Opinion
No. 83122.
November 17, 1994.
John H. Moore, Executive Director and Thomas A. Pobjecky, Gen. Counsel, Tallahassee, for petitioner.
Richard C. McFarlain, Charles A. Stampelos and Harold R. Mardenborough of McFarlain, Wiley, Cassedy Jones, Tallahassee, Wayne Thomas of Carlton, Fields, Ward, Emmanuel, Smith Cutler, Tampa, John F. Harkness, Jr., Executive Director, The Florida Bar, Thomas M. Ervin, Jr., Tallahassee, and Nicholas R. Friedman, Miami, Responding.
The Florida Board of Bar Examiners (the Board) petitions this Court to amend or adopt Rules Relating to Admissions to the Bar. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article V, section 15 of the Florida Constitution.
The Board has petitioned to create or amend these rules: article I, section 3.a. (qualifications for Florida Board of Bar Examiners); article I, section 4 (Florida Board of Bar Examiners); article I, sections 7.a.-c. (Board meetings and hearings); article I, section 14.f. (sanctions for violating confidentiality requirements); article III, section 2.h. (ineligibility of convicted felon to apply for Bar admission); article III, section 2.i. (ineligibility of probationer to apply for Bar admission until probation completed); article III, section 3.a. (background investigation); article III, section 3.c. (filing of specifications); article III, section 3.f. (formal hearings on specifications); article III, section 4.a. (petition for reconsideration); article IV, section 1.b. (applications); article IV, section 2.c. (termination of application) (relocated from article VI, section 9); article IV, section 5.b. (filing of application for admission; ethics provisions including exemptions from Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam); article IV, section 8 (filing supplement of exemption from MPRE); article V (schedule of fees) (introductory clause); article VI, section 1 (examinations); article VI, section 3.b. (examinations); article VI, section 3.c. (examinations); article VI, section 7.c. (grading of MPRE); article VI, section 9.a.-b. (testing); article VI, section 9.c. (termination of application) (relocated to article IV, section 2.c.); and article VII, section 1 (certification to the Supreme Court and admission to The Florida Bar).
Some of the proposed amendments simply involve technical changes, and others are self-explanatory. We discuss only two proposals.
Article III, section 3.c. and f. — Proposal for Conditional Admission for Applicants with Serious Financial Problems
Because of an increasing number of applicants to The Florida Bar with significant financial problems, the Board urges us to amend the rules to expand the conditional admissions program to these applicants. We decline to do so.
The Board investigates an applicant's credit history as part of the Bar admissions process. "[N]eglect of financial responsibilities" is one of the factors bearing on the fitness to practice law. See Fla.Bar Admiss.R., art. III, § 2.b.(7).
This Court first approved conditional admissions in 1986 for applicants with drug, alcohol, or psychological problems. In re Petition of Fla. Bd. of Bar Examiners, 498 So.2d 914 (Fla. 1986). The purpose of conditional admissions is to help rehabilitate these new admittees. The Board estimates that approximately 125 people have been conditionally admitted since 1986.
We do not think conditional admission is appropriate for applicants with serious financial problems. Debt is not an illness or a disease. It is not clear that the rehabilitative function of conditional admissions would work for those applicants with financial problems. To allow conditional admission for financial difficulties would render the supervising agency into little more than a credit bureau. In addition, expanding conditional admissions would add more people to the program and would create more regulatory problems for the agency that supervises these admittees.
We believe the Board's current practice is the best way to handle applicants with financial problems. Applicants who have fraudulently incurred or postponed the payment of debt typically are required to prove rehabilitation before they are admitted. But because some applicants legitimately incur debt to finance their legal education, we have recognized that debt alone is not a bar to admission. See Florida Bd. of Bar Examiners re S.M.D., 609 So.2d 1309 (Fla. 1992).
