Form B Resignation
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Oregon State Bar Association (OSBA) is a public corporation and instrumentality of the Oregon Judicial Department in the U.S. state of Oregon. Founded in 1890 as the private Oregon Bar Association, it became a public entity in 1935 that regulates the legal profession. The public corporation is part of the
Oregon Judicial Department The Oregon Judicial Department (OJD) is the judicial branch of government of the state of Oregon in the United States. The chief executive of the branch is the Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. Oregon’s judiciary consists primarily of ...
. Lawyers are required to join the OSB in order to practice law in Oregon, unless an exception applies. The OSBA is charged with administering lawyer admissions and discipline, pursuant to rules promulgated by the Oregon Supreme Court. It also administers the Legal Services Program which funds legal aid in Oregon and provides accountability by maintaining standards and guidelines for legal aid providers. OSBA is governed by a 19 person Board of Governors — 15 of the board’s members are lawyers, and four are public members.


Summary

Oregon has an "integrated bar": all attorneys in Oregon are required to join the Oregon State Bar if they desire to practice law in Oregon. Membership fees and program fees from the 16,000 active members, together with revenue from bar programs, fund the entire budget of the agency. OSBA has approximately 100 employees and is overseen by a Board of Governors. This 16 person board group along with the 200-member House of Delegates and the Oregon Supreme Court provide governance for the agency's activities. OSBA also administers a board on attorney discipline and the Board of Bar Examiners. Additionally, the bar makes recommendations for filing mid-term judicial vacancies in the courts of the Oregon Judicial Department. These recommendations are given to the Governor of Oregon who makes the final appointment decision. Most lawyers in private practice are also required to participate in the Oregon Professional Liability Fund, a self-funded insurance program. As of 2006, the program premium was $3,000 per year for $300,000 in coverage. Oregon was the first state to adopt the mandatory insurance scheme for attorneys. OSBA administers several programs to facilitate finding legal representation. The bar's Lawyer Referral Service has around 600 attorneys statewide that practice every area of law. The service receives around 75,000 calls per year and makes approximately 50,000 referrals. The Modest Means Program offers reduced fee representation in family law, criminal law, and landlord/tenant cases. The Problem Solvers Program offers a free 30-minute consultation to teens aged 13–17. The Military Assistance Panel offers two hours of pro bono work to active duty military members. The Lawyer-to-Lawyer Program connects lawyers with more experienced attorneys who are willing to give guidance over the phone at no cost.


Name

The Oregon Bar Association (OBA)was a voluntary association from 1890 to 1935. During its existence, OBA was also commonly referred to as the "Oregon State Bar Association" even though that was not its formal name. The "Oregon State Bar Association" (OSBA) is a public corporation established in 1935 by the Oregon Legislature to replace OBA. In popular usage, the term "Oregon Bar Association" has been often used to describe OSBA.


History

The Oregon Bar Association was organized on November 8, 1890. One vice-president was selected from each of the seven judicial districts of Oregon. The original bar association was not created by a statute and was not incorporated. Membership was voluntary, although as of July 1, 1927, any lawyer who became a member of a local bar association was automatically deemed to be a member of the Oregon Bar association. The first president of the Oregon Bar Association was Cyrus A. Dolph, a prominent lawyer who had begun practice in Portland in 1866.


Early disciplinary proceedings

As of October 19, 1895, the Oregon Bar Association was working towards the disbarment of eight attorneys, on grounds of false undertakings in attachment and
libel Defamation is the act of communicating to a third party false statements about a person, place or thing that results in damage to its reputation. It can be spoken (slander) or written (libel). It constitutes a tort or a crime. The legal defini ...
proceedings, gross drunkenness and misbehavior in court, uttering false certificates for admission of Chinese immigrants, false statements to a notary, falsifying documents purporting to show payment a debt to an estate, false
defamation Defamation is the act of communicating to a third party false statements about a person, place or thing that results in damage to its reputation. It can be spoken (slander) or written (libel). It constitutes a tort or a crime. The legal defini ...
and extortion, embezzlement, larceny, and misappropriation of funds held in trust held for clients. One of the attorneys, U.S. Grant Marquam, who was charged with misappropriation of client funds, was the son of millionaire and prominent politician
Philip A. Marquam Philip A. Marquam (February 28, 1823 – May 8, 1912) was a lawyer, judge, legislator, and real estate developer in the U.S. state of Oregon. Early life Philip Marquam was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on February 28, 1823, to Philip Winche ...
. Four of the eight lawyers had been convicted of crimes forming the basis for the disbarment proceedings, and one of those four was already in the state penitentiary.


