Source: https://caselaw.findlaw.com/dc-court-of-appeals/1678358.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 19:14:34+00:00

Document:
IN RE: Robert S. FASTOV, Respondent. A Suspended Member of the Bar of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals (Bar Registration 56333).
Before THOMPSON and McLEESE, Associate Judges, and KING, Senior Judge. Robert S. Fastov, pro se. Julia L. Porter, Assistant Bar Counsel, with whom Wallace E. Shipp, Jr., Bar Counsel, and Jennifer P. Lyman, Senior Assistant Bar Counsel, were on the brief, for the Office of Bar Counsel.
In a Report issued on July 31, 2013, the Board of Professional Responsibility (the “Board”) concluded that Respondent Robert Fastov violated Rules 3.1, 3.4(c), 4.4(a), and 8.4(d) of the D.C. Rules of Professional Conduct in filing and prosecuting a lawsuit against Christie's International PLC et al. (the “Christie's matter”), and also violated Rules 3.1, 4.4(a), and 8.4(d) in filing and prosecuting an unrelated lawsuit against the Palisades Swimming Pool Association and certain members of its governing board (“the Palisades matter”). The Board's conclusions were based on the factual findings set out in a January 5, 2012, report of an Ad Hoc Hearing Committee (the “Hearing Committee” or the “Committee”) and were largely in accord with the Committee's legal conclusions. The Board adopted the Hearing Committee's recommendation that Respondent be suspended from the practice of law for eighteen months and that he be required to demonstrate his fitness to practice as a condition of reinstatement. Respondent broadly attacks the Board's Report; Bar Counsel has filed only limited exceptions to it. We find it unnecessary to address all of the various issues raised by the parties, but conclude that the record and the law amply support a conclusion that, through his conduct in one or both of the matters, Respondent violated all of the foregoing Rules. We also adopt the recommended sanction.
The Hearing Committee found, and the Board accepted as “supported by substantial record evidence,” the following. Respondent was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in December 1969. In 1985, he retired from his position as Deputy Chief Counsel for an agency within the Department of Commerce. Thereafter, he opened an art gallery and worked as an art dealer. At some point, Respondent acquired a landscape painting that he believed was the work of 19th century Austrian artist Emil Jakob Schindler (“the painting” or “the Schindler painting”).2 In February 1993, he contacted Christie's London office in response to an advertisement he had received from the firm about an auction of German and Austrian art it planned for May of that year. In his letter to Christie's, Respondent proposed to consign the painting to Christie's for the auction. He testified before the Hearing Committee that, through telephone conversations, he and Wendy Goldsmith of Christie's reached an oral consignment agreement under which Christie's was required to offer the painting for sale as an “unqualifiedly authentic Schindler painting” and was specifically prohibited from seeking an expert opinion as to the painting's authenticity.3 In March 1993, Respondent sent the Schindler painting and two other paintings to Christie's and received in response a document that acknowledged receipt of the paintings and set forth Christie's conditions of sale, which reserved to Christie's “absolute discretion as to ․ whether the Lot is suitable for sale by Christie's, and ․ whether the views of any expert shall be obtained[,]” and provided that “Christie's reserves the right to withdraw any property at any time before the actual sale if, in Christie's sole judgment ․ there is doubt as to its attribution or to its authenticity [.]” Before returning the document to Christie's, Respondent crossed out certain provisions, but, the Hearing Committee found, “did nothing to indicate” that the terms quoted above did not apply to the Schindler painting.
After Christie's received the painting in March 1993, a Christie's employee consulted Dr. Gerbert Frdl, director of a prominent Austrian art museum, about the painting. According to statements by Christie's staff, Dr. Frdl advised that he could not render a definitive judgment as to the authenticity of the painting without seeing the original. Goldsmith attested that she called Respondent and told him that Christie's would not auction the painting because Dr. Frdl could not commit to an opinion without seeing the original painting. In contrast, Respondent testified that his understanding of what Goldsmith told him on or about April 1, 1993, was that Dr. Frdl had said that the painting was a “fake.” In March 1994 correspondence to Respondent, Dr. Frdl told Respondent that he had never challenged the authenticity of the painting or called it a “fake.” At that point, Respondent concluded that Christie's employees had been lying to him. That conclusion was the backdrop for a 79–page letter that Respondent sent to a Christie's executive in July 1994.
