Drayton Beecher Smith, II v. Board of Professional Responsibility Of The Supreme Court Of Tennessee ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                                           06/26/2018
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
    AT JACKSON
    November 8, 2017 Session
    DRAYTON BEECHER SMITH, II v. BOARD OF PROFESSIONAL
    RESPONSIBILITY OF THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County
    No. CH-16-0528-I William B. Acree, Jr., Special Judge
    No. W2017-00247-SC-R3-BP
    Drayton Beecher Smith, II (“Attorney”) pled guilty in 2007 to federal charges of receipt
    and possession of images depicting child pornography and was sentenced to five years of
    imprisonment. In conjunction with these charges, Attorney consented to his disbarment,
    which was ordered in 2008. In August 2014, after being discharged from prison and
    while on probation, Attorney petitioned to be reinstated to the practice of law in
    Tennessee. The Board of Professional Responsibility (“BPR”) opposed Attorney’s
    petition, and a hearing panel was appointed (“the Panel”). After an evidentiary hearing,
    the Panel denied Attorney’s petition. Attorney sought review in chancery court, and the
    chancery court reversed the Panel’s decision and ordered Attorney reinstated. The BPR
    sought review in this Court. Initially, we hold that the chancery court had subject-matter
    jurisdiction of Attorney’s petition in spite of the BPR’s untimely filing of its application
    for costs. We further hold that the chancery court misapplied the applicable standard of
    review and thereby committed reversible error. Accordingly, we reverse the chancery
    court’s ruling and reinstate the Panel’s decision.
    Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 33.1(d);
    Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed;
    Decision of the Hearing Panel Reinstated
    JEFFREY S. BIVINS, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CORNELIA A. CLARK,
    SHARON G. LEE, HOLLY KIRBY, and ROGER A. PAGE, JJ., joined.
    A. Russell Willis, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, Board of Professional
    Responsibility.
    Lucian T. Pera and J. Bennett Fox, Jr., Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Drayton
    Beecher Smith, II.
    OPINION
    Factual and Procedural Background
    Attorney originally was admitted to the practice of law in Tennessee in 1974 and
    established himself in the practice area of trusts and estates. As of 2007, Attorney had
    not been disciplined by the BPR. In November 2006, Attorney was arrested on a seven-
    count federal indictment related to the receipt and possession of child pornography, based
    on images discovered on Attorney’s laptop computer. In June 2007, Attorney pled guilty
    in federal court to three of these counts. In conjunction with these charges, Attorney
    executed a Consent to Disbarment Affidavit in August 2007, and an Order of Disbarment
    was entered in May 2008. After serving a portion of his five-year sentence of
    imprisonment, on October 4, 2011, Attorney was transferred to a Memphis halfway
    house. Attorney was discharged on March 16, 2012, after completing his sentence of
    incarceration.
    Attorney’s sentence included ten years of supervised probation following his
    release from imprisonment. The conditions and restrictions of Attorney’s probation
    include: (1) answering truthfully all inquiries by his probation officer, (2) registering
    with the sexual offender registration agency for Tennessee, (3) participating in a
    specialized sex offender treatment program that may include the use of a polygraph, (4)
    refraining from direct or indirect contact with any child under eighteen (18) years of age,
    (5) not possessing any pornography, (6) not using sexually oriented telephone numbers or
    services, (7) participating in mental health treatment as directed by his probation officer,
    and (8) refraining from excessive use of alcohol. Additionally, Attorney’s conditions of
    probation provide that he “shall not possess, or use, a computer with access to any ‘on-
    line computer service’ at any location (including employment) without prior approval of
    the Probation Officer.”
    Attorney filed his petition for reinstatement on August 11, 2014. At the ensuing
    evidentiary hearing before the Panel, Attorney called several character witnesses, two of
    his treating physicians, the deputy director of the Tennessee Lawyers Assistance Program
    (“TLAP”), and a medical expert.1 Attorney also testified on his own behalf. The BPR
    adduced a written report prepared in May 2013 by Dr. A. J. Reid Finlayson, the Medical
    Director of the Vanderbilt Comprehensive Assessment Program (“VCAP”), following
    Attorney’s participation in an evaluation conducted through VCAP (“the VCAP
    Evaluation”). Attorney participated in the VCAP Evaluation at the suggestion of TLAP
    in conjunction with Attorney’s effort to be reinstated.
    1
    The Panel began hearing testimony on March 25, 2015. The hearing was suspended for
    Attorney to be evaluated by this medical expert, Dr. Gene G. Abel. The hearing recommenced on August
    25, 2015.
    2
    The conduct for which Attorney was prosecuted consisted of his downloading
    onto his computer between thirty and forty photographs of girls, between nine and
    fourteen years of age, appearing either nude or engaged in sex acts. There was no proof,
    however, that Attorney ever had engaged in sexual physical contact with a child.
    Following his incarceration, Attorney was diagnosed with pedophilia.
    Attorney testified about the conduct that resulted in his convictions:
    At the time I was suffering from chronic clinical depression. I was
    having trouble sleeping. I was staying up late at night. I was working on
    researching an appeal for my brother, who was convicted of a felony in
    California. And I would get tired of research, so then I would go to play
    games, video games, on the computer, like Spades or Hearts with other
    people. Online live video games.
    After that, if I got tired, I would go to look at other websites and then
    sometimes I would go to porn sites. I went to a couple of the porn sites,
    and there were things called pop-ups which said come to this site and see
    this, and one of them mentioned minors, and I was just curious to see what
    it was. It was curiosity that got me in trouble. I went there and looked at it,
    and I guess I downloaded—I did download a few images, not a whole lot,
    but enough to get me in trouble.
    Some people have thousands and thousands and thousands. I think I
    had less than 40, but they were enough to get me in trouble, and I did
    download some of those images.
    Attorney added that he “just wanted to see what was going on, what people were doing”
    and that he was “just curious to see how wild and crazy it could be.” Attorney
    acknowledged that he knew his conduct was wrong at the time and that he “shouldn’t
    have done it.” He explained that “at the time [he] thought it was a victimless crime” and
    that he “did not think [he] was hurting anybody.” Since his arrest, he had come to
    understand through counseling the harm that his actions caused to the persons in the
    images.