Advertising restrictions

In 1892, a lawyer ran an advertisement in several daily newspapers which stated: "" Divorces a specialty ; reliable advice, prompt, attention and moderate fee; no fee until after divorce. Apply Attorney, room 3 at 280½ Washington street, comer Fourth, City." The Grievance Committee found that the advertisement was neither illegal nor grounds for disbarment, but criticized it as being unprofessional. During a discussion of the advertisement, grievance committee member L.B. Cox objected to the attorney's not listing his name and further promising no fee until the divorce was concluded, and argued that these factors were grounds for disbarment. A motion was then passed to refer the matter back to the Grievance Committee with instructions to bring it to the attention of the
supreme court A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts in most legal jurisdictions. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort, apex court, and high (or final) court of appeal. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ...
. In 1908 the American Bar Association (ABA) approved 32 "Canons of Professional Ethics." In 1935, those Canons were adopted, in part, by the Oregon Supreme Court and the then-recently organized Oregon State Bar Association. ABA Ethics Canon 27 stated that it was unprofessional conduct for a lawyer to solicit business by advertising. Many years later, broad bar association restrictions on lawyer advertising were stricken down in '' Bates v. State Bar of Arizona'' as violations of the First Amendment guarantee of
freedom of speech Freedom of speech is a principle that supports the freedom of an individual or a community to articulate their opinions and ideas without fear of retaliation, censorship, or legal sanction. The right to freedom of expression has been recogni ...
. Even after ''Bates'', bar associations were still free to regulate advertising that was "false, deceptive, or misleading." Under OSBA rules in effect in 2022, the text 1892 advertisement would likely subject the lawyer to discipline, as it is required that the advertisement include the lawyer's name. Current bar rules further forbid a lawyer from charging "any fee in a domestic relations matter, the payment or amount of which is contingent upon the securing of a divorce."


Murder of bar prosecuting counsel

On the afternoon of Saturday, November 28, 1908, attorney Ralph B. Fisher, who had been the prosecutor for the grievance committee of the Oregon State Bar Association was shot and killed in his Portland office in the
Mohawk Building The Mohawk Building is a building located in downtown Portland, Oregon, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. See also * National Register of Historic Places listings in Southwest Portland, Oregon Current listings ...
by former attorney James Anderson Finch. Finch had been disbarred for having appeared in court in an intoxicated condition and forging the name and notarial seal of his law partner to an affidavit. Fisher had presented the disbarment case against Finch to the Oregon Supreme Court. Wire stories reported Fisher had refused to help Finch be reinstated into the bar. The evidence though was that Fisher,even though the bar's prosecutor in a clear case against Finch, had aided him by urging the Supreme Court to find him capable of reform and not impose full disbarment, but rather a suspension only, a recommendation which the court followed. The '' Oregon Daily Journal'' broadly portrayed Finch as mediocre lawyer and a drunk, with revenge as his motive. The ''Sunday Oregonian'' provided details such as the nature of the disbarment proceedings for Finch. Finch was subsequently convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Governor Frank W. Benson refused to commute the sentence, even though the petition was taken to him personally by Finch's wife, to whom he had been married less than a year. Finch was executed by hanging at
Salem Salem may refer to: Places Canada Ontario * Bruce County ** Salem, Arran–Elderslie, Ontario, in the municipality of Arran–Elderslie ** Salem, South Bruce, Ontario, in the municipality of South Bruce * Salem, Dufferin County, Ontario, part ...
on November 12, 1909, in a scene reported luridly in the newspapers.


Qualifications to practice

At the bar association's annual convention in 1903, lawyer A.F. Flegel proposed the adoption of measures proposed by the committee on legal education and admission to the bar to raise the standard of general and legal education in the legal profession in the state. Lawyer R.R. Duniway objected to any change which would make it more difficult for applicants to practice, saying that he could not have practiced if the requirements proposed by the committee had been in effect when he was admitted to the bar. Duniway's remarks that "there is no use in trying to shut out some man who don't know very much, but who would make a rattling good lawyer" were reported to have excited "much amusement", but even so the motion was adopted. In 1913, the Oregon Supreme Court created a five-member Board of Bar Examiners, appointed by the Oregon Bar Association for three year terms, to determine the qualifications of applicants to the bar, and make recommendations to the supreme court as to whether they should be admitted. Before then, candidates for admission had been examined by the court itself, or by its designees. In November 1915 the board of examiners of the bar association proposed new educational requirements for admission to practice. According to a newspaper of the time, there were hundreds of lawyers in Oregon unable cope with the difficult legal conditions of the time, who had passed the bar examination "when that barricade was more or less a joke." "It was customary to pass every applicant for a certificate to practice law law in this state, and no matter how little the applicant knew of law, he had a reasonable assurance that he would get that certificate." Under the 1915 proposal, candidates for admission to the bar would be required to have at least a high school education or its equivalent, and would have to show that they had studied law for three years. It was not until 1941 that graduation from an approved law school became a requirement for admission.


