-client relationship. Only licensed practitioners who
    are chosen by clients to represent them can intervene and assert the rights of their
    clients in court. All other third parties must have standing in their own right and
    cannot act on behalf of others.
    R. 86 (emphasis added). The court referenced this September 2, 2008 motion in its February 11,
    2009 order.
    Harwell was on notice that, because of the canons of ethics and the possibility of divided
    loyalties, he was not permitted to file anything on behalf of Moncier’s former clients. Harwell’s
    actions as a “front” were potentially unethical and exposed him to disciplinary proceedings. The
    court warned that any further attempts by Harwell to file motions on behalf of Moncier would
    -5-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    result in the loss of electronic filing privileges and other appropriate sanctions. The district court
    also denied Moncier’s pro se request. R. 95.
    Harwell, on behalf of Moncier, timely appealed the January 16 and February 11 orders.3 The
    February 11 order specifically addressed Harwell, and told him that he could not “do anything as
    Respondent’s agent that Respondent is prohibited from doing.” Although the case is styled In re:
    Herbert Moncier, Harwell, both as an attorney and as a party, is a subject of the February 11 order,
    and his conduct is also at issue before this court.
    III
    First, Monicer and Harwell claim that they were denied a meaningful opportunity to be heard,
    as the January 16 and February 11 orders were entered without notice that the matters were under
    consideration. This claim is without merit. Chief Judge Collier issued order after order after order
    instructing Moncier not to engage in the practice of law in the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Tennessee. With each motion seeking clarification filed by Moncier, the district
    court expanded the prohibition. In federal courts, the maxim, “if at first you don’t succeed, try, try
    again” does not apply. If at first you don’t succeed, quit, or appeal. Don’t persist in asking the same
    court for permission to do what has already been prohibited.
    As this court noted in Moncier’s last effort on appeal:
    3
    The notice of appeal, R. 98, references orders entered on 1/16/09 (R. 90), 1/21/09 (R. 91),
    1/26/09 (R. 92), 2/2/09 (R. 93), 2/9/09 (R. 95), and 2/11/09 (R. 96). Moncier’s brief only references
    the 1/16/09 and 2/11/09 orders, so the appeal of the other orders is waived.
    -6-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    There is no right of revolution in a United States District Court. The lawyer’s duty
    is not to defy the judge’s orders, but to follow them. It is true enough that judges,
    like other humans, will make mistakes, and that those mistakes will sometimes be to
    the detriment of a client’s rights. But that is what Circuit Courts exist to remedy.
    “Lawyers are required to obey even incorrect orders; the remedy is on appeal.” In re
    Dellinger, 
    502 F.2d 813
    , 816 (7th Cir. 1974). We entirely agree with Judge Greer
    that “someone must be in control of what happens in a courtroom[,]” and that the
    someone is “the trial judge, not the lawyer for a criminal defendant nor the lawyer for
    the United States.”
    
    Moncier, 571 F.3d at 599
    (citations omitted).
    Moncier and Harwell were on ample notice that Moncier could not file any motions in the
    United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee as part of his representation of
    clients, without permission. He did so anyway. Twice. Chief Judge Collier’s order, which was
    entered after it “c[a]me to the Court’s attention that Respondent, Herbert S. Moncier, on January 12,
    2009, filed motions in cases of two of his former clients,” was wholly appropriate and complied with
    notions of fairness and due process required by our Constitution. This claim is without merit.
    IV
    Moncier and Harwell argue that Chief Judge Collier “acted on ex parte information to
    discipline Moncier by (1) relying on an unnamed, uncited case to ‘gauge’ Moncier’s discipline and
    then denying Moncier the name, citation or location of that case; (2) considering unspecified
    ‘surrounding circumstances’ not reflected in the November 17, 2007 transcript; (3) considering
    sources of information from the Eastern District of Kentucky; and (4) relying on a secret decision
    of the judges in the EDTN to not follow In re: Mitchell, 
    901 F.2d 11
    (3rd Cir. 1990) in Moncier’s
    case.” Appellant Br. at 20. (citations omitted).
    -7-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    Moncier claims that the January 16, 2009 order, which imposed additional restrictions on
    Moncier, “failed to comply with any of the provisions of EDTN 83.7 in imposing that new discipline
    on Moncier or 28 U.S.C. 401 and Fed. R. Crim. P. 42 regarding contempt of court” in that the district
    court relied on ex parte information. The January 16, 2009 order was premised on documents that
    Moncier filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee in two other
    cases. The district court was permitted to take judicial notice that these briefs, which were public
    records, were signed by Moncier.
    We are somewhat unclear exactly what process Moncier thinks is appropriate, though it
    seems he would have wanted notice and an opportunity to be heard about any ex parte information
    known to the court prior to imposing the punishment. In accordance with EDTN 83.7(b), Chief
    Judge Collier had issued an order to show cause on January 17, 2008 informing Moncier about the
    allegations against him. R. 1. Monicer was on notice of the charges against him, and he should also
    have been on notice about documents that he had filed in the two other cases. The district court had
    a sufficient basis to issue the order, independent of any alleged ex parte knowledge. This claim fails.
    V
    Moncier and Harwell claim that Chief Judge Collier exceeded his authority by prohibiting
    them “any access to the Courts.” Appellant Br. at 24. Essentially, they argue that the order
    suspended “Moncier from practicing law pursuant to his Tennessee law license regarding any issue
    that touches on federal law or speaking to others about matters that touch on federal law.” 
    Ibid. Further, “Moncier asserts
    that Judge Collier does not have authority to limit Moncier’s access to the
    -8-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    Court’s [sic] to protect his employment contract interest and fulfill his ethical duty to his clients.”
    
