Forrest Gump paraded a variety of "Mama always said" quotes past us. Two stick in my head:
"Stupid is as stupid does."
"life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're gonna get."
I progress back and forth between these two recently, as I read the 1984 decision of the Florida Supreme Court in The Florida Bar v. Lancaster, 440 So. 2d 1019 (Fla. 1984). It reminds me of both. And, it makes me reflect on How Will You Be Known (December 2015) and Do You Care about Reputation? (June 2023). Is there something more valuable for an attorney than reputation?
The concept of reputation makes me think of a recent Associated Press (AP) story about a judge robbed in her home. Her husband is described as "a former attorney," "disbarred," and "taking" money. There are more flattering accolades, but these adjectives overshadow any description.
Back to 1984. In Lancaster, the Court was provided a referee report that recommended disbarment. The lawyer instead received a two-year suspension. It all started with a boat, some attempt at concealment, and influencing witnesses. There was apparently some debate about who owned the boat.
Attorney Lancaster admitted the boat was in his backyard, and that he was suspicious that his roommate's ownership or possession might raise questions. When the state attorney made inquiries about the boat, Lancaster later admitted that "he lied about his knowledge" of some alterations to the "number on the boat."
There was a surreptitious recording introduced as evidence. It was obtained by the roommate (who allegedly altered the number), wearing a "body bug" microphone in the home shared with Lancaster. That issue, in the style of lawyers, became about the admissibility of the evidence more than the substance of the recording. Lancaster asserted it was inadmissible, and the referee disagreed.
The Supreme Court agreed with the referee, describing that Bar proceedings were not the same as criminal proceedings. The transcript of that conversation included details regarding "stick(ing) together" and investigating "whether ... the boat was stolen" and how to engage with the seller of the boat, who might be a witness in the Florida case.
There was some allegation that attorney Lancaster might have sought to have a witness "alter his story to assist Lancaster," and to encourage another witness "not to testify." Neither of those seems very flattering.
Against this backdrop, Lancaster presented witnesses who said various "workers' compensation ... claimants ... would be without assistance (of counsel) if Lancaster were suspended." Furthermore, there was evidence that Lancaster belonged to a local community service organization. These mitigations of community engagement and involvement were perhaps critical.
The Florida Bar recommended a suspension, the referee recommended disbarment, and the Court imposed a suspension. It concluded "that Lancaster had conspired to influence a potential witness not to testify at his trial." It concluded that evidence supported "Lancaster ... (lied) to a law enforcement official."
What a lawyer, or anyone, might consider is that there is the potential for dishonesty to become a reputation. The odds of this are perhaps increased when your example is brought before the state's highest court and published for all to read in the Southern Reporter. The case of The Florida Bar v. Lancaster will be available on the internet for generations to come.
A lawyer might similarly be cautious about counseling witnesses or encouraging them not to appear. There may be relevance in the juxtaposed potentials of Forrest Gump: "You never know what you're gonna get," and Lancaster might have gotten no punishment or publicity. There is always that potential when electing to proceed to trial. However, you may have the opportunity to have your name published forever in the state's case law. "You never know."
In deciding to mislead or misdirect, any witness must know the potential. Obfuscation, misdirection, or falsity may steer a decision in an unexpected or unwanted direction. "You never know."
And, in that event, you may simply leave posterity with the decision of whether the action, the response to being caught, or the outcome was smart or not. Reputation is built a single act at a time, but can be destroyed in a moment.
In the end, it is your reputation and your history. How will you be known? Do you care? Should you? Over what, a boat? A boat that may be your roommate's? A boat that is at least not yours and not your concern? Is it different if there is a shot at lots of money, as in the AP story? At what value is your integrity at risk or for sale?
The entire situation is curious, and its machinations and outcome merit consideration. How many instances of poor judgment or mistakes are worth the risk?



