Monday, April 29, 2013

SUMMARY OF MY CASE TO DEMOCRACYDEFINED.ORG


  • Re: Nicholas N Chin has left a message for you‏

Nicholas N Chin (nnchin1@hotmail.com)
10:36 AM
Photos
To: Campaign@democracydefined.org, nnchin1@gmail.com, jim.macleod@nor.com.au
Hi Kenn:
The WA Discipline Board for Lawyers the LPCC conducted malafides proceedings against me in VR 87 OF 2007.   The Mala Fides of the the President of the State Administrative Tribunal is exempliefied;  his Honour Justice Chaney was asked to recuse himself when he did a bare-faced lying judgment against me.  He did recuse himself by activating his Deputy Judge SAT by altering the statute law to empower him to do so, to continue to do the insidious job for him which he did by removing me from the roll of barristers and solicitors.   I was asked to respond to his order confining myself to the penalty issue which the latter judge was proposing against me.  I put up my written submissions, which I considered to be part and parcel of the appeal process i.e. my submissions against Penalty is equated to my Submissions against being guilty of the claimed wrongdoings (My Submissions).
My Submissions is not being considered by the Full Bench of the Supreme Court of Western Australia which sat on 12.12.2012 to remove me from the roll of barristers and solicitors.  It contends that I have have NOT appealed the SAT decision to remove from the roll.
The mala fides of the LPCC are:
1) It disciplines me for contrived infractions whereas it does not discipline lawyers like Timothy Robin Thies, David Taylor and Pino Monaco for real infractions of the law.
2) It finds me guilty of sham dishonesty upon the non-complaining Mrs. Mathias who had withdrawn her complaint about a res judicata issue or non-issue that I had ALTERED a costs agreement when it did not happened. There is proof that the ink of the costs agreement’s impugned alteration was made subsequent after it had been drawn up. Indeed it is: the alteration was made after it was drawn up within a few minutes and with the presence of Mrs. Mathias. It contradicts the fundamental common law notion for a real finding of fraud i.e. there must be a pecuniary deprivation of funds of Mrs. Mathias and there was none.  In fact Mrs. Mathias obtained benefits from me for which I had condoned her non-payment for my legal services (the Sham Dishonesty).
3) The Sham Dishonesty is just a ruse of the LPCC to get me out of the legal profession just because I had made allegations of the real infractions of the law by the three lawyers:
3.1. David Taylor for misleading the court with a forged document that he filed the impugned Writ of Summons on time in compliance with Justice Jenkins Orders in CIV1142 of 2005 when he did not.  My client suffered a premature death as a result of the injustice she received from Mr. David Taylor. The various courts simply refused to make a decision on this barefaced facts that was properly brought before it.
3.2. Pino Monaco for misleading the court that he did not used duplicitous and duplicated bills of costs to effect the pillaging and plundering my client Dr. Kheng Su Chan.
3.3. Timothy Robin Thies pillaged and plundered my son Paul Chin contrary to the tenor of the costs agreement he entered into with my son Paul Chin.  The lawyer refused to quit when told to do so and keep escalating costs for my son Paul.  This case was finally won by me but the court refused to acknowledge that Mr. Thies has no caveatable interests to justify his strangle-hold over my son’s property and refused to order damages against him.
3.5. Both Timothy Thies and David Taylor misled the court when they unlawfully lodged unlawful caveats against the property of my son Paul Chin and my former client Ms Nancy Hall respectively, when both of these lawyers know or should know that caveatable interests can only be founded upon proprietary interests in the caveat property which both lawyers or their clients have none.  They have thus misled the courts on the fundamental principle of law and are getting away with it.  I have appealed this point but the Supreme Court is ignoring it.
Armed with a summary of my grievance, I hope your Campaign can solve this “democracy” problem for me, which is my fundamental human rights to be able to earn my living as a lawyer.
Cheers.
Nicholas N Chin
Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2013 6:38 PM
Subject: Re: Nicholas N Chin has left a message for you
Dear Nicholas,
Greetings.
It would be more convenient if, when contacting us with
matters concerning the Restoration Campaign, we receive
your messages, not by invitations to blogs and/or discussion
forums, but directly by e-mail.
We hope you are well.
Best wishes,
Kenn.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2013 3:49 AM
Subject: Nicholas N Chin has left a message for you