    After his release from prison, Attorney participated in a specialized sex offender
    treatment program through Counseling Resources of America. The entire program
    consisted of four phases, all of which he had completed by the time of the hearing.
    Attorney stated that it took him approximately two and one-half years to complete the
    program. The first phase consisted of weekly meetings, with the latter phases requiring
    meetings every other week. Following this program, Attorney completed a ten-week
    pilot program involving cognitive behavior that was led by his probation officer.
    3
    Attorney stated that he had not had any violations of his probation.
    On cross-examination, Attorney stated that he participated in the VCAP
    Evaluation “[t]o have professional people assess [him] to see if [he was] mentally and
    physically fit to practice law.” Asked if he was truthful during his evaluation, Attorney
    responded, “[p]ainfully brutally truthful. They couldn’t help me if I wasn’t.” Attorney
    confirmed that, as reflected in the VCAP Evaluation, he had used his computer after his
    release to alter adult comic strip figures in order to make them appear nude for self-
    gratification.2 He explained, “I was having trouble adjusting. I was having trouble with
    my wife’s health. I’m not allowed to have pornography. I was taking images on a
    scanner and changing them to erotic images to help me with my fantasy. I was not saving
    them. I was making those images for that moment and then erasing them.” Attorney
    stated that he engaged in this behavior for “a couple of months” in late 2012 and/or early
    2013 and attributed his conduct to stress. He added, “I stopped doing it because I
    realized—you talk about stop signs and triggers. I saw what was wrong, and I stopped it.
    But even after I talked to the people at Vanderbilt about it, I realized that that was what
    they call a slippery slope, like you don’t want to go on doing something like that, so I did
    stop that, and I have not resumed that practice.” Attorney stated that he had not disclosed
    this conduct to anyone before his VCAP Evaluation. He had never disclosed this use of
    his computer to produce possibly pornographic images3 to his probation officer.
    Attorney explained, “I have not because I just—it was something that I self-remedied.
    It’s not gone on. It’s not a problem.” Attorney also admitted that he had not disclosed
    this conduct to his counselor at Counseling Resources of America, explaining that he did
    not “because it was already passed. Once it was over, it was over.”
    Attorney also admitted during cross-examination that, since his release from
    prison, he had engaged in fantasizing about underage females for self-gratification,
    conduct that he also reported during his VCAP Evaluation. Based in part on these
    fantasies, the VCAP Evaluation provides that Attorney
    does have some factors that likely elevate his risk of sexual offending. In
    particular, he clearly has deviant sexual arousal to prepubescent females.
    2
    Attorney would scan images of adult comic strip characters such as Blondie and Betty Boop
    from the newspaper into his computer and then use the computer’s software program to “paint” flesh
    colors over the characters’ clothing to make them appear nude. The record does not indicate whether, in
    undertaking this activity, Attorney used a computer “with access to any ‘on-line computer service’”
    which would have violated the terms of Attorney’s probation unless Attorney had first received his
    probation officer’s approval.
    3
    As set forth above, the conditions of Attorney’s supervised release prohibit him from possessing
    any pornography. It is unclear, and not necessary to our resolution of this matter, whether the images that
    Attorney created would fall within the definition of “pornography.” See generally Michael Smith, Note,
    Barely Legal: Vagueness and the Prohibition of Pornography as a Condition of Supervised Release, 84
    St. John’s L. Rev. 727 (Spring 2010).
    4
    Furthermore, he is actively engaging in fantasy and regularly experiencing
    arousal to sexual images and fantasy of girls, which is clearly not consistent
    with recommended treatment for sexual offenders[.]
    Attorney testified that he stopped this fantasizing “about six months after” he participated
    in the VCAP Evaluation. He stated that he no longer fantasized about young girls,
    adding that he had to take a polygraph every six months and had answered that question
    truthfully.
    Attorney stated that he had not told his character witnesses about the behavior
    reported in the VCAP Evaluation, explaining that the witnesses were his friends, not his
    doctors.
    On questioning by the Panel about the VCAP Evaluation, Attorney acknowledged
    that “[s]ome of [his] actions [since his release from prison] could be construed to violate
    [his] probation.” Attorney emphasized that, long before the hearing, he had stopped
    engaging in both the fantasizing and the cartoon alterations. One of the Panel members
    expressed concern with Attorney’s status as a sex offender and, if Attorney were
    reinstated, the impact of that status on the integrity of the bar. Attorney acknowledged
    that people were going to “hate [him] just because they know [he is] a sex offender.”
    Attorney was evaluated again in May 2015 by Dr. Gene G. Abel, Medical Director
    for the Behavioral Medicine Institute of Atlanta. Dr. Abel is a psychiatrist specializing in
    the field of sexual misconduct. Dr. Abel testified that Attorney had disclosed to him his
    previous fantasies about underage females and his use of a computer to alter cartoon
    characters. Attorney told Dr. Abel that he had stopped this behavior. Dr. Abel explained
    that the cartoon-altering behavior was “an indirect measure of interest in children.” Dr.
    Abel also explained that he did not expect persons in therapy for pedophilia to reveal all
    of their inappropriate thoughts or behavior immediately but that, if therapy were
    effective, the person would reveal more of “those things” over time as the therapeutic
    relationship evolved.
    Dr. Abel concluded that Attorney had made progress in his treatment since the
    VCAP Evaluation. In his written report, which was admitted into evidence, Dr. Abel
    supported Attorney’s reinstatement, subject to a number of strict conditions including
    ongoing treatment and polygraphs.
    Dr. Jeffery Warren, Attorney’s primary care physician, testified by deposition. Dr.
    Warren testified that he diagnosed Attorney with depression in December 1998, many
    years prior to Attorney’s conviction. When Dr. Warren saw Attorney after his release
    from incarceration, Attorney “did not seem actively depressed at that point.” Dr. Warren
    also “saw no evidence” of an alcohol problem since Attorney’s release. In Dr. Warren’s
    opinion, Attorney’s current mental health indicated that he was fit to resume the practice
    5
    of law. Dr. Warren also opined that Attorney “is an ethical man.” Dr. Warren last saw
    Attorney in October 2014.