Involvement in Espionage Act prosecution

Henry Albers was a well-known German-American businessman and a principal in the Albers Brothers milling business, which was then a well-established Oregon firm. On October 21, 1918, Albers was arrested in Portland, Oregon and charged with violation of the Espionage Act of 1917. Affidavits of a deputy U.S. marshall, and others, alleged that on October 8, 1918, while on passenger train running from Grants Pass to
Roseburg, Oregon Roseburg is a city in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is in the Umpqua River, Umpqua River Valley in southern Oregon and is the county seat and most populous city of Douglas County, Oregon, Douglas County. Founded in 1851, the population was 23,683 a ...
, Albers had said "he was a German and proud of it, and that his brothers were also pro-German." Albers was also accused of saying "the United States could never lick the Kaiser in a thousand years" and, further, that he had abused Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo. Albers, who had been born in Germany in 1866, and who had become a naturalized citizen in 1900, was under the influence of liquor at the time. After a jury trial in early February 1919 in Portland, Albers was found guilty. On March 17, 1919, Albers was sentenced to three years of penal servitude at the U.S. penitentiary on McNeil Island and to pay a $10,000 fine. Albers filed an appeal. and was at liberty while it was pending. In February, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals denied Albers' appeal. In June, 1920, the Albers case was accepted by the United States Supreme Court on a petition for a writ of certiorari. In April 1921, when the case was called for oral argument, Solicitor General of the United States
William L. Frierson William Little Frierson (September 3, 1868 – May 25, 1953) was an American lawyer, judge, and politician. During his career he served as the United States Solicitor General (1920–1921), United States Assistant Attorney General (1917–1920), ...
conceded there had been an error in the Albers case, and moved to vacate the conviction. The error appears to have been the admission of evidence of alleged pro-German statements by Albers before war had been declared. The Oregon Bar Association then attempted to intervene in the case as a non-party. The bar association sent a telegram to Oregon's U.S. Senator Charles L. McNary which requested that the senator go before the Supreme Court and move for a stay of the order reversing the conviction of Albers. The bar protested the action of the Department of Justice in confessing error in the case, which had resulted in the case being remanded to the U.S. district court in Oregon. The telegram further asked that the bar association be given the privilege of appearing in the case at a hearing on the merits. McNary, acting as lawyer for the bar association, presented a formal petition to the Supreme Court. The court, in a one-sentence opinion, denied the bar association's effort to intervene in the case. Albers died of a stroke on July 27, 1921 at his home in Milwaukie, Oregon, before any remanded proceedings could occur in U.S. district court.


The Oregon Law Review

The Oregon Law Review began publication in 1921, with the first editor being Prof. Thomas A. Larrimore. By 1933 it was a quarterly publication and the official organ of the Oregon Bar association, with a mailing list of 1350 names. After the bar association was formally incorporated as a public agency in 1935, the Oregon Law Review was sent out to all members of the bar who paid the statutory fee.


Bar examination

As of July, 1925, the state board of bar examiners was conducting the bar examination. In 1931 the bar examination was given on July 15. Of the one hundred and three (103) persons who took the examination, forty five (45) passed. Another source reported that the bar passage rate for the 1931 examination was "about 60 per cent." There were a number of applicants taking the examination for the second time. At that time, an applicant who did not pass on the second time could not take the examination again unless special permission were granted. On May 5, 1933, the bar association voted in favor of a five-year academic course for admission to the legal profession.


Minimum fee schedules

Bar associations used to promulgate and enforce fee schedules as one of their more common activities. The Oregon State Bar Association promulgated a minimum fee schedule before World War II. The schedule set fee guidelines for a variety of common legal services. "For example, the schedule suggested that lawyers charge $250 for preparing an uncontested divorce. Simple wills and adoptions with no controversy are set at $30 and $100 respectively." (A minimum fee schedule was also reported to have been on the agenda for the Oregon State Bar Association's 1938 annual meeting.) OSBA adopted its first statewide minimum fee schedule on September 29, 1938 after lengthy debate at the annual bar convention. Originally the proposal was to set minimum fees that would double in counties with more than 100,000 population, of which at that time there was only one, Multnomah County. The convention then voted to apply the Multnomah County schedule to the entire state.


Local schedules

Proposals to establish or raise minimum lawyer fees were made in Oregon by local bar associations. In 1907, the Umatilla County Bar Association was formed, and at the first organizational meeting, it established a detailed schedule of minimum fees. Each member of the new bar association pledged not to charge less than the minimum schedule of fees, and not to associate with any attorney who did so. The Jackson County bar association was newly formed in the summer of 1919, with "the immediate business of the new organization would be to standardize and lift lawyers' fees so as to make them conform with the cost of living." After adoption of the state-wide fee schedules in 1938, county bar associations were still free to adopt their own minimum fee schedules provided they were approved by the Board of Governors of the state bar. Marion County did so in December 1938. It "increased certain of the minimum fees from its depression-established schedule but in nearly all instances the new list remained below fees prescribed in the approved at the state bar convention n Salemlast fall." Marion County's minimum fees for an uncontested divorce were raised to $75, up $25, which restored the fee to its pre-depression minimum. Minimum fees were set lower than the state schedule , for such matters as office calls, examining abstracts, appealing cases to the Oregon Supreme Court and bankruptcy petitions. For example the county set a minimum fee of $2 for office calls seeking oral advice, with the state minimum fee at $5. In January 1939, lawyers of Washington County similarly protested that the state fee schedule was too high and "discrediting to the profession." The lawyers passed a motion stating their own county's fee schedule conformed better to the conditions in Washington County.