On March 21, 1997, Respondent filed a 225–page Verified Complaint against Christie's in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, alleging “Continuing Fraudulent Misrepresentation and Concealment of Material Facts”; “Continuing Negligent Misrepresentation and Concealment of Material Facts”; “Unfair Trade Practices”; “Breach of the Oral Consignment Agreement and Implied Duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing”; “Negligence and Reckless Conduct”; and “Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress” (“IIED”), and seeking compensatory and punitive damages totaling more than $7 million.
On May 1, 2000, Christie's moved for summary judgment, arguing that Respondent's claims were barred by the statute of limitations and that he had failed to establish any damages. In response, Respondent filed a 59–page opposition, to which he attached a 90–page declaration, a 461–page statement of disputed and undisputed facts, and three volumes, totaling more than 1500 pages, of exhibits. District Court Judge Paul Friedman rebuked Respondent for submitting a filing that did “the opposite” of “assisting the Court in rendering its decision” and that constituted “an abuse of the litigation process.” The court cited Respondent's “well-documented proclivity in this case to engage in obstructionist litigation tactics at the expense of the Court [and] opposing counsel[.]” Judge Friedman ordered Respondent to re-file his opposition, subject to page limitations, and ordered that in the future, Respondent would be personally fined and sanctioned each time he abused the litigation process.
[T]he record amply demonstrates that [Respondent] first initiated, then prosecuted this lawsuit in bad faith for the purpose of harassing Defendants. His egregious behavior, which unreasonably and vexatiously multiplied these proceedings, clearly warrants the imposition of sanctions under [28 U.S.C.] section 1927 as well as under the Court's inherent authority.
You will refrain from any abusive language (threatening or profane), physical intimidation or the creation of any hostile airs toward any members of the Palisades membership, including any of our kids, regardless of age․ You are not to touch in any manner, for any reason, any one other than one of your own family.
You will cease and desist in any behavior that is perceived to be leering, sexually intimidating, or creating a sexually hostile environment which serves to intimidate and frighten our female members and staff. You are not to touch in any manner, for any reason, anyone other than a member of your own family.
The Hearing Committee found that the letter was “discussed only among the Board members, and was sent to Respondent only[,]” and noted that Respondent admitted during his hearing testimony that he had “no evidence that the letter was circulated to anyone other than Palisades Board members” and, eventually, their counsel in the litigation that ensued.
In September 2004, Bryan sent Respondent a letter informing him that the Board had decided not to pursue the matter any further. However, Respondent's threats of litigation continued unabated. In one letter, Respondent threatened that, in the course of the litigation he intended to initiate if his demands were not met, he planned to take “50 to 60 depositions” including those of “you and each and every Board Member and Employee of Palisades in 2004[,] [including] ․ the pool manager and all of the many 2004 lifeguards, swim team instructors and dive team instructors, and the kids who worked in the front office.” He threatened to “break” the pool financially.
Respondent filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland on June 29, 2005, asserting that the court had federal diversity jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) (2006). Although Respondent, himself a D.C. resident, named most of the Palisades Board Members as individual defendants, he (with one inadvertent exception) omitted the names of Board Members who resided in the District, acknowledging subsequently that he did so intentionally7 and claiming that he did so under the belief that they were “permissible defendants” and not “indispensible parties.” Respondent listed eleven causes of action in his complaint, including “Breach of Contract And Implied Obligation To Deal In Good Faith And Fairly With Plaintiff”; “Breach Of Trustee's[ ] Obligation As A Fiduciary And Of A Confidential Relationship”; “Negligence, Gross Negligence, Recklessness, Malicious And/Or Willful Misconduct”; “Fraud, Deceit And Intentional Stonewall, Concealment And Cover–Up Of Material Facts”; “Negligent Misrepresentation And Negligent Stonewall, Cover–Up And Concealment of Material Facts”; “Violations Of The Maryland Consumer Protection Act”; “Defamation By Libel And/Or Slander By Defendants Bryan, Neudorfer, Other Palisades Officials And The John And Jane Doe Defendants”; “Intentional Infliction Of Emotional Distress”; “Civil Conspiracy (Joint Tortfeasor Liability)”; “Disgorgement And Repayment By Palisades Officials Of Palisades Compensation Paid The Children Of Palisades Officials”; and “Liability For Damages Of Defendants[,]” and sought compensatory damages in the amount of $500,000 and punitive damages in the amount of $1 million.