    Dr. Allen O. Battle, a psychologist, first saw Attorney in 1996 for a session of
    clinical hypnosis aimed at helping Attorney remember a specific event. Dr. Battle next
    saw Attorney in 1999 for acute stress related to matters involving Attorney’s twin
    brother. Dr. Battle continued to see Attorney until 2002, by which point Attorney had
    improved. Attorney returned to Dr. Battle in 2005 due to the stress he was experiencing
    as a result of the criminal investigation against him related to the child pornography
    found on his computer.
    Dr. Battle was aware that Attorney was later convicted of possessing child
    pornography, which Dr. Battle understood to consist of photographs of children, some of
    them consisting of “nude single photos” and some of them depicting the subjects engaged
    in sexual activity.
    Dr. Battle saw Attorney in 2012 for “an anxiety disorder.” Attorney improved
    over the course of his treatment. Dr. Battle also saw Attorney in January 2015 to
    evaluate his “present psychological function” in preparation for Attorney’s quest to be
    reinstated. Dr. Battle testified that, in 2015, Attorney was handling the stresses in his life
    much better than he had previously.
    Attorney discussed with Dr. Battle the conduct that led to his conviction. In Dr.
    Battle’s opinion, Attorney felt remorse for his conduct. Dr. Battle further testified that he
    had no reason to suspect that Attorney would re-offend. Dr. Battle elaborated:
    “[Attorney] has been burned so thoroughly by all of this that has happened to him over
    the last six or seven years that I don’t think he would touch it with a barge pole.”
    Dr. Battle had reviewed the VCAP Evaluation and described it as the “most
    comprehensive” evaluation he had ever read in his fifty-seven years of practice. Dr.
    Battle did not agree with all of the VCAP Evaluation’s recommendations or conclusions.
    Dr. Battle opined that Attorney was fit to resume the practice of law. He also
    stated that he would not hesitate to recommend Attorney to friends or family.
    On cross-examination, Dr. Battle stated that Attorney disclosed to him Attorney’s
    use of the computer to alter cartoon images. Dr. Battle also stated that he was concerned
    that Attorney had masturbated to imaginary images of children “because they are not
    socially acceptable libidinal objects.” Dr. Battle also was concerned that Attorney had
    not disclosed this activity to his probation officer.
    In response to a question from the Panel, Dr. Battle agreed that there is a social
    stigma attached to persons diagnosed with pedophilia.
    6
    Attorney also called a number of character witnesses. Frank Michael Bursi, a
    lawyer, testified that he had practiced with Attorney for approximately ten years from
    1990 to 2000. Mr. Bursi stated that he was aware that Attorney had pled guilty to a
    federal offense involving the receipt and possession of child pornography. Since
    Attorney’s release from prison, Mr. Bursi’s contact with Attorney was limited to a dinner
    party and several phone calls.
    Mr. Bursi described Attorney as “highly professional in his work” and added that
    he had seen Attorney “do very good legal work.” Mr. Bursi stated that he had no reason
    to doubt Attorney’s integrity and honesty as a lawyer and no reason to doubt his moral
    qualifications to handle legal matters. Mr. Bursi indicated that, in his view, it would be
    “a good thing for the legal profession and administration of justice in Tennessee for
    [Attorney] to be reinstated to the practice of law.” Mr. Bursi added, “I think he’s a good
    lawyer. I think he’s paid his debt to society. I think he’s rehabilitated himself, and I
    think the profession would be helped by his practice.”
    Carl Thomas Jackson testified that Attorney had provided him with legal services
    for himself and his daughter who had a special-needs trust. He was aware that Attorney
    had been convicted of a federal crime involving the receipt and possession of child
    pornography. Mr. Jackson considered himself a friend of both Attorney and Attorney’s
    wife. Mr. Jackson believes that Attorney has the moral qualifications to practice law and
    that he is an honest man. Mr. Jackson did not know whether Attorney was remorseful for
    the conduct that led to his conviction but assumed that he was. Mr. Jackson testified that
    he would have no hesitation about hiring Attorney again if he were reinstated.
    Robert Benham, retired lawyer and judge, testified that he had served as a judge of
    the Shelby County Probate Court for fifteen years. He knew Attorney both from
    Attorney’s appearances before the bench and previously when they were both in private
    practice. Judge Benham testified that, before he was disbarred, Attorney’s reputation as a
    lawyer “was a very, very good one.” During Attorney’s appearances before Judge
    Benham, Attorney never gave him a reason to doubt his integrity or honesty.
    Judge Benham was aware that Attorney had been convicted of a crime involving
    the receipt and possession of child pornography. Judge Benham supported Attorney’s
    reinstatement to the bar:
    I think he would do a good job. He’s always done a good job in the
    past, and there’s no reason to believe that he wouldn’t continue to do that in
    the future. The matter about which he was convicted in my opinion had
    nothing to do with his professional ability or his integrity as far as honesty
    with the court, honesty with his clients, honesty in handling funds of
    clients.
    7
    Donn Allen Southern testified that he served as a judge in the Shelby County
    Probate Court for almost eighteen years. Prior to that time, he was engaged in private
    practice. Attorney practiced regularly before him while he was on the bench. Judge
    Southern stated that Attorney had a good reputation as a lawyer and was “known as a
    capable, intelligent attorney, skilled especially in that area of estate planning and wills
    and practice in probate court.” Judge Southern added that he “never saw anything of a
    negative nature at all in the way he handled matters and represented his clients.”
    Attorney never gave him any reason to doubt Attorney’s integrity or honesty. Judge
    Southern was aware that Attorney had been convicted of a federal crime involving the
    receipt and possession of child pornography. Judge Southern testified that he thought it
    would be a “good thing” if Attorney were reinstated, adding, “I know nothing about the
    details of his conviction and guilty plea other than what I’ve been told, but I have no
    reason to think that he would not resume a very reputable practice of law and represent
    clients in a proper manner.”
    On cross-examination, Judge Southern stated that he had read about Attorney’s
    offense in the newspaper and that Attorney also told him personally that he had had child
    pornography on his computer. Judge Southern did not know any of the details of
    Attorney’s offense.