Saturday, April 13, 2013

LPCC'S VEXATIOUS ALLEGATIONS OF MY FALSE ALLEGATIONS AGAINST FELLOW PRACTITIONERS

1) THE LPCC MALICIOUSLY PERSECUTED ME BY ITS VEXATIOUS ALLEGATION THAT I WAS  MAKING FALSE ALLEGATIONS AGAINST FELLOW PRACTITIONERS: TIMOTHY ROBIN THIES, DAVID TAYLOR AND PINO MONACO (THE LPCC VEXATIOUS ALLEGATIONS) .
2) WHEN LPCC FAILED TO PROVE THE LPCC VEXATIOUS ALLEGATIONS,  THE VARIOUS HONOURABLE JUDGES SIMPLY REFUSED TO GIVE JUDICIAL RECOGNITION TO IT (THE LPCC VEXATIOUS ALLEGATIONS).
3) LPCC ESCALATED THE LPCC VEXATIOUS ALLEGATIONS BY CHANGING ITS GOAL POSTS CONTINUALLY AND THEREBY REFUSING TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE PRINCIPLE OF THE RULE OF LAW AS A RESULT.
4) LPCC WAS ALLOWED TO GET AWAY WITH ITS CRIME BY INTRODUCING A RES JUDICATA RED-HERRING - THE SHAM VICTIMLESS MATHIAS DISHONESTY SANS MISAPPROPRIATION OF PROPERTY OR MONIES, OR EVEN SIMPLE DISHONESTY WHEN THE COURT WAS NEVER MISLED BY ME AS TO THE TRUE FACTS OF THE MATTHIAS COST AGREEMENT (THE SHAM DISHONESTY).
5) THE COURT REFUSED TO RECOGNIZE THE JUDICIAL FACT THAT THE MATHIAS COST AGREEMENT WAS "ADDED TO" AFTER IT WAS WRITTEN AND A COPY WAS PROVIDED TO HER AT THE SAME TIME.