On October 8, 2010, the Office of Bar Counsel issued a Specification of Charges alleging that Respondent had violated five provisions of the D.C. Rules of Professional Conduct in the course of litigating against Christie's and Palisades. Bar Counsel charged that, with respect to the Christie's litigation and Palisades litigation, Respondent violated Rule 3.1 by pursuing frivolous claims and asserting issues for which there was no basis; violated Rule 3.2 in Christie's by seeking to delay the proceedings when he knew or when it was obvious that such delays would serve solely to harass or maliciously injure another; violated Rule 3.4(c) in Christie's by knowingly disobeying an obligation under the rules of a tribunal; violated Rule 4.4 in both Christie's and Palisades by using litigation tactics that had no substantial purpose other than to embarrass, delay, or burden a third person; and violated Rule 8.4(d) in both Christie's and Palisades by engaging in conduct that seriously interfered with the administration of justice.
Following a three-day hearing on March 15–17, 2011, the Hearing Committee issued a 90–page Report and Recommendation on January 5, 2012, in which it painstakingly reviewed the evidence and found that Bar Counsel had proven all of its charges by clear and convincing evidence9 (although it did not agree that Respondent had violated each of these rules in precisely the manner that Bar Counsel had charged). The Hearing Committee recommended that Respondent be suspended from the practice of law for eighteen months and be required to demonstrate his fitness to practice law before being reinstated.
In a Report and Recommendation issued on July 31, 2013, the Board adopted the Hearing Committee's findings of fact and most of its conclusions of law. The Board found that the Committee had erred in declining to give preclusive effect to the District Court's findings that supported the court's imposition of sanctions in the Christie's matter. The Board also concluded, however, that regardless of the applicability of issue preclusion, Bar Counsel had established the almost all of the charged Rule violations by clear and convincing evidence.
With respect to the Palisades matter, the Board found that Bar Counsel proved by clear and convincing evidence that (1) Respondent violated Rule 3.1 by filing his tort and contract claims, all of which had no basis in fact or law; (2) that Respondent violated Rule 4.4 in that he filed a (240–page) complaint that was without any factual basis and was designed to “manufacture jurisdiction” and thereafter filed voluminous pleadings for the sole purpose of harassing or embarrassing the Palisades defendants; and (3) that he violated Rule 8.4(d) by using the judicial system to harass the Palisades Board.
The Board adopted the Hearing Committee's sanction recommendation. It found that Respondent's inexcusable conduct in “us[ing] the legal system to vent his personal pique at Christie's and Palisades rather than trying to vindicate a right protected by law” warranted a severe sanction, especially in light of the Hearing Committee's finding that Respondent had shown no remorse for his conduct.
In his brief to this Court, Respondent broadly challenges the Board's Report, contending that the Board, like the Hearing Committee, Bar Counsel, and the federal courts, “almost totally ignored” his factual explanations and legal arguments. Respondent also takes issue, at great length, with the Board's application of collateral estoppel to find violations of Rules 3.1, 3.4(c), 4.4(a), and 8.4(d) in the Christie's matter. In addition, Respondent asserts that the recommended sanction is unsupported by law.