    One of the Panel members asked Judge Southern if Attorney’s status as a
    registered sex offender, which rendered information about Attorney’s crime available to
    the public, impacted his opinion about the effect of Attorney’s reinstatement on the
    integrity and standing of the bar. Judge Southern responded,
    I think most people realize that they have failings in their lives, and
    he has paid his debt to society, obviously in terms of what the court
    sentence involved.
    I think I’m a pretty good judge of character; and having known
    [Attorney], I just feel that he would handle himself in a proper manner, that
    that’s not something that would be repeated.
    I know he’s had treatment and gone through counseling and that sort
    of thing, and this is a big city. I don’t think there would be that much—I
    don’t think there would be that much talk about it. There might be some,
    you’ve got to recognize that. There are some people that are going to know
    about that. But that’s my opinion.
    James P. Cole testified that Attorney was a good friend, and they corresponded
    while Attorney was in prison. Mr. Cole was aware of the reasons for Attorney’s
    incarceration. In Mr. Cole’s opinion, Attorney was remorseful for his actions, and he
    “recognized he has a problem to deal with, and he’s doing his best to deal with it.” Mr.
    8
    Cole also stated that he had “a very strong opinion that that will never happen again,”
    adding,
    I just think he’s learned his lesson. He’s dealt with it. He’s a strong
    man, he’s got a strong sense of character; and if he makes up his mind that
    this is what he’s going to do, this is what he’s going to do. I just think he’s
    turned the page on all that.
    Mr. Cole had no reason to doubt Attorney’s honesty or integrity, and he would
    have no hesitation about recommending Attorney’s services if Attorney were reinstated.
    Mr. Cole stated that Attorney had “always been sorry about what happened.” Mr. Cole
    stated that Attorney’s reinstatement “would be an act of compassion that’s overdue.”
    On questioning by a member of the Panel, Mr. Cole testified that he and Attorney
    “never discussed the facts involved in the offense for which he pleaded guilty.”
    Fletcher Haaga, a trust officer with Comerica Bank, testified that he had a long
    professional relationship with Attorney, as well as a friendship. Attorney’s professional
    reputation was “very good.” Mr. Haaga was aware of Attorney’s crime. Asked about
    Attorney’s remorse, Mr. Haaga stated that he believed Attorney was remorseful based on
    Attorney’s “demeanor.” Mr. Haaga added, “[Attorney] has never come out and said I’m
    so sorry for all this, but you could just—in conversations with him, you could just feel
    it.” Mr. Haaga had no concerns about Attorney’s honesty or integrity. Mr. Haaga
    supported Attorney’s reinstatement, stating that he had persons that he wanted to refer to
    Attorney.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Haaga stated that he had heard people say negative
    things about Attorney and that “[c]ommon sense” told him that Attorney’s reputation
    “probably” was negatively impacted by Attorney’s conviction.
    On questioning by the Panel, Mr. Haaga stated that he had not discussed the
    details of Attorney’s crime with Attorney.
    Frank Holeman, the executive manager of a diabetes treatment clinic, employed
    Attorney for legal business advice beginning in 2003. Attorney’s work was “excellent.”
    Mr. Holeman was aware of Attorney’s crime. After Attorney was released from prison,
    Attorney provided Mr. Holeman with clerical and proofreading assistance for Mr.
    Holeman’s business. Mr. Holeman stated that he had been in touch with Attorney at least
    weekly since Attorney’s release. Mr. Holeman described Attorney as “a man of great
    character.” Mr. Holeman added, “I know his love for the law, and never has he ever said
    anything or done anything that made me think ever that he would compromise what he,
    as an officer of the court, would do.” Mr. Holeman has complete faith in Attorney’s
    honesty and integrity. Asked about whether Attorney was remorseful, Mr. Holeman
    9
    answered, “He was crushed. As he looks back at it, he was crushed that he would do
    anything that would jeopardize his professional integrity, that would damage his family.”
    He added, “He’s not sorry because he got caught. He’s sorry because it ever happened in
    the first place.” Mr. Holeman opined that Attorney would never re-offend.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Holeman acknowledged that Attorney’s reputation
    “was diminished in the eyes of many people” as a result of his conviction. He added that
    a potential investor in his company declined to invest based on Attorney’s assisting the
    company with its informational materials.
    Alva B. Weir, III, M.D., testified that he had been acquainted with Attorney since
    they were children.        Dr. Weir corresponded with Attorney during Attorney’s
    incarceration and saw him frequently after Attorney’s release. Dr. Weir hired Attorney to
    prepare his manuscripts for submission to an agent. Dr. Weir was familiar with
    Attorney’s conviction and, based on their conversations, knew that Attorney was
    remorseful. He added that, since Attorney’s release, he had “not detected any moral or
    ethical failure” by Attorney. He added that he had “detected no evidence” to suggest that
    Attorney would re-offend. Dr. Weir supported Attorney’s reinstatement on the basis that
    he would “add to the profession without hurting the profession.”
    On cross-examination, Dr. Weir acknowledged that Attorney had not told him the
    details of his criminal conduct.
    Henry Robert Heller, III, testified that Attorney had performed legal work for him
    and that they were also friends, having known each other for over thirty years. Mr.
    Heller visited Attorney three times while he was incarcerated and also corresponded with
    Attorney. Mr. Heller had faith in Attorney’s honesty and integrity, both within and
    outside of the attorney-client relationship. Mr. Heller thought that Attorney was
    remorseful for his criminal conduct, but did not supply details supporting this conclusion.
    Based on his “gut feeling,” he did not think Attorney would re-offend.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Heller acknowledged that he did not know the details
    of Attorney’s crimes and that they had not discussed the matter since Attorney’s release.
    Charles Howard Davis, Jr., testified that he and Attorney grew up together and that
    Attorney had practiced law with Mr. Davis’ father for a time. Mr. Davis stated that
    Attorney had been his personal and business attorney since 1976. Mr. Davis was aware
    of Attorney’s convictions and visited him several times while Attorney was incarcerated.
    Mr. Davis also corresponded with Attorney. Mr. Davis also has spent time with Attorney
    on numerous occasions since Attorney’s release. Mr. Davis testified that Attorney was
    remorseful for his criminal conduct, stating, “He’s really sorry for what he did.” Mr.