The Australian Professional Liability Blog



Posted: 13 Apr 2013 05:14 AM PDT
I have posted before about the Darwin solicitor whose disciplinary complaint against a fellow practitioner resulted in her being fined $19,500 for making that complaint without a proper factual foundation.  I have just come across another case in which a female solicitor was disciplined for her intemperate allegations against another lawyer, despite having had an honest belief that she had a reasonable basis for making them: Legal Profession Complaints Committee v in de Braekt[2011] WASAT 1.  She was recently struck off: [2013] WASC 124.
A panel provided over by a judge of Supreme Court of Western Australia and President of WASAT, Justice John Cheney, said in the earlier decision:
’107 Legal practitioners should be slow to make allegations of impropriety against other legal practitioners or their client. Such allegations should not be made unless there is a reasonable basis upon which to make them. The same can be said of allegations of abuse of process. It is apparent that the impropriety asserted by Ms in de Braekt was based upon her view that, having regard to the various matters upon which she relied, the winding up proceedings amounted to an abuse of process.’
I am looking at another matter at the moment in which a complaint has been made to a Legal Services Commissioner by one of the lawyers for one party to extant litigation against one of the other party’s lawyers, in relation to conduct which is itself the subject of the civil proceedings and which is in fact said to have generated the information on which those proceedings are founded.  Even if the disciplinary complaint is stayed pending the exhaustion of appeals from the civil proceedings, it seems to me that the propriety of making a complaint in such circumstances is doubtful.  Does anyone have any views, or — better — authority on the question?
Posted: 12 Apr 2013 05:18 PM PDT
In Forster v. Legal Services Board [2013] VSCA 73Kyrou AJA, with whom Weinberg and Harper JJA agreed, restated briefly the law which requires lawyers to be absolutely honest in their dealings with Courts:
’161 In Meek v Fleming,[85] Holroyd Pearce LJ agreed with the proposition that while a lawyer must not knowingly mislead the Court as to the facts or the law, he or she may put such matters as he or she believes will best advance the client’s case.[86] A party need not reveal something to the discredit of that party. However, this does not mean that the party can by implication falsely pretend that a particular state of affairs exists, and knowing that the court has been misled with respect to a material matter, foster and confirm the misrepresentation through answers given by the party.[87] A lawyer who is a party to the presentation of evidence or the making of a statement to the court that is partly true, but which does not amount to the whole truth, can create a misleading impression to the Court and thereby breach his or her duty to the Court. Once a misleading impression has been created, even if innocently, the lawyer has an obligation to correct that impression as soon as he or she becomes aware of the true position.[88] That obligation continues until judgment is given.[89]
162 Misleading the Court by presenting a misleading or false document is contrary to the lawyer’s duty of honesty and candour, including in his or her capacity as a litigant.[90] In Law Society of New South Wales v Foreman,[91] the New South Wales Court of Appeal ordered that the respondent be removed from the Roll of practitioners, because she had knowingly presented a falsified document to the Court on the basis that it was genuine. Mahoney JA stated that:
A practitioner must not merely not deceive the court before which she practises; she must be fully frank in what she does before it. This obligation takes precedence over the practitioner’s duty to her client, to other practitioners and to herself: Meek v Fleming [1961] 2 QB 366 at 382, 383. The justice system will not work if a practitioner is, for her own purposes, free to put to the court that which she knows to be false.[92]
163 In Myers v Elman,[93] Viscount Maugham said that: ‘A solicitor who has innocently put on the file an affidavit by his client which he has subsequently discovered to be certainly false owes it to the Court to put the matter right at the earliest date if he continues to act as solicitor upon the record.’[94] Similarly, in Foreman, Giles AJA stated that the respondent’s failure to reveal and correct the conduct by which the Court had been misled, compounded the unacceptable conduct involved in preparing the falsified document.[95]
[86] Meek v Fleming [1961] 2 QB 366, 379.
[87] Meek v Fleming [1961] 2 QB 366, 380.
[88] Myers v Elman [1940] AC 282, 294.
[89] Vernon v Bosley [No 2] [1999] QB 18, 37, 56, 63.
[90] Coe v New South Wales Bar Assn [2000] NSWCA 13, [8], [10]; NSW Bar Assn v Cummins [2001] NSWCA 284;(2001) 52 NSWLR 279, 290 [59].
[91] (1994) 34 NSWLR 408 (‘Foreman’).
[92] Foreman (1994) 34 NSWLR 408, 447.
[94] Myers v Elman [1940] AC 282, 294.
[95] Foreman (1994) 34 NSWLR 408, 466.’

Thursday, April 4, 2013

HOW CAN A LAWYER BE GUILTY OF DISHONESTY WHEN THERE IS NO MISAPPROPRIATION OF PROPERTY OR MONIES FROM HIS CLIENT?