Bar Counsel defends the Board's application of collateral estoppel, but asserts that Respondent's challenge to the Board's application of that doctrine is ultimately “of no consequence” since the Board independently found “all the same ethical violations based on clear and convincing record evidence.” Bar Counsel argues that the Board's findings and conclusions were correct, with one exception: The Board erred, Bar Counsel contends, in failing to adopt the Hearing Committee's finding that Respondent's litigation tactics in Christie's violated Rule 3.2(a). Bar Counsel supports the Board's recommended sanction (but urges that an enhanced sanction would be justified on the basis that Respondent gave false testimony before the Hearing Committee about the details of his oral agreement with Goldsmith and about his initial telephone call with Bryan10 ).
Our standard of review is well-established. This court, “like the Board itself, must accept the factual findings of the Hearing Committee, unless they are not supported by substantial evidence in the record[,]”11 In re Robinson, 74 A.3d 688, 694 (D.C.2013), but we review questions of law de novo. In re Martin, 67 A.3d 1032, 1039 (D.C.2013). We “shall adopt the recommended disposition of the Board unless to do so would foster a tendency toward inconsistent dispositions for comparable conduct or would otherwise be unwarranted.” D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 9(h)(1).
We begin by briefly addressing Respondent's argument that the Board erred by giving preclusive effect to the District's Court's findings in Christie's, and using those findings as a factual predicate to establish Respondent's violations of Rules 3.1, 3.4(c), 4.4(a), and 8.4(d) in the Christie's matter (and Bar Counsel's argument that the Hearing Committee's failure to do so was erroneous). For collateral estoppel to apply, it must be the case that “(1) the issue [was] actually litigated and (2) determined by a valid, final judgment on the merits; (3) after a full and fair opportunity for litigation by the parties or their privies; (4) under circumstances where the determination was essential to the judgment, and not merely dictum.” In re Wilde, 68 A.3d 749, 759 (D.C.2013) (internal quotation marks omitted). Further, to guard against the risk of unfairness, there must be a consideration of “the fairness of applying collateral estoppel to the facts of the case[,]” id. (internal quotation marks omitted), including a consideration of whether “compelling circumstances make it appropriate that the party be permitted to relitigate the issue.” Id. at 761 (internal quotation marks omitted).
We agree with Bar Counsel that “[n]othing in the underlying court records ․ suggests that the court[ ] adjudicated Respondent's claims on any basis other than the evidence presented[.]”15 However, we decline to resolve Respondent's unfairness claims point-by-point because (1) we agree with Bar Counsel that the issue of collateral estoppel is ultimately of no consequence in this case since the Board found independently that the record evidence showed clearly and convincingly that Respondent violated each of the Rules cited in the Specification of Charges; (2) Judge Stafford's findings did not correspond to all of the charged Rule violations and thus, as the Board found, did not estop Respondent from contesting certain of the charges; and (3) the (mostly documentary) evidence that we must examine and that the Board had to examine to determine whether collateral estoppel applied is co-extensive with the evidence that is relevant to an original determination of whether Respondent violated the Rules through his conduct in the Christie's matter. We therefore confine our review to the Board's and Hearing Committee's findings and analysis with respect to the record evidence and do not decide the matter of issue preclusion.16 Cf. In re Reback, 487 A.2d 235, 239 (D.C.1985) (“We need not decide whether this argument is correct, because the Board majority's alternative ground for finding a violation ․ is adequate to support the Board's ruling.”), vacated on other grounds, 492 A.2d 267 (D.C.1985); In re Lee, 755 A.2d 1034, 1036 n. 4 (D.C.2000) (“[W]e need not decide [the issue] conclusively since it is not determinative of the result.”).
Following that course, and for the following reasons, we agree with the Board that the record evidence established by clear and convincing evidence that Respondent violated Rules 3.1, 3.4(c), 4.4(a), and 8.4(d). We decline to address, whether Respondent violated Rule 3.2 because resolution of that issue does not affect our ultimate decision as to whether the recommended sanction is warranted.