    Davis explained that he knew Attorney was remorseful based on “his actions.” Mr. Davis
    had no doubts about Attorney’s honesty and integrity.
    10
    On cross-examination, Mr. Davis acknowledged that Attorney’s reputation had
    been damaged by his conviction.
    On questions from the Panel, Mr. Davis stated that he did not know the details
    underlying Attorney’s conviction, had not discussed it with Attorney, and did not know
    how Attorney came to possess child pornography.
    Eyleen Farmer, associate rector at Calvary Episcopal Church, began her
    association with Attorney at his sentencing when she appeared “as a show of support
    from his faith community.” She corresponded with Attorney while he was incarcerated.
    Attorney rejoined the congregation after he was released. Ms. Farmer considered
    Attorney “a faithful and sincere participant in the church community,” explaining that he
    attended every Sunday.
    On cross-examination, the lawyer representing the BPR asked Ms. Farmer if
    Attorney had “asked for forgiveness from you or the church for his actions.” Ms. Farmer
    responded, “Not in those words that I remember.” In response to a question from the
    Panel, Ms. Farmer explained that Attorney had counseled with one of her male
    colleagues.
    After considering all of the proof, the Panel denied Attorney’s petition in a
    comprehensive nineteen-page written judgment filed on November 30, 2015. The Panel
    concluded that Attorney had failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that he
    possesses the moral qualifications required to practice law in Tennessee. In particular,
    the Panel found that,
    while [Attorney] called multiple character witnesses who testified as to his
    moral qualifications, the statements were conclusory and unsupported by
    specific facts demonstrating rehabilitation or remorse. Most witnesses had
    minimal contact with [Attorney] following his release from prison, and
    none knew the details of his crimes or conviction beyond what was reported
    in the news. None of the character witnesses were knowledgeable about
    [Attorney’s] treatment or his conduct subsequent to his release from
    incarceration.
    The Panel also expressed concern that Attorney had not disclosed his inappropriate
    behavior to his probation officer, noting that “[h]onesty is considered to be a centerpiece
    of good moral character.” The Panel also made an implicit finding adverse to Attorney’s
    credibility.4 As we have recognized, “[t]he Panel is uniquely suited to make credibility
    4
    The Panel stated that Attorney’s “testimony that he has had a spiritual and emotional change is
    undermined by a number of facts and a failure of proof sufficient to meet his burden” and that his
    “pronouncements since his release from incarceration are inconsistent with his known actions.”
    11
    determinations of witnesses.” Culp v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 
    407 S.W.3d 201
    , 208
    (Tenn. 2013).
    The Panel further concluded that Attorney’s reinstatement “will be detrimental to
    the integrity and standing of the bar, administration of justice and the public interest.” In
    this regard, the Panel made specific note that Attorney’s crime consisted of the knowing
    receipt and possession of visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct
    in violation of federal law; that Attorney is a registered sex offender; that Attorney is a
    diagnosed pedophile; that Attorney remains on probation with the United States Bureau
    of Prisons until 2022; and that Attorney has been untruthful with, and failed to disclose
    pertinent information to, his probation officer. Stating that any one of these factors
    would be sufficient to support a finding that Attorney’s reinstatement would be
    detrimental, the Panel also set forth the following in support of its conclusion:
    [Attorney] is undoubtedly aware and had multiple of his own
    witnesses, including two physicians, testify there is a negative public
    stigma attached to individuals convicted of paraphilia and pedophilia
    offenses. Several of his friends including Mr. Cole, Mr. Haaga and Mr.
    Holeman testified [Attorney] has lost friends, had his reputation damaged
    and will suffer public scorn from his criminal history and conviction.
    Moreover, both Dr. Battle and Dr. Abel testified as to the negative social
    stigma attached to sex offenders and pedophilia/paraphilia patients. Dr.
    Abel testified the general public believes paraphilia patients cannot be
    successfully treated. Even [Attorney] acknowledged during his testimony,
    people are going to hate him just because they know he is a sex offender
    and that is not something that will go away.
    On January 7, 2016, thirty-eight days after the Panel filed its judgment, the BPR
    filed its application for costs. On January 28, 2016, the Panel acted on the application,
    filing its findings and judgment for assessment of costs. On March 28, 2016, Attorney
    filed a petition for review of the Panel’s decision with the Chancery Court of Shelby
    County. The BPR answered, and in due course, the chancery court reviewed the record
    of the proceedings before the Panel. The chancery court did not consider any additional
    proof. After hearing argument by the parties, the chancery court issued a twenty-page
    order reversing the Panel’s decision and ordering that Attorney be reinstated to the
    practice of law in Tennessee “subject to the conditions set out by TLAP in the existing
    monitoring agreement5 and any additional conditions required by TLAP.” (Footnote
    added). The chancery court determined that the Panel’s conclusion that Attorney lacked
    the moral qualifications to be readmitted to the bar was “unsupported by evidence which
    is both substantial and material in the light of the entire record” and that the Panel’s
    5
    Attorney entered into a monitoring agreement with TLAP on June 8, 2015, after Dr. Abel
    evaluated Attorney.
    12
    conclusion that Attorney’s reinstatement to the practice of law would be detrimental to
    the integrity and standing of the bar, the administration of justice, and the public interest
    was “based solely on the nature of the crime committed and . . . [was] arbitrary and
    capricious and not supported by substantial and material evidence.” The chancery court
    also reversed the Panel’s award of costs to the BPR.
    The chancery court’s order was filed on December 15, 2016. On January 11,
    2017, the BPR filed its notice of appeal. We now consider four issues: (1) whether
    Attorney’s petition for review filed with the chancery court was untimely and deprived
    that court of subject-matter jurisdiction; (2) whether the chancery court misapplied the
    correct standard of review and thereby committed reversible error in overruling the
    Panel’s decision; (3) whether the chancery court erred by reversing the Panel’s award of
    costs to the BPR; and (4) whether this Court should consider post-judgment facts
    regarding Attorney’s participation in the TLAP monitoring agreement.
    Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
    The BPR contends that the chancery court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over
    Attorney’s petition for review because Attorney’s petition was filed sixty days after the
    Panel issued its ruling on the BPR’s late-filed application for costs rather than sixty days
    after the Panel’s judgment on the merits. We begin our consideration of this issue with a
    review of the pertinent rules.
    Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 9, Section 31.3(a), provides that “[i]n the event
    that a . . . denial of reinstatement results from formal proceedings, Disciplinary Counsel
    shall within fifteen days from the hearing panel’s submission of such judgment . . . make
    application to the hearing panel for the assessment against the . . . petitioning attorney of
    the necessary and reasonable costs of the proceedings . . . .” Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, §
    31.3(a) (2014). The petitioning attorney then has fifteen days within which to submit any
    response in opposition to Disciplinary Counsel’s application. 
    Id. The hearing
    panel
    thereupon has fifteen days from the date that the petitioning attorney’s response is due in
    which to submit its findings and judgment with respect to Disciplinary Counsel’s
    application. 
    Id. Section 31.3(a)
    further provides that “[t]he making of an application
    under this Section shall extend the time for taking steps in the regular appellate process
    under Section 33.1(a) unless, upon application of the [BPR] to the Court and for good
    cause shown, the Court orders otherwise.” Significantly, this provision does not refer to
    the making of a timely application.
    Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 9, Section 33, which governs the appeals of
    hearing panel decisions, provides that the party seeking review of a hearing panel
    decision may do so “by filing within sixty days of the date of entry of the hearing panel’s
    judgment a Petition for Review in the circuit or chancery court . . . .” Tenn. Sup. Ct. R.
    9, § 33.1(a). Additionally, Section 33.1(a) provides that “[i]f a timely application for the
    13
    assessment of costs is made under Section 31.3(a), the time for appeal for all parties shall
    run from the hearing panel’s submission of its findings and judgment with respect to the
    application for the assessment of costs unless, upon application of the [BPR] to the Court
    and for good cause shown, the Court orders otherwise.” 
    Id. Finally, Tennessee
    Supreme Court Rule 9, Section 34.2, provides as follows:
    Except as is otherwise provided in this Rule, time is directory and
    not jurisdictional. Time limitations are administrative, not jurisdictional.
    Failure to observe such directory time intervals may result in contempt of
    the agency having jurisdiction but will not justify abatement of any
    disciplinary investigation or proceeding.
    Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 34.2.
    As set forth above, the Panel entered its judgment denying reinstatement on
    November 30, 2015. The BPR filed its application for costs on January 7, 2016, several
    weeks beyond Section 31.3(a)’s fifteen-day deadline of December 15, 2015. Attorney
    had until January 22, 2016, in which to respond to the application but ultimately filed no
    response. The Panel then had fifteen days, or until February 6, 2016, within which to act
    on the application, either by denying it as untimely or by considering it on the merits.
    The Panel chose the latter course and filed its findings and judgment regarding the
    application on January 28, 2016, well within its deadline. Clearly, the Panel did not
    deem the application’s untimeliness as a bar to its consideration. Attorney filed his
    petition for review on March 28, 2016, sixty days after the Panel filed its order awarding
    costs to the BPR.
    The BPR raised no issue regarding the timeliness of Attorney’s petition in its
    answer thereto. Nor did the BPR later raise with the chancery court any concerns about
    that court’s subject-matter jurisdiction. Now, however, the BPR argues to this Court that,
    when it missed its own fifteen-day deadline for the filing of an application for costs, it
    simultaneously doomed Attorney to a jurisdictional sixty-day deadline running from the
    Panel’s original judgment for filing his petition for review regardless of the BPR’s late-
    filed application for costs and the Panel’s subsequent action thereon.
    In support of its position, the BPR refers us to two reported cases construing not
    the provisions recited above but rather Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 4 (“Rule
    4”). Rule 4 requires that parties in civil litigation wishing to appeal from a final
    judgment in the trial court must file their notice of appeal within thirty days after the
    judgment appealed from has been entered. Tenn. R. App. P. 4(a). The cases cited by the
    BPR, Ball v. McDowell, 
    288 S.W.3d 833
    , 836 (Tenn. 2009), and Binkley v. Medling,
    
    117 S.W.3d 252
    , 255 (Tenn. 2003), state that this thirty-day deadline is jurisdictional.
    However, as noted by this Court in Ball, this holding is based, at least in part, on
    14
    Tennessee Rule of Appellate Procedure 2 which states explicitly that this thirty-day rule
    applicable in civil cases may not be extended. See 
    Ball, 288 S.W.3d at 836
    (citing Tenn.
    R. App. P. 2); see also Tenn. R. App. P. 21(b) (providing that “[f]or good cause shown
    the appellate court may enlarge the time prescribed by these rules or by its order for
    doing any act or may permit an act to be done after the expiration of such time; however,
    the court may not enlarge the time for filing a notice of appeal prescribed in Rule 4”).
    We are not persuaded by the BPR’s argument. First, although Tennessee Supreme
    Court Rule 9 explicitly incorporates the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure and the
    Tennessee Rules of Evidence in disciplinary case proceedings “[e]xcept as otherwise
    provided in” Rule 9, Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 34.3(a), Rule 9 does not incorporate
    wholesale the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure with regard to a party seeking a
    trial court’s review of a disciplinary hearing panel’s judgment. And while Tennessee
    Supreme Court Rule 1 provides that the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure “shall
    govern all matters on appeal before this Court,” “this Court” refers to the Tennessee
    Supreme Court, not the trial court acting as a court of review in a disciplinary matter.
    The BPR’s extensive reliance on the construction of our Rules of Appellate Procedure,
    therefore, is misplaced.
    Second, the provisions of Rule 9, Section 34.2, make clear that time limitations in
    attorney disciplinary proceedings “are administrative, not jurisdictional” unless otherwise
    specifically provided in Rule 9. There is no specific provision in Rule 9 making
    “jurisdictional” the sixty-day time limit for filing a petition for review with a circuit or
    chancery court.6 Cf. Henderson v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 
    125 S.W.3d 405
    , 408–10
    (Tenn. 2003) (relying on the text of former Rule 9, Section 23.2, the predecessor of
    current Rule 9, Section 34.2, to reject a claim that attorney’s late demand for a formal
    hearing deprived the adjudicative body of subject-matter jurisdiction).