In addition, over the last five years the Board has used a "credit string" that has been used for about thirty-five applicants whose debts are neither clearly legitimate nor fraudulent. According to the Board's counsel, applicants must acknowledge their debts and swear to repay them. They are required to report back to the Board at predetermined intervals for one year. Under the Board's rules, should an applicant fail to adhere to the sworn document, he or she may be investigated for making material misstatements.
Florida Bar Admission Rule article VII, section 2 provides:
If, within 12 months of admission of an applicant to The Florida Bar, the Board determines that a material misstatement or material omission in the application process of such applicant may have occurred, then the Board may conduct an investigation and hold hearings. After investigation and hearings, the Board may make findings and recommendations as to revocation of any license issued to such applicant and shall file any such findings with the Supreme Court of Florida for final determination by the Court.
To expand the "credit string" and grant conditional admission to applicants with serious financial problems creates the risk of giving creditors leverage over a Bar applicant for an indefinite length of time. We believe the better practice is for the Board to continue to distinguish between someone who cannot properly discharge his or her financial duties from someone who legitimately incurred debt or is simply poor. If an applicant presents a threat to the public because of financial difficulties, he or she should not be admitted to the Bar. Otherwise, the Bar can monitor attorneys and take action if financial problems interfere with the ability to ethically represent clients. The Board should continue to use the "credit string" sparingly.
Because we decline to adopt this proposed rule, we express no opinion on whether the Board or the Bar is the appropriate agency to monitor attorneys admitted under this proposal.
Article IV, section 5.b.(8), (9), (10) — Ethics Testing
The Board also asks use to adopt several "housekeeping" rules to go along with its proposal to eliminate the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE) for some applicants. Because we do not adopt the Board's proposed article IV, section 5.b.(9) and (10), we have no need to adopt these rules: article IV, section 1.b.; article IV, section 5.b.; article IV, section 8; article VI, section 1; article VI, section 7.c.; and article VI, section 9.a.-b.
We adopt the Board's proposal requiring an applicant to sign an affidavit attesting that he or she has read Chapter 4, Rules of Professional Conduct, and Chapter 5, Rules Regulating Trust Accounts, of the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar. We decline to adopt the Board's proposal to eliminate the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE) for certain Bar applicants.
The Board's proposal would exempt Florida Bar applicants from taking the MPRE if they produce an official transcript that shows they have taken and passed an ethics course of at least two hours at an American Bar Association-approved law school.
An applicant should be required to pass a separate ethics examination to gain admission to The Florida Bar. The ethics exam now given is the MPRE. This national exam consists of fifty multiple-choice questions that must be answered in a two-hour, five-minute period. The MPRE is administered three times per year at test sites throughout the country. Florida Bar applicants must attain a scaled score of seventy to pass the exam.
The Board contends that the MPRE has outlived its usefulness because it tests only American Bar Association provisions and not Florida rules. Despite this shortcoming, we are not prepared to say that the examination serves no purpose and should be eliminated.
In urging us to eliminate the MPRE, the Board points out that it has recently adopted a policy of including ethics questions on every Bar examination. But the Board acknowledges that, despite its policy, an applicant can miss the ethics questions and still pass the Bar exam. We do not think this alone puts sufficient emphasis on ethical rules, although we encourage the Board to continue to include ethics questions on the Florida section of the bar exam.
Because of the Board's legitimate concern that the MPRE does not test Florida's ethics rules, we suggest that the Board consider developing its own, separate ethics exam. At oral argument, counsel for the Board indicated that the Board had not determined the feasibility of developing such an exam. If the Board does develop a separate ethics exam, the Court would substitute that exam for the MPRE requirement that now exists. Until that time, Florida applicants will be required to take and pass the MPRE.
Accordingly, we amend and adopt the rules as reflected in the Appendix to this opinion. Underscoring indicates new language; strike-through type indicates deletions. The Board's rationale is included only for explanation and guidance and is not adopted as an official part of the rules. These rules shall take effect upon the release of this opinion.
On our own motion we renumber portions of article IV, section 5.b. to reflect administrative changes the Board made as a result of our decision in Florida Board of Bar Examiners re Amendment to Rules, 603 So.2d 1160 (Fla. 1992). In addition, on our own motion we adopt additional housekeeping changes to article VII, sections 1(a) and (b).
