Arthur Frederick Silber was first admitted to the California Bar 14th December 1987, but is currently resigned with charges pending. Arthur graduated from Loyola Law School.

Lawyer Information

NameArthur Frederick Silber
First Admitted14 December 1987 (36 years, 4 months ago)
StatusResigned with Charges Pending
Bar Number130768

Contact

Phone Number(213) 384-1083

Schools

Law SchoolLoyola Law School (Los Angeles CA)
Undergraduate SchoolNew York University (New York NY)

Address

Current Address3681 W 4th St
Los Angeles, CA 90020
Map

History

14 June 2001Resigned (22 years, 10 months ago)
26 April 1996Not Eligible To Practice Law in CA (28 years ago)
14 December 1987Admitted to The State Bar of California (36 years, 4 months ago)

Discipline Summaries

June 7, 2000

ARTHUR F. SILBER [#130768], 52, of Los Angeles was suspended for four years, stayed, placed on three years of probation with an actual one-year suspension, and was ordered to prove his rehabilitation, take the MPRE and comply with rule 955. The order took effect June 7, 2000.

Silber stipulated that he failed to comply with the probation conditions attached to two disciplinary orders. He did not attend ethics school, submit five quarterly probation reports, submit evidence that he obtained mental health treatment or furnish proof that he had not practiced law while suspended. He committed a total of 15 probation violations.

Silber had been disciplined for failure to perform legal services competently, keep clients informed about developments in their cases, return client property and cooperate with a bar investigation, and he improperly withdrew from employment.

In mitigation, Silber states that his noncompliance was due in significant part to his previously undiagnosed alcoholism. He now is sober and attends regular AA meetings.

August 16, 1998

ARTHUR FREDERICK SILBER [#130768], 50, of Los Angeles was suspended for two years, stayed, placed on two years of probation with a 120-day actual suspension and was ordered to comply with rule 955. The order took effect Aug. 16, 1998.

Silber was disciplined in 1997 and, as part of the order, he was required to comply with rule 955 of the California Rules of Court by notifying all his clients and other interested parties of his suspension. He was required to submit an affidavit to that effect with the court.

His failure to file the affidavit on time led to the new discipline.

The original discipline resulted from a failure to respond to a client's inquiries about the status of a case, perform legal services competently, return client papers, or keep his address current with bar records, and for withdrawing from a case without protecting his client's interests.

In mitigation, Silber cooperated with the bar's investigation and demonstrated remorse for his conduct. He also suffered from extreme clinical depression for two years, has undergone treatment and is responding well.

January 1, 1998

ARTHUR FREDERICK SILBER [#130768], 49, of Los Angeles was suspended for two years, stayed, and placed on two years of probation with an actual 90-day suspension. The order took effect Jan. 1, 1998.

In a default matter, the State Bar Court found that Silber abandoned two clients and their cases. He failed to perform legal services competently, communicate with clients or return their files, and he withdrew from employment without protecting a client’s interests. He also did not maintain a current address with the bar or cooperate with the bar’s investigation.

In one of the matters, Silber failed to appear at three hearings. As a result, a default was entered against his client. It was only when the client went to the courthouse to check on her case that she learned of the default. She had been unable to contact Silber because his telephone was disconnected.

Silber was disciplined last year for similar misconduct.

March 15, 1997

ARTHUR FREDERICK SILBER [#130768], 50, of Beverly Hills was suspended for two years, stayed, and placed on probation for two years on the condition that he actually be suspended for 90 days and until he submits proof that he is physically and psychologically capable of practicing law without danger to his clients or the public.

If the period of actual suspension exceeds two years, he will remain on actual suspension until he has shown proof of his fitness to practice.

In addition, he was ordered to pass the MPRE and comply with rule 955. The order took effect March 15, 1997.

Silber was hired by a client in 1994 to represent her in two pending civil actions originally filed in propria persona. He failed to make appearances at an arbitration hearing and a deposition.

The bar court hearing department found Silber culpable of failure to communicate with a client, perform legal services competently and cooperate with the bar's investigation.

The court found that aggravating circumstances outweighed the slight mitigation provided by Silber's lack of discipline in only seven years of practice.

The court also said it was particularly troubled by Silber's assertion in various correspondence that he suffers from chronic depression which is so severe it has completely disabled him from practicing.

However, wrote the court, although his problems are unfortunate, they do not excuse Silber from failing to notify his client of his condition in order for her to obtain new counsel.