    Third, the Panel chose to consider the merits of the BPR’s untimely application for
    costs and, by filing an order granting the application two days before the passage of sixty
    days from the filing of its original judgment, gave Attorney reasonable grounds to believe
    that the application had “extend[ed] the time for taking steps in the regular appellate
    process under Section 33.1(a).” Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 31.3(a).
    Finally, as a practical matter, we are disinclined to create a loophole by which the
    BPR may choose to delay its filing of an application for costs in order to create confusion
    about the deadline for filing a petition for review. Accordingly, we hold that, if the BPR
    files an application for costs beyond the fifteen-day deadline set forth in Section 31.3(a),
    the late-filed application shall function to extend the time for taking steps in the regular
    6
    This case does not present the issue of a late-filed petition for review filed in cases in which the
    BPR does not file an application for costs. We do not address that situation in this opinion.
    15
    appellate process under Section 33.1(a) to the same extent as if the application had been
    filed timely.
    The BPR argues that this construction of Section 31.3(a) will “cast doubt upon the
    finality of every disciplinary judgment in which no appeal was perfected.” We disagree.
    Our holding does not extend indefinitely the time for filing a petition for review of a
    hearing panel’s decision. Rather, our holding simply recognizes that a late-filed
    application for costs by the BPR will extend the sixty-day deadline for petitions for
    review to the same extent that a timely application would do so. We recognize that our
    construction of Section 31.3(a) effectively renders superfluous the inconsistent reference
    in section 33.1(a) to the extension of time for appeal based on a “timely” application for
    costs. Nevertheless, this conundrum is best solved by the BPR either filing its
    applications timely or recognizing that a late-filed application will extend the time for
    appeal.
    In sum, we hold that the chancery court had subject-matter jurisdiction of
    Attorney’s petition for review.
    Chancery Court’s Application
    of the Standard of Review
    This disciplinary proceeding was initiated by Attorney seeking to be reinstated to
    the practice of law in Tennessee after having been disbarred. Accordingly, Attorney had
    the burden of demonstrating by clear and convincing evidence that he possesses “[1] the
    moral qualifications, [2] competency and learning in law required for admission to
    practice law in this state, [and 3] that the resumption of the practice of law within the
    state will not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar or the administration
    of justice, or subversive to the public interest.” Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 30.4(d)(1). “Clear
    and convincing evidence” is that which “eliminates any serious or substantial doubt
    concerning the correctness of the conclusions to be drawn from the evidence. It should
    produce in the fact-finder’s mind a firm belief or conviction with regard to the truth of the
    allegations sought to be established.” Milligan v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 
    301 S.W.3d 619
    , 630 (Tenn. 2009) (quoting Hughes v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 
    259 S.W.3d 631
    , 642 (Tenn. 2008)). In this case, the Panel concluded that Attorney had met
    the second of the three prerequisites for reinstatement but had failed to satisfy his burden
    of proof with respect to his moral qualifications and with respect to demonstrating that
    his reinstatement would not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar, the
    administration of justice, and the public interest.
    Upon Attorney’s appeal from the Panel’s adverse decision, the trial court was
    bound to apply the following standard of review:
    16
    The review shall be on the transcript of the evidence before the
    hearing panel and its findings and judgment. If allegations of irregularities
    in the procedure before the hearing panel are made, the trial court is
    authorized to take such additional proof as may be necessary to resolve
    such allegations. The trial court may, in its discretion, permit discovery on
    appeals limited only to allegations of irregularities in the proceeding. The
    court may affirm the decision of the hearing panel or remand the case for
    further proceedings. The court may reverse or modify the decision if the
    rights of the party filing the Petition for Review have been prejudiced
    because the hearing panel’s findings, inferences, conclusions or decisions
    are: (1) in violation of constitutional or statutory provisions; (2) in excess
    of the hearing panel’s jurisdiction; (3) made upon unlawful procedure; (4)
    arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly
    unwarranted exercise of discretion; or (5) unsupported by evidence which is
    both substantial and material in the light of the entire record. In
    determining the substantiality of evidence, the court shall take into account
    whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight, but the court shall not
    substitute its judgment for that of the hearing panel as to the weight of the
    evidence on questions of fact.
    Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 33.1(b). The BPR contends that, in reversing the Panel’s decision,
    the chancery court erred both by disregarding substantial and material evidence
    supporting the Panel’s decision and by substituting its own judgment for that of the
    Panel’s.
    This Court applies the same standard of review as that imposed on the trial court.
    See Long v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 
    435 S.W.3d 174
    , 178 (Tenn. 2014). Thus, we
    must review the Panel’s judgment in light of the record and determine whether the
    chancery court erred by setting aside the Panel’s decision and granting Attorney’s
    petition for reinstatement. 
    Hughes, 259 S.W.3d at 641
    . “Fundamental to our
    deliberations is that the license to practice law in this state is a privilege, not a right.” 
    Id. Moreover, “[a]
    person suspended from the practice of law is not entitled to have that
    privilege restored simply because that person has served the sentence imposed for a
    violation of the criminal laws.” Murphy v. Bd. of Prof’l Responsibility, 
    924 S.W.2d 643
    ,
    647 (Tenn. 1996).
    We have carefully reviewed the entire record in this case, and, contrary to the
    chancery court’s determinations, we hold that the record contains material and substantial
    evidence supporting the Panel’s conclusion that Attorney did not carry his burden of
    proving by clear and convincing evidence that he has the moral qualifications required to
    practice law in Tennessee. We agree with the BPR that the chancery court impermissibly
    engaged in reweighing the evidence in order to overturn the Panel. That is, the chancery
    court misapplied the applicable standard of review. Because, upon the proper application
    17
    of the standard of review, the record supports the Panel’s conclusion, we reverse the
    chancery court and reinstate the Panel’s judgment.
    Specifically, the record supports the Panel’s concern that Attorney was less than
    entirely honest with his probation officer about his inappropriate activities following his
    release from prison. Additionally, Attorney proffered witnesses to testify about his
    character without providing them with adverse information that might have had a
    negative impact on their assessment of his character, both the details of his criminal
    conduct and a description of his inappropriate conduct following his release from prison.