The record supports the Board's and the Hearing Committee's finding that Respondent had no colorable claim because “no one from Palisades did anything even remotely actionable” that justified the filing of Respondent's complaint. As the Hearing Committee found, the Palisades Board was not required to permit Respondent to engage in abusive, bullying, or inappropriate conduct, and Respondent presented no evidence that its actions, which the Hearing Committee found were a “legitimate exercise of [the Board's] duties and obligations to ensure the safety and well[-]being of its members[,]” caused him compensable harm. There is no record evidence that Palisades ever defamed Respondent by accusing him of having committed, in Respondent's words, “child molestation, pederasty, pedophilia, or any other inappropriate sexual conduct ․ [or] battery or assault[,]” or published to anyone any defamatory accusation, and the Board was justified in rejecting Respondent's claim, which he repeats in his brief filed in this court, that he reasonably interpreted Bryan's letter as leveling such accusations. Further, as the Board and the Committee found, there was no evidence of a confidential relationship between Respondent and Palisades that could support Respondent's breach of fiduciary duty claim;17 no discernible basis for Respondent's negligence claim; no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation;18 nothing to indicate that, with respect to Palisades, Respondent was a consumer of services from a merchant such that he could have a claim arising under the Maryland Consumer Protection Act; no extreme conduct to support an IIED claim; no underlying tort to support Respondent's civil conspiracy claim; and no evidence of a Palisades rule or by-law that prohibited the hiring of family members as pool staff that could have supported Respondent's disgorgement claim.
The record supports the Hearing Committee's finding that Respondent sued because he wanted to make miserable the lives of Palisades Board members who had had the “temerity to tell him that his behavior was unacceptable,” not because he had claims that he legitimately believed entitled him to relief under the law. In addition, there was no basis in fact or law for Respondent's claim that the court had diversity jurisdiction.
Rule 3.4(c) provides that a lawyer shall not “[k]nowingly disobey an obligation under the rules of a tribunal except for an open refusal based on an assertion that no valid obligation exists[.]” Bar Counsel charged, and the Hearing Committee and Board also found, that Respondent violated Rule 3.4(c) in the Christie's matter by attaching argumentative exhibits to his memoranda in order to evade the page limits set by the federal rules and (in his January 19, 2001, surreply) by dramatically reducing the margins, presenting almost the entirety of his argument in single-spaced footnotes, and attaching a declaration that exceeded the length limit set by the court. Bar Counsel also charged that Respondent further violated Rule 3.2(c) by filing his 225–page (443–paragraph) complaint. Although the Hearing Committee concluded that Bar Counsel had not proven that Respondent knew that such a lengthy pleading was improper, the Board sustained the charge, concluding that knowledge of the “short and plain statement” standard embodied in Fed.R.Civ.P. 8 could be imputed to Respondent, who asserts that he was a high-ranking litigator in the Department of Commerce and boasted of his litigation experience.
Rule 4.4(a) provides in pertinent part that, “[i]n representing a client, a lawyer shall not use means that have no substantial purpose other than to embarrass, ․ or burden a third person․” We are satisfied that Bar Counsel proved a violation of this Rule by clear and convincing evidence. In Palisades, the evidence established that even after the Palisades Board notified Respondent that it did not intend to pursue the complaints that it had made against him and that it considered the matter closed, Respondent proceeded with litigation through which, he openly threatened, he would destroy Bryan's personal finances, business, and reputation, would “break” the Palisades pool, and would harass Board members, their families and children, and other pool employees. He acknowledged that he included the disgorgement count in his complaint (relating to his allegations that it was somehow improper for Board members' children to also work as pool staff) to “cause Bryan's buzzer to go off” and to make him “collapse.” As to the Christie's matter, the record as a whole provides substantial support for the Board's and the Hearing Committee's conclusion that Respondent engaged in discovery and motions practice that was “entirely out of proportion to any reasonable dispute between the parties and any colorable damage claim” and that was undertaken “solely to make Christie's give up, in order to avoid Respondent's continued onslaught of paper and the attendant expense”; and that Respondent litigated against Christie's in a manner that was “designed to cause Christie's to incur maximum costs” and that was “for no purpose other than to harass Christie's.”21 Although in each case Respondent was representing himself rather than another client, we agree with the observation of a sister jurisdiction that “[t]he intent and purpose of Rule 4.4 is served” by the “common sense” “construction that a lawyer is representing a client when he represents himself[.]” Attorney Grievance Comm'n of Maryland v. Alison, 565 A.2d 660, 668 (Md.1989) (citing In re Segall, 509 N.E.2d 988, 990 (Ill.1987) (an attorney who is himself a party to the litigation represents himself within the meaning of the disciplinary rules)); see also In re Pelkey, 962 A.2d 268, 280 (D.C.2008) (finding a violation of Rule 4.4(a) based on conduct that Pelkey took while proceeding pro se ).
