Johnnie Lee Taylor was admitted to the California Bar 29th May 1985, but has since been disbarred. Johnnie graduated from UC Hastings COL.

Lawyer Information

NameJohnnie Lee Taylor
First Admitted29 May 1985 (40 years ago)
StatusDisbarred
Bar Number117532

Contact

Current Email[email protected]
Phone Number626-956-6278

Schools

Law SchoolUC Hastings COL (San Francisco CA)
Undergraduate SchoolUniversity of California Irvine (Irvine CA)

Address

Current AddressTaylor, 43568 Gadsen #415
Lancaster, CA 93534
Map
Previous AddressLaw Ofc John Taylor
251 E Montana St
Pasadena, CA 91104
Previous Address251 E Montana St
Pasadena, CA 91104-1059

History

16 September 2016Disbarred (8 years, 9 months ago)
Disbarment 13-O-14902
10 March 2016Not eligible to practice law in CA (9 years, 3 months ago)
Ordered inactive 13-O-14902
9 May 2014Disciplinary charges filed in State Bar Court 13-O-14902 (11 years, 1 month ago)
30 November 2012Not eligible to practice law in CA (12 years, 6 months ago)
Suspended, failed to pass Prof.Resp.Exam 09-C-12634
4 June 2011Not eligible to practice law in CA (14 years ago)
Discipline w/actual suspension 08-O-13790
18 January 2011Active (14 years, 5 months ago)
10 December 2010Not eligible to practice law in CA (14 years, 6 months ago)
Discipline w/actual suspension 09-C-12634
1 February 2010Not eligible to practice law in CA (15 years, 4 months ago)
Interim suspension after conviction 09-C-12634
27 October 2009Conviction record transmitted to State Bar Court 09-C-12634 (15 years, 7 months ago)
21 August 2002Public reproval with/duties 00-O-14819 (22 years, 10 months ago)
27 September 1993Public reproval with/duties 91-O-06555 (31 years, 9 months ago)
30 December 1992Disciplinary charges filed in State Bar Court 91-O-06555 (32 years, 5 months ago)
29 May 1985Admitted to the State Bar of California (40 years ago)

Discipline Summaries

September 16, 2016

JOHNNIE LEE TAYLOR [#117532], 64, of Pasadena, was disbarred Sept. 16, 2016 and ordered to comply with rule 9.20 of the California Rules of Court.

A State Bar Court hearing judge initially recommended Taylor be suspended, finding him culpable of 13 probation violations but noting that there were mitigating factors. The Office of Chief Trial Counsel appealed, asking he be disbarred. A three-judge review panel, while adopting the judge’s culpability findings, found more aggravating factors and fewer in mitigation.

Taylor failed to submit four quarterly probation reports and violated his Lawyer Assistance Program plan by missing drug tests and group therapy sessions without being excused. In total, he missed seven scheduled lab tests and twice failed to attend group therapy sessions.

Taylor’s four prior disciplines included a 1993 public reproval for two counts of failing to perform competently and one of failing to communicate significant developments. He was publicly reproved again in 2002 for failing to obey a court order imposing sanctions or report the sanctions to the State Bar on time. His third disciplinary proceeding, which resulted in a suspension, stemmed from his conviction for two felony counts of stalking and misdemeanor driving under the influence. In 2011, he was suspended for failing to competently perform legal services, resulting in client harm, and failing to maintain the respect due the courts and judicial officers.

June 4, 2011

JOHNNIE LEE TAYLOR [#117532], 59, of Pasadena was suspended for two years, stayed, placed on three years of probation with an actual 90-day suspension and until he proves his rehabilitation, and he was ordered to comply with rule 9.20 of the California Rules of Court. The order took effect June 4, 2011.

Taylor stipulated to five counts of misconduct in three matters.

He filed a personal injury lawsuit for a client whom he also represented in the appeal when the suit was dismissed. He failed to appear at six hearings and a deposition, appeared very late at another four hearings, and he didn’t notice the opponent’s deposition or seek documents until after the deadline expired. When he appealed the dismissal of the lawsuit, he didn’t provide an adequate record and the dismissal was upheld.

Taylor’s misconduct was similar in another personal injury case in which he represented the plaintiff: he missed four hearings and was late for two more, he didn’t file a case management statement and he didn’t respond to discovery. He eventually substituted out of the case.

In both matters, he failed to perform legal services competently or obey court orders.

Taylor also failed to perform competently while representing a former postal worker who claimed she was a victim of employment discrimination. The case was dismissed because he failed to serve the defendants properly and he took no action for more than a year to set aside the dismissal. When he finally did so, the court ordered him to complete service of the lawsuit within 10 days.

He was incarcerated a few days later, and the case was again dismissed. He did not comply with court orders to notify his client of the dismissal and to file a declaration stating that he had done so. About six weeks later, a federal court found Taylor in contempt. After Taylor’s lawyer submitted a satisfactory declaration, the court vacated the contempt order. Taylor admitted he failed to maintain respect for the courts.

Taylor has been publicly reproved twice and was placed on interim suspension in January 2010 after pleading no contest to two counts of felony stalking and one count of misdemeanor driving under the influence.

December 10, 2010

JOHNNIE LEE TAYLOR [#117532], 58, of San Francisco was suspended for two years, stayed, placed on three years of probation with a nine-month actual suspension and he was ordered to take the MPRE and comply with rule 9.20 of the California Rules of Court. The order took effect Dec. 10, 2010.

Taylor pleaded no contest in 2009 to two counts of felony stalking and one count of misdemeanor driving under the influence. He repeatedly violated a restraining order that he stay 100 yards away from his wife and son and made threats against his wife and her boyfriend.

At one point he was charged with 11 criminal counts, including assaults with a deadly weapon (rebar, a vehicle and a knife) and making criminal threats.

Taylor has been publicly reproved twice and was placed on interim suspension in January 2010. In mitigation, he and his wife have been embroiled in a contentious custody battle.