    Id. at 26.
    This argument is without merit.
    In the January 16, 2009 order, the following limitation was placed on Moncier:
    Accordingly, Respondent, Herbert S. Moncier, is hereby ORDERED not to file any
    motion, pleading, affidavit, effort to intervene, or any other matter in any case in the
    Eastern District of Tennessee without the prior written authorization as to any and
    each motion, pleading, affidavit, effort to intervene, or other matter, of the Chief
    Judge of the Eastern District of Tennessee.
    It confounds the mind how Moncier, as late as November 2008, still had not come to grips
    with the fact that he has been disbarred from practice in the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Tennessee. To the extent that he still had clients with pending matters in that
    court, he could, with the court’s prior written authorization, take steps to enable another attorney
    to take over the cases. Nothing more. The order did not purport to take any action with respect to
    Moncier practicing law outside the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee,
    or in state court.
    Even after extensive warnings, Moncier took it upon himself to file motions without seeking
    prior authorization. As Chief Judge Collier stated in September 2008—months prior to the January
    and February orders—Moncier had more than enough time to ensure his clients obtained other
    counsel—not Harwell, whose loyalties lay with Moncier:
    Last, considering the length of time that has transpired since Respondent’s
    suspension, the former clients have had more than ample time to comply with Judge
    Phillips’ order. The Court suspended Respondent from the bar of the Eastern District
    of Tennessee for a period of three to five years on April 29, 2008. (Court File No.
    -9-
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    69, “Suspension Order,” In re Moncier, 
    550 F. Supp. 2d 768
    (E.D. Tenn. 2008)).
    Upon the entry of that order, Respondent, as he was ethically obligated to do, would
    have immediately notified the former clients that he was no longer permitted to
    practice law in the Eastern District of Tennessee and could no longer represent them.
    Such communication surely would have taken place within the few days immediately
    following the Suspension Order, and no latter [sic] than the first few days of May.
    Respondent would also have informed the former clients they should retain other
    counsel as soon as possible. By the time of Judge Phillips’ order on May 21, 2008,
    the former clients should have already obtained replacement counsel if they desired
    or were able to do so. Almost four months after the Suspension Order the former
    clients still had not obtained counsel so Judge Phillips issued the order that is the
    subject of this motion. Four months is a very long time to allow a case to sit idle and
    is an extraordinarily generous amount of time to allow someone to obtain counsel.
    R. 86. Perhaps if Moncier was so concerned about his ethical duties to his clients, and their cases,
    he would have heeded the court’s warnings, and stopped representing them.
    VI
    Finally, Moncier and Harwell contend that the evidence does not support Chief Judge
    Collier’s findings that Moncier’s pro se pleadings were “frivolous and vexatious.” Appellant Br. at
    29. On appeal, Moncier and Harwell argue that his motions in Stidham, Harvey, and Green were
    aimed at “protecting Moncier’s interest in his employment contracts and satisfying his ethical duties
    to his [former] clients.” 
    Ibid. Neither the January
    16 nor the February 11 order found that Moncier’s pro se pleadings were
    “frivolous” or “vexatious.” The district court does cite one case that dealt with “imposing prefiling
    restrictions in matters with a history of repetitive or vexatious litigation.” Feathers v. Chevron
    U.S.A., Inc., 
    114 F.3d 264
    , 269 (6th Cir. 1998). Chief Judge Collier found in the January 16 order
    that he needed to take additional action in order to “diminish the risk Respondent [Moncier] will file
    - 10 -
    No. 09-5227
    In re: Herbert S. Moncier
    [pro se] additional motions or cases in violation of the Suspension Order.” The court ordered
    Moncier “not to file any motion, pleading, affidavit, effort to intervene, or any other matter in any
    case in the Eastern District of Tennessee without the prior written authorization as to any and each
    motion, pleading, affidavit, effort to intervene, or other matter, of the Chief Judge of the Eastern
    District of Tennessee.” The court’s reasoning was premised on Moncier improperly filing motions
    pro se at all—not Moncier filing “frivolous” or “vexatious” motions. There was no judgment on
    the merits of the motion. Rather, the court objected that they were filed in the first place.
    Consistent with the court's order, Moncier could have first sought the requisite permission
    of Chief Judge Collier to file notices with the court concerning the status of the cases, and his
    interests. He did not do so. Rather, he took it upon himself to file briefs directly with the court, in
    direct conflict with the court's order. If Moncier's intent was simply to protect his interest and satisfy
    his ethical duties, he should have done so ethically.
    VII
    The district court’s January 16 and February 11, 2009 orders are AFFIRMED.
    - 11 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-5227

Citation Numbers: 488 F. App'x 57

Filed Date: 6/18/2012

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023