Rule 8.4(d) provides that it is professional misconduct for a lawyer to “[e]ngage in conduct that seriously interferes with the administration of justice[.]” The record makes plain that Respondent's meritless and voluminous filings wasted the time and resources of the courts (requiring them, as the Board found, to “wade through his verbose and repetitive pleadings”) and, particularly because of their excessive single-spacing and excessive argument, unnecessarily burdened the courts. Respondent argues that his tactics did not “taint the judicial process in more than a de minimis way” because his filings were quickly and summarily disposed of by the court. But to find a violation of Rule 8.4 does not require a demonstration that the violator actually “cause[d] the court to malfunction or make an incorrect decision.” In re Hopkins, 677 A.2d 55, 59 (D.C.1996); In re Uchendu, 812 A.2d 933, 941 (D.C.2002). Rather, it is sufficient that the respondent's conduct burdened the judicial system. In re Spikes, 881 A.2d 1118, 1127 (D.C.2005). Respondent's voluminous, meritless, and difficult-to-read filings did precisely that.
The imposition of bar discipline sanctions “is not an exact science but may depend on the facts and circumstances of each particular proceeding.” In re Goffe, 641 A.2d 458, 463 (D.C.1994). Relevant considerations may include the nature and seriousness of the misconduct; the prejudice, if any, to the client that has resulted from the misconduct; whether the misconduct involved dishonesty or misrepresentations; the presence or absence of violations of other ethical rules; whether the lawyer has a history of prior discipline, and whether the lawyer has acknowledged his wrongful conduct. Pelkey, 962 A.2d at 281. “Generally speaking, if the Board's recommended sanction falls within the wide range of acceptable outcomes, it will be adopted and imposed.” In re Austin, 858 A.2d 969, 975 (D.C.2004).
Respondent disputes that any sanction should be imposed, noting that he has “no intention, capacity or need to practice law for compensation in the future” and citing his “health problems.” Bar Counsel initially sought a three-year suspension in addition to a fitness requirement, but does not oppose the Board's recommended sanction of an eighteen-month suspension and a fitness requirement. We conclude that the Board's recommended sanction is justified. As described above, through his conduct in the Christie's and Palisades litigation, Respondent violated several provisions of the Rules of Professional Conduct. Far from exhibiting remorse for his egregious and repeated misconduct, Respondent has refused to acknowledge that he has engaged in any wrongdoing. While Respondent has no prior disciplinary history, this factor does not weigh heavily in his favor in light of his representations that he has not been engaged in the practice of law for nearly three decades, with the exceptions of his involvement in Christie's and Palisades.
