PER CURIAM.
Marilyn Ringstaff appeals the final decision of the Board to Determine Fitness of Bar Applicants ("the Board") denying her certification of fitness to practice law. After reviewing the record, we conclude the Board erred; accordingly, we reverse the Board's decision and order that a certificate of fitness to practice law be granted Ms. Ringstaff.
After conducting an informal meeting with Ms. Ringstaff, the Board tentatively denied a certificate of moral fitness and issued specifications when Ringstaff requested a formal hearing. Part A, §§ 7 and 8, Rules Governing Admission to the Practice of Law. In its specifications, the Board recounted Ringstaff's conduct with regard to a minor traffic accident in which she was charged with following too closely and with regard to her self-representation as a first-year law student in the prosecution of the traffic charge at trial and on appeal;
1. The Board erred as a matter of law when it imposed upon Ringstaff the burden of proving full and complete rehabilitation by clear and convincing evidence. An applicant must shoulder the additional burden of proving rehabilitation to establish good moral character "[w]here an applicant for admission to the bar has a criminal record" (In re Cason, supra, 249 Ga. at 808, 294 S.E.2d 520), where an applicant has engaged in criminal conduct that was not prosecuted (In re K.S.L., 269 Ga. 51, 495 S.E.2d 276 (1998)), or where an applicant seeks reinstatement to the bar. In the Matter of Spence, 271 Ga. 630, 523 S.E.2d 323 (1999) (applicant seeking reinstatement following disbarment); In the Matter of Oliver, 268 Ga. 882, 494 S.E.2d 333 (1998) (applicant seeking reinstatement following voluntary surrender of license). Inasmuch as this case presents none of these circumstances, the rehabilitation
2. This Court has a responsibility to the public "to see that those who are admitted to practice are ethically cognizant and mature individuals who have the character to withstand the temptations which are placed before them as they handle other people's money and affairs." (Punctuation omitted.) In re Cason, supra, 249 Ga. at 809, 294 S.E.2d 520. The Board has the duty to "inquire into the character and fitness of applicants for admission to the practice of law and ... [to] certify as fit to practice law those applicants who have established to the Board's satisfaction that they possess the integrity and character requisite to be members of the Bar of Georgia." Part A, § 2, Rules Governing Admission to the Practice of Law. See also In re Cason, supra, 249 Ga. at 809, 294 S.E.2d 520 ("The function of the Fitness Board is to prevent those not demonstrating the requisite moral character and fitness from being allowed to become lawyers."). The purpose of a hearing to determine character and fitness is to "acquaint[ ] this court with the applicant's innermost feelings and personal views on those aspects of morality, attention to duty, forthrightness and self-restraint which are usually associated with the accepted definition of `good moral character.'" In re Lubonovic, 248 Ga. 243(3), 282 S.E.2d 298 (1981). It is the applicant's burden to prove she possesses the requisite character and moral fitness to practice law, and this Court will uphold the Board's decision if there is any evidence to support it. In re R.M.C., 272 Ga. 99(1), 525 S.E.2d 100 (2000). Ultimately, the decision whether an applicant is fit to practice law in Georgia rests with this Court. In re Spence, 275 Ga. 202, 204, 563 S.E.2d 129 (2002). After reviewing the specifications cited by the Board in its tentative decision and reiterated in its final decision
Twelve of the seventeen pages of the transcript of the Board's informal interview with applicant are devoted to discussions of the applicant's pro se representation in the trial of the traffic violation, the appeal, and the content of the note she sent to the clerk of the trial court. When asked to tell the Board about the trial, Ms. Ringstaff stated:
When asked whether she had felt she was treated unfairly by the judge, Ms. Ringstaff stated:
With regard to whether the prosecutor had treated her unfairly, Ms. Ringstaff stated: "I thought he brought a case that should never have been brought and—I haven't reviewed the case recently, but there are several things I thought of in response to the prosecutor that I was unhappy with." When asked about her appellate contention that she received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial, applicant stated:
When asked what she had meant when she wrote to the trial court clerk that the system of justice was crooked and inequitable, Ms. Ringstaff stated:
She told the Board "I would not write those words now and the only reason I did at that time was because I knew April [the clerk to whom the note was addressed]. I had talked to her several times on the phone and I thought it was more of an off-the-record note to her." When asked whether she believed the system of justice is crooked and inequitable, Ms. Ringstaff responded: "No, overall I believe it's the best we've got, but there are problems in the system...." While applicant continued to stand by her assertion that the police officer who issued her the ticket committed perjury, she acknowledged that she did not know whether the district attorney or the trial judge knew that. When asked whether she believed the appellate court "knew the superior court judge knew it," she replied:
Applicant was asked whether it was her position the trial court erred when in permitted the prosecuting witness to sit at counsel table during the criminal trial, to which she responded that it had been her belief at the time.
The transcript of the informal hearing reflects that there is no evidence supporting the specifications listed by the Board and the conclusion drawn by the Board.
3. In her application, Ms. Ringstaff listed no criminal convictions or criminal conduct. In a separate category, she listed traffic citations for speeding (issued in 1983, 1990, and 2000), failure to come to a complete stop (2000), and the 2002 citation for following too closely. She listed her 1984 discharge in bankruptcy of several debts. The Director of the Office of Bar Admissions testified before the hearing officer that the Board had received no complaints about the applicant's personal moral characteristics or her integrity, other than the trial of the traffic citation and its aftermath and the informal hearing held by the Board. The record contains the testimony before the hearing officer of an attorney who had supervised Ms. Ringstaff's work in the healthcare unit of the Atlanta Legal Aid Society for two years. He described her as quiet, studious, resourceful, conscientious, and very deferential to authority, and stated she had not made any statements to him that were critical of the judicial system, judges, or lawyers. A law-school professor described applicant as completely respectful of all her classmates and testified she never heard applicant say anything negative about law enforcement or display contempt or a lack of respect for any category of persons. The professor stated she had no reservations about Ms. Ringstaff's character or fitness. Another law-school professor testified he had never seen applicant display contempt for the legal system and found her always to have conducted herself with great candor and truthfulness.
We conclude from our review of the record that Ms. Ringstaff established that she possesses the integrity and character required to be a member of the State Bar of Georgia. Inasmuch as the Board's grounds for finding otherwise are not supported by the record, we reverse the decision of the Board and direct that it issue a certificate of fitness to practice law to Ms. Ringstaff.
4. In light of the above, we need not address applicant's remaining enumerations of error.
Certificate of Fitness to Practice Law granted.
All the Justices concur.
The Board did not include a quotation that follows Ms. Ringstaff's name on the note and which states: "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."