Forced abandonment

The bar association's minimum fee schedule was still in effect in the early 1960s. By the early 1970s, these minimum fee schedules were being criticized as having the true purpose to provide "a minimum income level for lawyers above that which would prevail in a free market." In 1974, the United States Department of Justice brought a legal action against the Oregon State Bar Association, alleging that by use of minimum fee schedules, the association was violating federal antitrust statutes. The Oregon State Bar sought summary judgment in its favor, arguing that it was not liable under the "state action" and "learned profession" exemptions to the Sherman Antitrust Act. On November 19, 1974, the U.S. district court in Portland, Oregon ruled against the bar association, opening the association up to Sherman Act liability. Within six weeks the bar association abandoned its minimum fee schedule. Not long after that the United States Supreme Court reached the same result as did the district court in the Oregon case.


Former Communist Party members

Applicants for admission to the bar were and remain required to establish that they are persons of good moral character. In the 1950s and early 1960s, membership in the Communist Party was considered highly suspect, and in at least on state (Florida) was considered, at least in dicta, to be per se grounds for denial of admission. In 1957, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Konigsberg vs. State Bar and in Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners that previous membership in the Communist Party could not by itself suffice to prevent a bar applicant from proving that he was a person of good moral character. In Oregon, Frank V. Patterson, passed the bar in 1953, but was denied admission because of his previous affiliation with the Communist Party, Aided by the American Civil Liberties Union, Patterson sought and was granted review in the United States Supreme Court, which reversed the Oregon Supreme, and ordered the Oregon court to review the matter in light of the then-recent Konigsberg and Schware decisions. On remand, the bar's decision to deny Patterson admission was upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court. Another applicant, Nick Chaivoe, who had allegedly been a Communist, had been denied admission to the bar in the early 1950s. (Chaivoe was eventually admitted to the bar in 1963.) When Bernard Jolles applied for admission to the bar in 1963, the bar opposed his admission based on the fact that when seeking admission to his law school, Northwestern School of Law, that he had previously been a member of the Communist Party. Jolles was fully aware of the Patterson decision, and developed his legal strategy with that case in mind. The Oregon Supreme Court, finding that Jolles had abandoned his allegiance to the Communist Party, admitted him to the bar association on a 4-2 vote, with then-recently appointed Justice
Arno Denecke Arno Harry Denecke (May 7, 1916 – October 20, 1993) was an American jurist born in Illinois. He served on the Oregon Supreme Court from 1963 to 1982, and as the 37th Chief Justice of the court from 1976 until leaving the bench. The World War II ...
recusing himself. Jolles still could not practice in federal court, because, although normally a matter of course, his application for admission to the bar of the U.S. District Court for Oregon was delayed for two years. Jolles believed that District Court judge
Gus J. Solomon Gus Jerome Solomon (August 29, 1906 – February 15, 1987) was a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon. Education and career Born in Portland, Oregon, Solomon was the child of immigrant Jew ...
was eventually instrumental in securing Jolles' admission. Twenty-five years later, in 1987, Jolles became president of the Oregon State Bar Association.


Incorporation of the bar as a public agency


Early proposals

On January 3, 1933, it was reported that at a closed door meeting of the executive directors of the bar association, there had been a discussion of presenting to the legislature a proposal to incorporate the bar association and giving it disciplinary authority over its members. The measure was said to have the objective of raising the standard of legal practice. The bill was introduced in the
Oregon House of Representatives The Oregon House of Representatives is the lower house of the Oregon Legislative Assembly. There are 60 members of the House, representing 60 districts across the state, each with a population of 65,000. The House meets in the west wing of the ...
on February 9, 1933 by the committee on the judiciary. Under the terms of the 1933 bill, all persons then entitled to practice law in the State of Oregon, including judges of the supreme, circuit, and the district courts, and, with their consent, the judges of the U.S. district court, would become members of the Oregon State Bar association. The bill provided for a board of governors of three members for each of Oregon's three congressional districts. The bill would give the Board of Governors, the authority, by a two-thirds vote following a hearing, to make a recommendation to the Oregon Supreme Court for the disbarment of any member of the bar.


Purpose of incorporation

In August 1935, Oscar Hayter, one of the most prominent attorneys in the state, and soon to be one of the first board of governors of the new association, gave a speech to the Salem
Rotary Club Rotary International is one of the largest service organizations in the world. Its stated mission is to "provide service to others, promote integrity, and advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through hefellowship of business, profe ...
in which he outlined some of the goals of the incorporated bar. Hayter stated: "Under the plan of the integrated bar, the profession hopes to build itself up so its members are above reproach in their dealings. We cannot make men angels overnight, but the new organization, with definite standards and officers, should be able to accomplish much."