As we have observed many times, the sanction in a bar discipline case should fall within the range of sanctions imposed in other cases involving similar misconduct. In this respect, the sanction recommended by the Board is an appropriate, mid-range sanction. See, e.g., In re Spikes, 881 A.2d 1118 (imposing thirty-day suspension for the filing of a meritless defamation claim in retaliation for the defendant's report of prior misconduct to Bar Counsel, conduct found to violate Rules 3.1 and 8.4(d)); In re Thyden, 877 A.2d 129 (D.C.2005) (imposing thirty-day suspension where the lawyer filed, and appealed the denial of, a motion to dismiss a bankruptcy petition and an adversary proceeding, even though he acknowledged a lack of standing, and then filed a subsequent adversary proceeding making essentially the same claims, thereby burdening and delaying the underlying bankruptcy petition); In re Shieh, 738 A.2d 814 (D.C.1999) (reciprocal discipline case in which this court declined to adopt the Board's recommendation of a two-year suspension, and instead disbarred the lawyer, where the record showed that he was found repeatedly to have filed and pursued “baseless, vexatious litigation” and to have filed lawsuits solely to harass his opponents, and also revealed a history of “frivolous motions (including for removal of cases to federal court and recusal of judges), meritless appeals, and disobedience of court orders”); In re Orci, 974 A.2d 891 (D.C.2009) (disbarring lawyer who had “filed multiple frivolous claims to harass and intimidate others[,]” “knowingly flouted court orders[,]” “engaged in abusive litigation tactics[,]” and “seriously interfered with the administration of justice[,]” but also had “engaged in fraudulent and dishonest conduct”); In re Ditton, 980 A.2d 1170 (D.C.2009) (imposing five-year suspension with fitness requirement where the lawyer had exhibited “a long history of filing civil actions against numerous and various defendants on grounds that are, at best, of questionable merit”). The recommended fitness requirement is appropriate because the record raises serious questions about Respondent's judgment and his understanding of and regard for court rules and the Rules of Professional Conduct, and “casts a serious doubt upon” his continuing fitness to be trusted with litigation matters. See In re Cater, 887 A.2d 1, 24 (D.C.2005) (approving the “serious doubt” test) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also In re Chisholm, 679 A.2d 495, 505 (D.C.1996) (citing attorney's “refusal to accept responsibility for his actions” and his “lack of contrition” as reasons for requiring him to demonstrate his fitness to practice as a precondition to reinstatement).
Respondent argues that the imposition of sanctions on him will accomplish nothing since he has “not practice[d] law for compensation since December 1985” and does not intend to resume practice, and since a suspension would not prevent him from filing pro se claims against his adversaries. These points may be correct, but an important purpose of discipline is “to maintain the integrity of the profession and to ․ deter other attorneys from engaging in similar misconduct.” In re Reback, 513 A.2d 226, 231 (D.C.1986). We therefore adopt the recommended sanction.
For the foregoing reasons, Respondent is hereby suspended from the practice of law in the District of Columbia for a period of eighteen months, commencing on the date when he filed an affidavit in compliance with D.C. Bar R. XI, § 14(g). His reinstatement is conditioned upon a showing of fitness to resume the practice of law, in accordance with D.C. Bar R. XI, § 16.
2. Respondent asserts that he acquired the painting as part of his private collection, and not in his capacity as an art dealer.
4. Judge Stafford also observed that the record was “replete with evidence that Goldsmith did not and could not enter into an agreement utterly at odds with Christie's written Conditions of Business,” which Respondent “acknowledged and accepted ․ when he signed and returned the written Receipt” to Christie's.
6. Throughout subsequent proceedings relating to the order awarding attorneys' fees, Respondent continued his practice of submitting numerous and lengthy pleadings. For example, in response to the 13–page declaration that Christie's submitted in support its claim for fees and costs, Respondent filed a 45–page memorandum and a 48–page declaration that included eight attachments, one of which was a 56–page document that discussed in detail the cases cited in the 45–page memorandum. In January 2008, Magistrate Judge Alan Kay issued a report and recommendation finding that Christie's request for $630,043.32 in fees and expenses was reasonable and warranted under 28 U.S.C. § 1927, but recommending that, in light of Respondent's finances, the court impose a sanction of only $110,000. Christie's indicated its willingness to accept the reduced amount “only if [Respondent] likewise accepts Judge Kay's Report and Recommendation and does not seek to have it reduced.” Respondent did not accept Judge Kay's recommendation and instead followed it with another spate of lengthy filings (e.g., a 45–page reply to Christie's four-page response to Magistrate Judge Kay's recommendation, accompanied by a 14–page declaration that consisted mostly of additional argument). Judge Stafford awarded Christie's the full amount of $630,043.32 as a sanction for what he described as Respondent's “bad faith, vexatious, and oppressive conduct in this case[,]” which he found Respondent had continued to engage in even in submitting his objections to Magistrate Judge Kay's report.