Posted: 02 Apr 2013 04:46 PM PDT
Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v JAX [2012] NSWADT 283 is a case in which the solicitor was disciplined for paying himself out of fees provided to him by his client for payment of counsel’s fees.  Ultimately he went bankrupt and did not pay the fees. See also this earlier post on this subject.  The decision also represents yet another admonition to pleaders of disciplinary charges to plead dishonesty expressly if they intend to allege it.
There were the following agreed facts:
’20. The Solicitor acted for [a client] in a Family Law matter and Mr A Todd of Counsel was briefed.
 26. On 27 June 2007 the Solicitor issued a further Bill in the sum of $25,267.00 which included $6,765.00 due to Mr Todd.
27. On 27 June 2007 the sum of $8,800.00 was transferred from the Solicitor’s trust account for costs but the amount due to Mr Todd was not paid.
28. On 9 July 2007 Mr Todd issued a further Bill in the sum of $990.00 so that the amount then due to him was $7,755.00.
29. On 11 July 2007 the sum of $9,702.00 was transferred from the Solicitor’s trust account for costs. The amount then due to Mr Todd [$6,765.00 plus $990, $7,755.00 in total] was not paid.
30. As at 11 July 2007 the Solicitor had issued Bills for costs & disbursements totalling $40,667.00. On the dates shown the Solicitor withdrew from his trust account and paid to his office account the following amounts:-
22/06/07 $23,294.50
27/06/07 $8,800.00
11/07/07 $9,702.00
$41,796.50
31. The Solicitor was reckless as to the amount of the withdrawals made from the trust account ledger (total of $41,796.50) exceeding the total of bills issued for costs & disbursements ($40,667.00).
32. The Solicitor thereby breached section 260 of the Act by mixing trust money with his own funds.
33. The Solicitor misappropriated to his own use the sum of $1,129.50 being the difference between the figures of $41,796.50 (total of withdrawals from the trust account ledger) and $40,667.00 (total of bills issued for costs & disbursements).
34. Further, the Solicitor breached section 261(1)(b) of the Act and clause 88 of the Regulation as he had no authority to withdraw the additional sum of $1,129.50.
35. On 18 August 2007 the sum of $7,500.00 was paid to Mr Todd by way of a trust account cheque leaving a balance in the trust account of $703.50.
36. Between 27 June 2007 (the date of payment into the office account, as in paragraph 27 above) and 18 August 2007 the Solicitor deliberately, alternatively recklessly, preferred his own interests as to the payment of costs, by transfer into the office account, in preference to the payment of counsel’s fees.
37. The Solicitor misappropriated to his own use the sum of $7,500.00 due to Mr Todd between 27 June 2007 and 18 August 2007.
The Tribunal discussed the agreed facts as follows:
  1. Having regard to common usage, to the considerations spelt out in the passage in Council of the Law Society of NSW v Nicholls[2012] NSWADT 22 mentioned above and to the authorities cited in that passage, we agree with Ms Webster that an allegation of misappropriation against a legal practitioner does not necessarily connote dishonesty on the part of the practitioner. We would observe, however, that this term may often be interpreted by a respondent practitioner, by the Tribunal or by a third party as involving dishonesty. For this reason, an applicant in disciplinary proceedings such as these should bear in mind the danger of alleging misappropriation without also indicating what form of culpability is alleged against the respondent – i.e., whether it be outright dishonesty, mere inadvertence or some intermediate degree of fault. If no such indication is given, the respondent may well be entitled to maintain that the case being brought against him or her has not been defined with sufficient precision.
  1. In the present proceedings, we are satisfied that the two acts of the Solicitor claimed to amount to misappropriation – i.e. those described in paragraphs 33 and 37 of the Agreed Statement – did merit this label. As Ms Webster made clear, neither of them was alleged to involve dishonesty on the Solicitor’s part.
  1. At first sight, the conduct described in paragraph 37 – i.e., the Solicitor’s transfer into his office account of an amount of $7,500 held in trust for [the client], at a time when this amount was due to be paid by him to Mr Todd of counsel – might seem to involve no more than deferral by him of the discharge of his obligation to pay a debt. But a passage in the Tribunal’s decision in Law Society of New South Wales v Davidson [2007] NSWADT 264 is useful in demonstrating that unjustified delay by a solicitor in paying counsel’s fees from funds received for that purpose constitutes a breach of a fiduciary duty to the client. In consequence, the transfer of such funds into the solicitor’s office account, for the benefit of the solicitor, can properly be characterised as misappropriation of them.