Establishment as a public corporation

A bill similar to the proposed 1933 legislation was introduced in the 1935 legislature on January 29 by the joint Senate and House judiciary committee. With the approval of the Oregon Supreme Court, the board of governors would have the power to appoint a committee to examine applicants and make recommendations to the supreme court for admission to practice law. Any inactive member, or persons suspended or disbarred, who were to practice law could be charged with a misdemeanor, and if convicted, could be subject to a fine of $500 or imprisonment for up to six months, or both. On January 31, 1935, after nearly an hour of debate, the bill was passed by the Oregon senate by a vote of 21 to 9. According to a contemporary report, "objection to the measure centered on the contention that such legislation would hit at the 'little' lawyers and would not be workable in regard to the more prominent practitioners." Senator William H. Strayer, of
Baker A baker is a tradesperson who bakes and sometimes sells breads and other products made of flour by using an oven or other concentrated heat source. The place where a baker works is called a bakery. History Ancient history Since grains ha ...
contended that no lawyer should be compelled to join such an association. It was reported that as he voted, Strayer declared that "the skids are greased and I'm in a revival meeting. I vote no." By February 20, 1935, the bill had been passed by the Oregon House of Representatives and signed by governor
Charles H. Martin Charles Henry Martin (October 1, 1863September 22, 1946) was an American Army officer and later politician in the state of Oregon. A native of Illinois, he had a 40-year career in the military including serving in conflicts from the Spanish–Am ...
. The legislation took effect on June 12, 1935. Every active lawyer was required to be a member of the newly incorporated Oregon State Bar Association. In 1935 the annual membership fee was $3.


Governing body and initial officers

The governing body of the incorporated bar association was a nine-member Board of Governors. Three governors came from each of the (then) three Congressional districts. Each district also had a three-member trial committee. The first president of the Oregon State Bar was Portland attorney Robert F. Maguire. In addition to President Maguire, the first board of governors comprised attorneys Oscar Hayter, of Dallas, Circuit Court Judge James T. Brand, of Marshfield, Allan G. Carson, of
Salem Salem may refer to: Places Canada Ontario * Bruce County ** Salem, Arran–Elderslie, Ontario, in the municipality of Arran–Elderslie ** Salem, South Bruce, Ontario, in the municipality of South Bruce * Salem, Dufferin County, Ontario, part ...
, H.H. DeArmond, of Bend, Colon R. Eberhard, of La Grande, A.A. Smith, of
Baker A baker is a tradesperson who bakes and sometimes sells breads and other products made of flour by using an oven or other concentrated heat source. The place where a baker works is called a bakery. History Ancient history Since grains ha ...
, Arthur M. Geary, and Nicholas Jaureguy, both of
Portland Portland most commonly refers to: * Portland, Oregon, the largest city in the state of Oregon, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States * Portland, Maine, the largest city in the state of Maine, in the New England region of the northeas ...
. Arthur H. Lewis was treasurer and F.M. Sercombe, also from Portland, was secretary.


Involvement of law instructors

University of Oregon law school dean, and later U.S. senator
Wayne L. Morse Wayne Lyman Morse (October 20, 1900 – July 22, 1974) was an American attorney and United States Senator from Oregon. Morse is well known for opposing his party's leadership and for his opposition to the Vietnam War on constitutional grounds. ...
was appointed in November 1935 to the committee on legal education and admission. In addition to practicing law, board member Jaurgegay taught, from 1922 to1942,
evidence Evidence for a proposition is what supports this proposition. It is usually understood as an indication that the supported proposition is true. What role evidence plays and how it is conceived varies from field to field. In epistemology, evidenc ...
,
negotiable instrument A negotiable instrument is a document guaranteeing the payment of a specific amount of money, either on demand, or at a set time, whose payer is usually named on the document. More specifically, it is a document contemplated by or consisting of a ...
s, and trusts at Northwestern School of Law, in Portland, where he was said to have "set extremely high standards for himself and for his students."


Opposition to Supreme Court expansion

On February 5, 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, frustrated by
New Deal The New Deal was a series of programs, public work projects, financial reforms, and regulations enacted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the United States between 1933 and 1939. Major federal programs agencies included the Civilian Cons ...
legislation being struck down by the
Supreme Court A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts in most legal jurisdictions. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort, apex court, and high (or final) court of appeal. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ...
on what were perceived by critics of the court to be dubious constitutional grounds, announced he would support legistation which, if enacted would increase the number of justices on the court from nine to up to fifteen. The formal name of the legislation was the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937, and it came to be called the "court-packing plan." After the announcement, an OSBA committee sent out a poll to 2,200 members of the bar as to whether they supported or opposed the court-packing plan. On March 6, 1937, Frank P. Keenan, chairman of the committee, announced that 1,640 ballots had been returned, and these ran against the plan by a five to one ratio, specifically 266 votes for and 1,383 votes against.