    While Attorney disclosed his inappropriate activities to the persons conducting his VCAP
    Evaluation and to Dr. Abel, we note that both of these evaluations were sought by
    Attorney not in order to further his treatment but in order to obtain reinstatement. It
    appears that the level of Attorney’s candor depends upon to whom he is speaking and for
    what purpose.
    As noted by the Panel in its judgment, this Court has stated that “[t]he evidence
    necessary to demonstrate that one is morally qualified to practice law in this state requires
    more than conclusory statements; it should also include ‘specific facts and circumstances
    which have arisen since [one’s conviction] that demonstrate either rehabilitation or
    remorse.’” 
    Hughes, 259 S.W.3d at 643
    (quoting 
    Murphy, 924 S.W.2d at 647
    ) (alteration
    in original). Attorney failed to adduce sufficient clear and convincing evidence of such
    specific facts and circumstances. Moreover, the Panel’s conclusion that several of
    Attorney’s character witnesses gave conclusory testimony regarding his crime and did
    not express specific knowledge about the underlying facts is supported by substantial and
    material evidence.
    Additionally, although Attorney adduced proof of his post-incarceration treatment,
    the VCAP Evaluation concluded that Attorney demonstrated “some factors that likely
    elevate his risk of sexual offending,” including his fantasizing about female children,
    indicating that Attorney was not yet rehabilitated. Although Attorney adduced proof
    from Dr. Abel that he had progressed since the VCAP Evaluation, Attorney told Dr. Abel
    that he no longer was engaging in fantasizing or altering cartoons. The Panel did not find
    Attorney entirely credible, so the Panel had some basis for being somewhat skeptical of
    Dr. Abel’s conclusions about Attorney’s progress to date.
    The record also supports the Panel’s apparent difficulty in accepting at face value
    Attorney’s protestations of remorse because he continued fantasizing about underage
    females after his release from prison and also engaged in cartoon-altering behavior that
    was, in Dr. Abel’s words, “an indirect measure of interest in children.”
    Finally, the record supports the Panel’s concern that Attorney’s withholding of
    information from his probation officer, as well as using his computer for activities that
    Attorney knew might violate the terms of his probation, raised a question about
    18
    Attorney’s honesty, an attribute that the Panel properly noted is “a centerpiece of good
    moral character.” Milligan, 301 SW.3d at 631 (citing Schware v. Bd. of Bar Exam’rs,
    
    353 U.S. 232
    (1957) (Frankfurter, J., concurring)).
    In sum, we hold that the Panel’s conclusion that Attorney failed to carry his heavy
    burden of proving his moral qualifications to be reinstated was supported by substantial
    and material evidence. The chancery court erred in concluding otherwise. Because
    Attorney’s failure to prove his moral qualifications was fatal to his effort to be reinstated,
    we need not consider the correctness of the Panel’s conclusion regarding the impact of
    Attorney’s reinstatement on the integrity and standing of the bar, the administration of
    justice, and the public interest.
    Costs Awarded to BPR by Panel
    As set forth above, although the BPR filed its application for costs weeks after the
    deadline for doing so, the Panel nevertheless considered the application and awarded the
    requested costs to the BPR. The chancery court reversed the Panel’s award of costs
    solely on the basis that the application was late-filed. The BPR contends in this Court
    that, because Attorney never voiced any objection to the untimeliness of the BPR’s
    application, the chancery court’s “intervention on this issue was inappropriate and
    improper.”
    We reject the BPR’s attempt to use its own missed deadline as both weapon and
    shield. However, we also disagree with Attorney that “[t]he assessment of costs to the
    [BPR] is only appropriate where the [BPR] is the prevailing party” and that, therefore, the
    chancery court’s reversal of costs was warranted because the chancery court reversed the
    Panel on the merits. In support of this proposition, Attorney cites to Tennessee Supreme
    Court Rule 9, Section 31.3(a). Contrary to Attorney’s assertion, Section 31.3(a) provides
    that the BPR shall seek costs even when the result of the formal proceeding is
    reinstatement. Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 31.3(a). Moreover, it is the attorney’s burden to
    prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the costs sought by the BPR are
    unnecessary or unreasonable. 
    Id. Clearly, the
    purpose of Section 31.3(a) is to allow the
    BPR to recover its reasonable costs in defending the integrity of the Tennessee bar. That
    the BPR may occasionally lose a quest to prevent a disbarred lawyer from being
    reinstated should not prevent the BPR from recovering the reasonable costs it incurs by
    undertaking the quest.
    The BPR’s failure to timely file its application for costs in this matter, however,
    should not result in the forfeiture of its award, particularly in light of Attorney’s failure to
    object to the late filing. The Panel reviewed the application and, in due course, awarded
    the amount requested. There is no suggestion that the award was unnecessary or
    unreasonable, the two grounds provided by Rule 9, Section 31.3(a), for objections on the
    19
    merits. Accordingly, we reverse the chancery court’s decision regarding the award of
    costs and reinstate the Panel’s order granting costs.
    The BPR’s Request that Post-Judgment Facts be Considered
    The BPR has asked this Court to consider certain facts regarding a monitoring
    agreement that Attorney entered into with TLAP, which facts are based on conduct that
    occurred after the hearing before the Panel. The BPR asks that we consider these post-
    judgment facts as additional support for the Panel’s decision to deny reinstatement.
    Because we have concluded that the Panel’s decision must be reinstated on the record
    before us, this issue is moot. Accordingly, we decline to address it. See State v. Phelps,
    
    329 S.W.3d 436
    , 451 (Tenn. 2010).
    Conclusion
    The chancery court impermissibly reweighed the evidence in the record before it.
    Because the chancery court’s judgment was based on an impermissible reweighing of the
    evidence, and because substantial and material proof supported the Panel’s conclusion
    that Attorney had failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence his moral
    qualifications for reinstatement, we reverse the chancery court’s ruling and reinstate the
    Panel’s judgment, including its award of costs to the BPR. The costs of this cause are
    assessed to Attorney.
    ___________________________________________
    JEFFREY S. BIVINS, CHIEF JUSTICE
    20
    

Document Info

Docket Number: W2017-00247-SC-R3-BP

Judges: Chief Justice Jeffrey S. Bivins

Filed Date: 6/26/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024