In Re VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS ( 2022 )


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  • Case: 22-9000    Document: 2       Page: 1   Filed: 02/25/2022
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED
    PROTOCOLS FOR IN-PERSON ARGUMENTS AND
    RELATED ORDER
    ______________________
    2022-9000
    ______________________
    Before DYK, WALLACH, and STOLL, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM.
    ORDER
    Respondents, who are members of this court’s bar,
    were ordered to show cause why disciplinary action should
    not be imposed for, inter alia, violating this court’s Revised
    Protocols for In-Person Arguments (August 12, 2021) (here-
    inafter, “the Revised Protocols”) and an order that denied
    their motion to allow additional attendees at oral argu-
    ment. Having received the responses by Respondents, the
    court’s standing panel on attorney misconduct now consid-
    ers whether to take disciplinary action.
    I.
    A.
    Some background is helpful to put the relevant events
    in perspective. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic,
    this court issued administrative orders in 2020 that pro-
    hibited public access to the National Courts Building and
    suspended all in-person oral arguments.               See
    Case: 22-9000    Document: 2      Page: 2    Filed: 02/25/2022
    2                 IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS
    Administrative Orders 2020-02, 2020-03. When this court
    resumed allowing counsel in the courthouse for argument
    in September 2021, we kept in place the restrictions on
    public access to the National Courts Building, see Admin-
    istrative Order 2021-10, and put in place strict protocols
    governing appearances at oral argument in order to protect
    the health and safety of the court and its staff, the bar, and
    the public.
    Under the in-person argument protocols in effect dur-
    ing the events here, “[o]nly arguing counsel and no more
    than one attendee whose presence is necessary to assist or
    supervise arguing counsel (e.g., a client, lawyer sitting sec-
    ond chair, or paralegal)” were “permitted access to the Na-
    tional Courts Building and the courtroom.” The Revised
    Protocols also required all persons entering the building to
    complete Form 33C declaring under penalty of perjury that
    the individual was “scheduled to appear in person for argu-
    ment at the National Courts Building in Washington, D.C.
    either as (a) arguing counsel or (b) to assist or to supervise
    arguing counsel” and that the individual was either fully
    vaccinated for COVID-19 or received a negative test result
    for COVID-19 that was administered within 48 hours of the
    argument scheduled in the argued matter.
    To ensure compliance with the Revised Protocols, the
    court required that arguing counsel also complete Form
    33A, certifying that “I understand and agree that, as an
    officer of the court, I am personally responsible for ensur-
    ing all individuals attending argument with me have also
    read and will comply with the Revised Protocols,” and that
    “I further understand and agree that it is my responsibility
    to ensure that all individuals attending argument with me
    remain in compliance with the Revised Protocols while in
    the National Courts Building.” In completing that form,
    arguing counsel also certified that he or she understood
    that “failure to abide by any of” the provisions certified in
    the form “may subject [him or her] to discipline.”
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    IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS                  3
    B.
    The following facts appear undisputed: Respondents
    are two partners and a special counsel at the same law firm
    that represented a party in an appeal before this court. A
    few days before the scheduled in-person argument, Re-
    spondents filed a motion seeking leave of court for two of
    the Respondents as well as two other individuals to attend
    in addition to arguing counsel (also a Respondent) and the
    one person authorized to be in the building and the court-
    room who was necessary to assist or supervise arguing
    counsel. The proposed attendees were named in the mo-
    tion. The motion was forwarded to the merits panel on the
    appeal for consideration. The panel denied that motion
    without further elaboration.
    After receiving the order rejecting the request for addi-
    tional attendees, Respondents decided that when one of the
    Respondent partners argued, an associate would be the one
    official attendee allowed to assist the arguing partner dur-
    ing the argument. 1 Though they received the order deny-
    ing their request to enter the building and attend
    argument only two days prior to argument, the responses
    state that Respondents nonetheless “determined that [the
    special counsel and the non-arguing partner] could go to
    the Court, identify who they were, and ask if they could
    attend, if circumstances had changed.” The responses ex-
    plain that “[t]hey were hoping . . . that the panel would let
    them attend.”
    1  While the associate was directed to show cause, the
    court has determined that he committed no misconduct
    and therefore has dismissed all charges against him.
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    4                IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS
    On the day of argument, all four attorneys, each in pos-
    session of a signed Form 33C, proceeded together through
    the security gate at the entrance to the National Courts
    Building. After passing through security, the Respondents
    took an elevator to the second floor where the courtroom
    was located and entered the assigned courtroom. After en-
    tering the courtroom, special counsel and the non-arguing
    partner took a seat in a back corner of the courtroom and
    were shortly thereafter summoned to the front of the court-
    room by one of the court’s deputy clerks. The deputy clerk
    informed the special counsel and the non-arguing partner
    that they could not be in the courtroom, and both returned
    to the lobby area. The special counsel and the non-arguing
    partner were subsequently told that they were not permit-
    ted in the building and escorted out.
    The matters were subsequently referred to the court’s
    standing panel on attorney discipline. The panel ordered
    the Respondents to show cause as to why their actions did
    not warrant discipline for violating the Revised Protocols
    and the order denying the motion for additional attendees.