Code of ethics

As initially organized, the bar association did not have a formal code of ethics. In 1907, at its seventeenth annual meeting, at the
Pioneer Courthouse The Pioneer Courthouse is a federal courthouse in Portland, Oregon, United States. Built beginning in 1869, the structure is the oldest federal building in the Pacific Northwest, and the second-oldest west of the Mississippi River. Along with ...
, the association declined to adopt a code.


Resignation from the bar


Early procedure

Lawyers in the early years of the bar association could avoid disbarment by resignation, and this was done by two of the eight then facing charges, specifically Harold Pilkington and Lewis C. Garrigus. Garrigus was able to have himself reinstated to the bar in 1905. Harold Pilkington was sentenced to prison for two years for embezzlement, but he may have been able to have himself reinstated in 1914 despite his previous resignation, as there is reported to have a man of the same name having been admitted to the bar in that year. Only a few years later, the Oregon Supreme Court ruled that an attorney's resignation would no longer be effective if disbarment were pending.


Form B resignation

A Form B resignation is the functional equivalent of being disbarred from a
Bar association A bar association is a professional association of lawyers as generally organized in countries following the Anglo-American types of jurisprudence. The word bar is derived from the old English/European custom of using a physical railing to separ ...
, and means that the submitting member of the bar resigned while facing disciplinary charges from the bar tribunal. Members of the Oregon State bar who enter a Form B Resignation are not eligible to be readmitted to the bar again.


Permanent disbarment

Until December 31, 1995, disbarred lawyers could apply for reinstatement five years after the effective date of their disbarment. As of January 1, 1996, disbarment is permanent. Oregon is one of the few states where disbarment is automatically permanent, the others being Indiana, Ohio, and New Jersey.


Bar programs


Client Security Fund


Purpose and procedure

Like most other states, the Oregon State Bar Association has established a "Client Security Fund" which will reimburse clients, up to a certain amount, who are victims of their own lawyer's dishonesty. To be eligible for a CSF award, there must evidence of dishonesty in an established lawyer-client relationship or the lawyer must have acting in a fiduciary capacity related to the lawyer’s practice of law. "Dishonesty" includes failing to refund fees where no work was done on the matter or where the work done was de minimis or of no value to the client.


Establishment of fund

In March 1959, a bill was introduced in the Oregon Legislature which would have set up a fund to reimburse the public when attorneys embezzled funds of their clients. The bill was recommended by the Oregon State Bar. The system would be funded by assessments on the members of the bar. On March 24, 1959, the bill was voted down in the Judiciary Committee of the
Oregon House of Representatives The Oregon House of Representatives is the lower house of the Oregon Legislative Assembly. There are 60 members of the House, representing 60 districts across the state, each with a population of 65,000. The House meets in the west wing of the ...
. According to a report, "the committee felt it would be unfair to require honest attorneys to pay for the sins of dishonest lawyers and that the bill would have encouraged claims against the proposed fund." On Friday, November 15, 1963, the Oregon State Bar Association conducted a secret ballot mail poll of Oregon lawyers regarding the association's proposal to establish a "client security fund." The purpose of the fund would be to reimburse clients suffering loss through defalcation, embezzlement, conversion, or misappropriation of funds by their lawyers. About 2,533 ballots were mailed out on November 1, 1963 and 1,846 valid ballots were returned. Of those who returned ballots, 658 lawyers supported establishment of the fund, 109 declined to vote,stating they lacked sufficient information to decide, and 1,079 were opposed. In 1966, at the bar association's annual convention, following considerable debate, adopted by a vote of 142 to 124, a plan to propose that the legislature authorize the bar to create a client security fund. Another proposal was adopted by voice vote at the 1967 convention. The 1967 Oregon Legislature enacted enabling legislation. This was later codified as the Client Security Fund Act. The Client Security Fund Act authorized the bar to adopt a plan by which clients who suffered financial losses because of dishonest conduct of bar members could be reimbursed. The funds would be raised primarily by a standard compulsory payment by all members of the bar. The enabling act of the 1967 session (Ch. 546) became effective on September 16, 1967, and soon afterwards at the 1967 annual meeting, the bar approved a resolution establishing the fund. The bar's board of governors at their November 10–11, 1967, meeting adopted a motion providing for an annual membership assessment of $5 to support the fund. At its April 19–20, 1968 meeting the board passed a detailed resolution which set up a complete procedure for administering the program, which came to be called the "Client Security Fund" ("CSF"). In 1970, CSF was upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court against a challenge that it was unconstitutional on the grounds of equal protection and
due process of law Due process of law is application by state of all legal rules and principles pertaining to the case so all legal rights that are owed to the person are respected. Due process balances the power of law of the land and protects the individual pers ...
.


Claims history

For the first twenty-six years of the Client Security Fund's existence, the maximum claim payable was $25,000 (equivalent to $225,538 in September 2022). The maximum payment per claim was raised to $50,000 in 1993. In 2012 and in 2019, the Client Security Fund was exhausted by the malfeasance of two attorneys who embezzled large amounts of client moneys from their own trust accounts. In response to the 2019 embezzlements, the bar association raised the maximum CSF payment per claim from $50,000 to $100,000, and also backed new legislation, enacted as SB 180, which, as an anti-embezzlement measure, would require insurers to notify clients directly when the insurer paid a settlement to a client's lawyer.