  1. The relevant passage in Davidson (paragraphs [123] to [130]) is as follows:-
123 The second complaint against the solicitor is one of unethical conduct relating to the failure to pay third parties within a reasonable time. The solicitor is charged with unethical conduct in relation to late payment of disbursements in the nature of fees due to third parties…
124 At all relevant times the solicitor was a sole practitioner with employed staff. He operated a Trust Account in respect of which he was the sole signatory…
125 In Re Robb & Anor (1996) 134 FLR 294, the Supreme Court of the ACT, noting that wilful or persistent failure to pay counsel’s fees could amount to professional misconduct, said:
The point is that the delay in paying counsel to be attributed to the solicitors in the present case stems from their assumption that moneys in their office account, received on trust for the client and transferred to the office account for the very purpose of paying counsel, were not affected by their fiduciary duties to the client and were their moneys to pay counsel fees when they chose and that any delay was simply a matter between counsel and themselves.
That assumption was totally unjustified. On the contrary, every day of delay in paying counsel from the time of transferring the moneys from the trust account to the office account, was a day in which the solicitors were in breach of their fiduciary duty to the client.
126 The solicitor’s evidence on this issue was that it was his “policy” not to pay disbursements until the client had paid the whole amount due on a tax invoice.
127 The solicitor’s view of the matter was that:
“If an invoice has been rendered to the client, the client pays your invoice,…I’ve always believed you can pay that money to your office account and then you have the obligation to pay the disbursements that are included in that invoice.”
“The disbursements are incurred by me solely. I have the liability to pay them whether the client pays me or not… the money can be banked to the office account and then the disbursements are paid within a reasonable time…”
128 The Tribunal does not agree that the solicitor’s “policy” accords with his obligations as a solicitor to deal with moneys received from a client in accordance with the relevant legislation.
129 The Tribunal does not accept that the solicitor was entitled to act upon his “policy” of withholding payment of outstanding disbursements until such time as his client had paid the whole amount of a Tax Invoice. The obligation to pay such sums arose upon the solicitor being put in funds by the client for that purpose.
130 As was held in Re Robb, where a solicitor holds clients funds for the purpose of paying counsel and other persons, and transfers those funds to an office account, any delay in so paying the moneys amounts to professionalmisconduct, for during the period of delay the solicitor is treating clients’ funds as the solicitor’s own money.
  1. The conduct amounting to misappropriation described in paragraph 33 of the Agreed Statement – i.e., withdrawing funds from a trust account in order to pay costs – has been held more than once to amount to professional misconduct. The decision in Council of the Law Society of New South Wales v Clapin [2011] NSWADT 83 (see at [206 - 208]) provides an example.
  1. The conduct amounting to misappropriation described in paragraph 35 of the Agreed Statement – i.e., payment of a solicitor’s own costs in lieu of counsel’s fees, using funds furnished for the latter purpose – has also been held to amount to professional misconduct. As the extract quoted above demonstrates, this was the case in Law Society of New South Wales v Davidson [2007] NSWADT 264. A further example is provided by Law Society of New South Wales v McCarthy [2003] NSWADT 198. Here the facts on which the Tribunal based its finding of professional misconduct were summarised as follows at [2 - 3]:-
2 The conduct in question involves one transaction. The following facts are not disputed. In 1999 the practitioner was practising as a solicitor, but (as is permitted) did not operate a trust account. He received a payment in settlement of a client’s case which related to costs and disbursements incurred by him on the client’s behalf. The amount of the payment was $4200, of which it was said by the practitioner and not disputed, that $3000 was in respect of counsel’s fees and $1200 was in respect of his costs. A cheque for $4200 was drawn in favour of the practitioner. It was deposited into the practitioner’s personal account on 24 June 1999.
3 The matter of non-payment of counsel’s fees was drawn to the attention of the Law Society by the client on 8 March 2000. Counsel’s fees were paid on 28 June 2000.’