11. In original discipline cases such as this one, “the hearing committee conducts the hearings and makes factual findings and recommendations which it submits to the Board for review[.]” In re Temple, 629 A.2d 1203, 1208 (D.C.1993). “[T]he Board has the power to make its own factual findings and forward them to the court with a recommendation[,]” but “must accept the hearing committee's factual findings if they are supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.” Id. However, the Board “owes no deference to the hearing committee's determination of ‘ultimate facts,’ which are really conclusions of law.” In re Micheel, 610 A.2d 231, 234 (D.C.1992). Bar Counsel must establish a Rule violation by clear and convincing evidence. See, e.g., In re Anderson, 778 A.2d 330, 335 (D.C.2001).
12. Respondent asserts, for example, that summary judgment was unwarranted because there was a factual dispute as to whether he and Christie's had reached an oral consignment agreement whose terms were as Respondent claimed.
13. Thus, Respondent suggests, the District Court did not consider with impartiality his claim that he was “lulled” into not suing Christie's earlier, and ignored case law (Williams v. Central Money Co., 974 F.Supp. 22, 27 (D.D.C.1997)) recognizing the extraterritorial reach of the DCCPPA.
14. Cf. Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 439 U.S. 322, 330–31 (1979) (“[A]nother situation where it might be unfair to apply offensive estoppel is where the second action affords the defendant procedural opportunities unavailable in the first action that could readily cause a different result.”). We note that, after hearing Respondent's testimony, the Hearing Committee found that Respondent “believes that he had an oral consignment agreement with Christie's” (but also found that Respondent and Christie's “did not enter into such an agreement” and in particular did not agree that Christie's would not seek an opinion on the authenticity of the painting). The Board similarly stated that Respondent “believed ․ that Christie's would take the consignment of the Schindler without seeking an outside opinion as to its authenticity.” The Hearing Committee also found (contrary to Judge Stafford's finding that Respondent's “claims to damages def[ied] all credulity”) that Respondent may have incurred, as he claimed, about $3600 in costs to “rehabilitate” his painting (but that the value of the painting did not suffer because “whatever purportedly negative, but disavowed, statements had been made were made only to Respondent”).
15. We also have no doubt that, to the extent that the court may have overlooked whatever merit there was in Respondent's explanations and arguments, it was, somewhat ironically, the unreasonable voluminousness of Respondent's filings and their difficult-to-read format that were to blame for that circumstance. In any event, the court, like the Hearing Committee and the Board, was not required to adopt Respondent's version of events, and the court's findings could be conclusive for collateral estoppel purposes even if they were somehow erroneous. See K.H. v. R.H., 935 A.2d 328, 335 (D.C.2007) (“The mere fact that a judgment is erroneous does not deprive it of ․ conclusiveness[.]”).
17. Cf. Latty v. St. Joseph's Soc'y of the Sacred Heart, 17 A.3d 155, 162–63 (Md.Ct.Spec.App.2011).
18. Respondent claims that Bryan and the Palisades Board knowingly lied when they asked him to direct to Bryan any requests for further information about the complaints against him, as evidenced by Bryan's refusal to provide him with contact information for everyone who had complained about his misconduct. But the referral of questions to Bryan hardly created an obligation for Bryan to obey any and all demands for information that Respondent might make, however intrusive.
19. Respondent's argument that his lengthy footnotes were “not barred or limited by any court [r]ule” (emphasis omitted) misses the point that his lengthy footnotes were obviously designed to evade Judge Friedman's order imposing a page limit and requiring that the text be double-spaced.
20. Respondent's explanation that he prepared the “lengthy” complaint he filed as a “Quasi–Affidavit for Summary Judgment purposes” is entirely unavailing.

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