Professional Liability Fund

In 1977, the Oregon Legislature enacted legislation which gave the OSB Board of Governors authority to establish a professional liability fund for the purpose of insuring lawyers against malpractice lawsuits.1977 Oregon Laws Ch. 527 § 1, codified in ORS §§ 9.080 and 9.191. The fund would be financed by an annual assessment on lawyers in private practice in Oregon. Exercising its delegated authority, the Board passed a resolution, effective July 1, 1978, requiring all Oregon based attorneys to carry malpractice coverage with aggregate limits of not less than $100,000. The resolution further provided that the required malpractice coverage "for all active members in the private practice of law, with the exception of patent attorneys, shall be obtained through" the Fund. In 1989, PLF survived a legal challenge on anti-trust grounds. As of 2019, Oregon and Idaho are the only two states where lawyers are required to carry professional liability insurance. PLF's practice management attorneys and attorney counselors provide confidential services to all Oregon lawyers.


Interest on Lawyer Trust Accounts

The Oregon State Bar's IOLTA Program ( Interest on Lawyer Trust Accounts) began on a voluntary basis in 1983. In 1988, the bar members voted to make the IOLTA program mandatory, and the Oregon Supreme Court approved the necessary rule changes, effective May 1, 1989. Interest on short term client deposits in lawyer
trust account A custodial account is a financial account (such as a bank account, a trust fund or a brokerage account) set up for the benefit of a beneficiary, and administered by a responsible person, known as a legal guardian or custodian, who has a fiduciar ...
s is paid by the financial institution to th
Law Foundation
which uses the revenue "to fund organizations in Oregon that provide legal services to people of lesser means, promote diversity in the legal profession, and educate the public about the law."


Licensed paralegals

On July 19, 2022 the Oregon Supreme Court approved a proposal to license paralegals to provide some legal services that currently only lawyers may provide. Under the new rules, licensed paralegals will be allowed to provide limited legal services only in family law cases (divorces, custody, parenting time, etc.), and landlord/tenant cases.


Public Records Law

In March 1936, the board of governors of the newly-incorporated bar association declined to release the names of three attorneys who had received bar reprimands for unethical conduct, as well as the names of two other attorneys who had been exonerated. Records, or at least some of them, did become public when the bar association sought an actual suspension of an attorney from practice by a filing in the Oregon Supreme Court. In 1973, the Oregon Legislature passed the Oregon Public Records Law. In June 1974, Russell Sadler, a reporter for the Salem Capital Journal sought disciplinary records related to lawyer and politician Jason Lee, who was standing as a candidate for a judgeship on the Oregon Court of Appeals.
Oregon Attorney General The Oregon Attorney General is a statutory office within the executive branch of the state of Oregon, and serves as the chief legal officer of the state, heading its Department of Justice with its six operating divisions. The attorney general is ch ...
Lee Johnson Lee Johnson may refer to: Sportspeople * Lee Johnson (wide receiver) (born 1944), American football wide receiver *Lee Johnson (punter) (born 1961), American football punter *Lee Johnson (basketball) (born 1957), American basketball player * Lee Jo ...
had recently ordered the bar association to produce records for another lawyer, also at the request of the Capital Journal, and the association had similarly refused. (The newspaper dropped that request when it learned the information from another source.) James Welch, managing editor of the Capital Journal, stated that the newspaper's interest was based on the fact that Lee had narrowly defeated incumbent judge
Jacob Tanzer Jacob B. Tanzer (February 13, 1935 – July 23, 2018) was an American attorney in the state of Oregon. Prior to private practice Tanzer served as the 81st justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. He also served on the Oregon Court of Appeals, was a d ...
in the
primary election Primary elections, or direct primary are a voting process by which voters can indicate their preference for their party's candidate, or a candidate in general, in an upcoming general election, local election, or by-election. Depending on the ...
held on May 28, 1974, despite Tanzer's having had overwhelming support from members of the Oregon State Bar. Lee had been reprimanded by the Oregon Supreme Court in 1965, and this was already on the public record. The newspaper wanted to see his disciplinary file to ascertain if there were other complaints on file regarding Lee. Sadler brought legal action under the Oregon Public Records law to enforce his request, and in 1975, the Oregon Supreme Court ruled in his favor and required disclosure of the records. Oregon became the first state in the nation to provide complete access to all records, including grievances from clients.