    Respondents respond that any failure to comply with the
    Revised Protocols and the court’s order denying extra at-
    tendees was not intentional. Respondents further contend
    that it was not unreasonable for special counsel and the
    non-arguing partner to come to the court on the day of ar-
    gument so that Respondents could seek permission and
    clarification on whether they could attend the argument.
    II.
    Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 46(c) provides that
    “[a] court of appeals may discipline an attorney who prac-
    tices before it for conduct unbecoming a member of the bar
    or for failure to comply with any court rule.” We have also
    adopted Federal Circuit Attorney Discipline Rules, which
    make clear that “[a]n act or omission by an attorney that
    violates the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, the Fed-
    eral Circuit Rules, these rules, or orders or instructions of
    Case: 22-9000    Document: 2     Page: 5    Filed: 02/25/2022
    IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS                5
    the court . . . may be the basis for discipline.” Fed. Cir.
    Att’y Disc. R. 2(d). Although the Revised Protocols are not
    incorporated by reference or otherwise in any rule of this
    court, they are instructions of this court and help define
    conduct becoming a member of this court’s bar. Accord-
    ingly, we are authorized to impose sanctions on an attorney
    whose actions or omissions violate the Revised Protocols.
    Turning to the disciplinary matters at hand, we con-
    clude that the fact that the arguing partner was accompa-
    nied by the special counsel and the non-arguing partner
    clearly violated the Revised Protocols. The Revised Proto-
    cols were perfectly clear that “[o]nly arguing counsel and
    no more than one attendee whose presence is necessary to
    assist or supervise arguing counsel” were “permitted access
    to the National Courts Building and the courtroom.”
    The language of Form 33C, which Respondents readily
    understood was required when in the building, further re-
    inforced these access restrictions. That form required a
    declaration under penalty of perjury that the individual
    was “scheduled to appear in person for argument at the Na-
    tional Courts Building in Washington, D.C. either as (a)
    arguing counsel or (b) to assist or to supervise arguing
    counsel.” This language, together with the language of the
    Revised Protocols just quoted, put all here on clear notice
    that the non-arguing partner and special counsel could not
    be in the building as spectators or additional attendees
    there to assist or supervise arguing counsel.
    If there was some ambiguity or reasonable basis for
    confusion, we would be inclined to resolve that in Respond-
    ents’ favor. See United States v. Brown, 
    72 F.3d 25
    , 29 (5th
    Cir. 1995); In re Ruffalo, 
    390 U.S. 544
    , 556 (1968) (White,
    Case: 22-9000    Document: 2      Page: 6    Filed: 02/25/2022
    6                 IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS
    J., concurring). However, there was no ambiguity in the
    protocols. 2
    Most troubling is Respondents’ decision to come to-
    gether in person to the National Courts Building after this
    court had just denied their motion for additional attendees
    only two days earlier. The suggestion that the Revised Pro-
    tocols or court order permitted in-person attendance to
    orally request permission and clarification of the court’s or-
    der denying such permission is not reasonable. The court’s
    Revised Protocols and the panel’s order limited the number
    of attendees in the building and courtroom. Respondents’
    decision to violate these orders by entering the building
    and courtroom for purpose of seeking permission to violate
    the orders is not reasonable. Given the Revised Protocols
    and express denial of their motion by the court, it was in-
    cumbent on Respondents to file a written motion for recon-
    sideration or clarification rather than simply show up at
    the courthouse in violation of the protocols to again seek
    permission to attend argument. Any contention that court
    staff somehow authorized entry is irrelevant. Court staff,
    including court security officers, cannot override a court or-
    der. For these reasons, we conclude that the Revised
    2    Respondents rely on two sentences in the protocols
    that reference counsel and “attendees,” see the Revised Pro-
    tocols at page 1 (“Counsel and attendees may access only
    the main lobby, the public elevators, the courtroom desig-
    nated for argument, and the lobby area and restrooms im-
    mediately outside of the designated courtroom. Following
    security screening in the main lobby, counsel and attendees
    must report directly to the assigned courtroom . . . .”), but
    it is clear from context that these are instructions for au-
    thorized attendees and did not overrule the explicit lan-
    guage of the protocols and order limiting those who could
    attend. Respondents’ argument that the protocols are am-
    biguous is wholly without merit.
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    IN RE: VIOLATION OF THE REVISED PROTOCOLS                  7
    Protocols and the order were violated by Respondents, and
    there was no ambiguity in those instructions.
    Despite these violations, because Respondents express
    earnest remorse, have not previously been accused of mis-
    conduct, and because this situation has not arisen before,
    we have decided not to impose sanctions. See In re Viola-
    tion of Rule 50, 
    78 F.3d 574
    , 576 (Fed. Cir. 1996). However,
    the bar is on notice that this court takes compliance with
    these protocols very seriously and that sanctions will likely
    be imposed if a future violation of the protocols takes place.
    We have said that for this court “to get its work done,” it
    “must insist on strict compliance with its rules.” In re Vio-
    lation of Rule 28(c), 
    388 F.3d 1383
    , 1385 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
    That sentiment applies with particular force to our instruc-
    tions governing in-person arguments while the court and
    the bar continue to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic given
    the health and safety implications.
    FOR THE COURT
    February 25, 2022                    /s/ Peter R. Marksteiner
    Date                           Peter R. Marksteiner
    Clerk of Court