It is so ordered.
GRIMES, C.J., and OVERTON, SHAW, KOGAN, HARDING, WELLS and ANSTEAD, JJ., concur.
Section 3. a. Qualifications. Attorney members shall have been members of The Florida Bar for at least five years. b. Tenure. c. Devotion to Duty. d. Essential Conduct. e. Adverse Influences, Conflicting Duties and Inconsistent Obligations. Section 4. Chairman Chair Chairman Chair Chairman Chair Chairman Chair. Chairman Chair Meetings of the Board may be held at such places and times as may be fixed from time to time by the Board. The Board shall meet in formal session throughout the State of Florida on a regularly scheduled basis to handle administrative and applicant matters and to conduct investigative and formal hearings. Subject to the approval of the full Board, the places and times of such meetings shall be determined by the Chair of the Board. Hearings shall be conducted by the Board in the State of Florida on the second Fridays of March, June, September and November of each year and may be conducted at such other times and at such places as may be fixed by the Board. Hearings may also be conducted by special hearing panels of the Board to be convened at such other times and at such places as may be fixed by the Board. Chairman Chair Section 14. f. Whenever any person intentionally and without authority discloses confidential information maintained by the Board, such persons may be in contempt of the Board. The Board shall report to the Supreme Court of Florida the fact that such person is in contempt of the Board for such proceedings against such person as the Court may deem advisable. Section 2. h. A person who has been convicted of a felony shall not be eligible to apply for admission to The Florida Bar or the Florida Bar Examination until such person has had his or her civil rights restored. i. A person who is serving a sentence of felony probation regardless of adjudication of guilt shall not be eligible to apply for admission to The Florida Bar or the Florida Bar Examination until termination of the period of probation. See In re Florida Board of Bar Examiners, 183 So.2d 688 In re Florida Board of Bar Examiners, 341 So.2d 503 Section 3. An applicant who has been requested to appear for an investigative hearing by Board letter shall promptly respond to such letter. Failure to respond within 60 days shall result in termination of that application and shall require reapplication and payment of all fees as if the applicant were applying for the first time. In cases where the facts are undisputed regarding an applicant's prior conduct which bears adversely upon such person's character and fitness for admission to the Bar, the Board may forgo an investigative hearing and proceed directly with the filing of Specifications as provided by Section b.(3) below. of Section 4. including, without limitation to, evidence of rehabilitation, Evidence of rehabilitation as provided by Article III, Section 4.e. of the Rules shall not be included in a petition for reconsideration. Section 2. c. The Application for Admission to The Florida Bar must be vigorously pursued by the applicant. Failure to respond to inquiry from the Board within 90 days may result in termination of that application and require reapplication and payment of all fees as if the applicant were applying for the first time. Section 5. a.; (5) An official transcript of academic credit certifying that the applicant has received an academic Bachelor's Degree granted on the basis as specified under Article III, Section 1.a., which transcript must come directly from the awarding institution; (6) (5) (7) (6) any additional all (8) (7) (8) An affidavit on a form supplied by the Board attesting that the applicant has read Chapter 4, Rules of Professional Conduct, and Chapter 5, Rules Regulating Trust Accounts, of the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar; Fees are subject to change by published order of the Supreme Court of Florida. Amendments to Rules, 587 So.2d 1300 Section 3. draftsmen drafters draftsmen drafters and the Florida Rules of Judicial Administration Rules 2.051, 2.060, and 2.160. Section 9. c. The Application for Admission to The Florida Bar must be vigorously pursued by the applicant. Failure to respond to inquiry from the Board within 90 days may result in termination of that application and require re-examination and payment of all fees as if the applicant was applying for the first time. Section 1. b. a., b. a., c. b.; in the office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court with the Board and the date of the oath has been forwarded by the Board to the Supreme Court of Florida and The Florida Bar.