Challenge to the unified bar


Supreme Court restriction on "non-germane" activities

OSBA is an "integrated" or "unified" bar, meaning that all lawyers in the state are required to belong to the association. As of 2020, thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have unified bars. In 1990, in the case of ''
Keller v. State Bar of California ''Keller v. State Bar of California'', 496 U.S. 1 (1990), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that attorneys who are required to be members of a state bar association have a First Amendment right to refrain from subsidi ...
'', the Supreme Court held that a state could require lawyers to belong to an integrated bar association, but prohibited integrated bars from funding with mandatory dues "activities having political or ideological coloration which are not reasonably related to the advancement of ts regulatorygoals." Lawyers have sued a number of unified bars alleging that under the 2018 Supreme Court decision in ''
Janus v. AFSCME ''Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31'', No. 16-1466, 585 U.S. ___ (2018), abbreviated ''Janus v. AFSCME'', was a landmark decision of the US Supreme Court on US labor law, concerning the power of la ...
'', it is unconstitutional to require an attorney join a bar association to practice law.


OSBA publication of political material

OSBA publishes a monthly magazine called the
Oregon State Bar Bulletin
' which is printed using funds from membership dues and which is sent to all members of the Oregon State Bar. In April 2018 two editorials allegedly of a political nature were published in the bar bulletin. One, entitled "Statement on White Nationalism and Normalization of Violence", was signed by six officers of the bar association. The second was a joint supporting statement of seven Oregon affinity bar associations which specifically and repeated criticized President
Donald J. Trump Donald John Trump (born June 14, 1946) is an American politician, media personality, and businessman who served as the 45th president of the United States from 2017 to 2021. Trump graduated from the Wharton School of the University of Pe ...
by name for having "catered to this white nationalist movement, allowing it to make up the base of his support and providing it a false sense of legitimacy." The editorials were published on facing pages. A green margin band enclosed both editorials within a single print area, making the two editorials appear to be joined. According to one report, it was the second editorial that "really set off" conservative critics. At the meeting of the Oregon State Bar Association's Board of Governors on April 20, 2018, the bar's chief executive officer noted that the Board of Governors "did not formally adopt the statement by the specialty bar groups" but that "publishing the two statements together was 'ill-advised and confusing.'”


Legal action against OSBA

In 2018, two lawsuits were brought against the Oregon State Bar, specifically ''Gruber v. OSBA''''Gruber v. Oregon State Bar Association'', 3:18-cv-01591-JR (USDC Oregon) and ''Crowe v. OSBA''. In ''Crowe'', the plaintiffs alleged that the statements in the ''Bar Bulletin'' were non-germane political advocacy, and for that reason, the requirement for mandatory membership in the bar association violated their rights to freedom of association under the
First First or 1st is the ordinal form of the number one (#1). First or 1st may also refer to: *World record, specifically the first instance of a particular achievement Arts and media Music * 1$T, American rapper, singer-songwriter, DJ, and rec ...
and Fourteenth Amendments to the constitution of the United States. A lawyer for the plaintiffs stated that the lawsuit "says lawyers should still be licensed, but 'that’s different from membership with the bar, which implies somebody speaks for you.'” In 2019, both cases were dismissed by the U.S. District Court. Appeals were taken to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which gave its decision in 2021. The Ninth Circuit found that " aintiffs' freedom of association claim based on the April 2018 Bulletin statements is viable" and remanded the case to the trial court with instructions to consider the claim in the light of the Supreme Court's ''Janus'' decision. As of November 2022 the plaintiffs in ''Glover'' and ''Crowe'' were proceeding with
discovery Discovery may refer to: * Discovery (observation), observing or finding something unknown * Discovery (fiction), a character's learning something unknown * Discovery (law), a process in courts of law relating to evidence Discovery, The Discovery ...
in the district court.


Notes


Further reading

* William H. Welch, M.D., Symposium on Legal Education and Admission to the Bar: Public Demand for Better Qualified Bar, 3 Oregon Law Review 269 (1924). * Address by Wayne Morse, U. S. Senator from Oregon, Before the Association of American Law Schools, December 28, 1948, 1948 Association of American Law Schools Handbook, Part Two, at 94–112. * Marion R. Kirkwood, Legal Education and Admission to the Bar, 14 Oregon Law Review 42–66 (1934) *


See also

* List of Oregon judges *
List of first women lawyers and judges in Oregon This is a list of the first women lawyer(s) and judge(s) in Oregon. It includes the year in which the women were admitted to practice law (in parentheses). Also included are women who achieved other distinctions such becoming the first in their sta ...
*
List of first minority male lawyers and judges in Oregon This is a list of the first minority male lawyer(s) and judge(s) in Oregon. It includes the year in which the men were admitted to practice law (in parentheses). Also included are men who achieved other distinctions such becoming the first in their ...
* List of Oregon affinity bar associations * Multnomah Bar Association


External links


Oregon Blue Book

Proceedings of the Oregon Bar Association at Its Annual Meeting

Harvard Law School Caselaw Access Project

Oregon Historical Society Oral History Project
{{Authority control American state bar associations Oregon law
Bar Bar or BAR may refer to: Food and drink * Bar (establishment), selling alcoholic beverages * Candy bar * Chocolate bar Science and technology * Bar (river morphology), a deposit of sediment * Bar (tropical cyclone), a layer of cloud * Bar (u ...
1935 establishments in Oregon Tigard, Oregon Organizations established in 1935