ATTORNEY GRIEV. COMM'N OF MARYLAND v. Berger

593 A.2d 1103, 323 Md. 428, 1991 Md. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 20, 1991
DocketMisc. (Subtitle BV) No. 38 September Term, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 593 A.2d 1103 (ATTORNEY GRIEV. COMM'N OF MARYLAND v. Berger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ATTORNEY GRIEV. COMM'N OF MARYLAND v. Berger, 593 A.2d 1103, 323 Md. 428, 1991 Md. LEXIS 130 (Md. 1991).

Opinion

*429 RODOWSKY, Judge.

Stephen L. Berger (Berger), a member of the bar of this Court, conducts a plaintiffs’ personal injury practice. In June 1984 Mrs. Nancy A. Bart retained Berger, and ultimately complained against him to Bar Counsel. The complaint reached the level of public charges which we referred for hearing to Judge Ellen M. Heller of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.

Judge Heller found that Berger had violated the Maryland Lawyers’ Rules of Professional Conduct: Rule 1.15, by mismanaging his escrow account; Rule 1.3, by failing to act diligently in the matter; and Rule 1.4, by failing promptly to reply to the client’s reasonable requests for information. Berger does not except to these findings. Judge Heller further concluded that, “[notwithstanding these findings, the Court does not find that Mr. Berger’s actions were taken with the intent to deceive or fraudulently deprive or misrepresent any client in any matter.” Bar Counsel excepts, contending that Judge Heller should have found that Berger “knowingly misappropriated to his own use a substantial portion of Mrs. Bart’s funds____”

Bar Counsel’s case rested on the bank statements of Berger’s escrow account and on copies of the cancelled checks for that account, particularly for the period following Berger’s receipt of Mrs. Bart’s funds in August 1988 to the disbursement to her in February 1989. Because Bar Counsel knew only the amount of money which Berger held in trust for the complainant, Bar Counsel’s case consisted of demonstrating that, in early November 1988, the escrow account was far below that minimum required balance. Judge Heller found that the November 1988 shortage was due to negligence. Certain primary fact-findings underlie that conclusion. Judge Heller said:

“It is significant that it was Mr. Berger who discovered the shortfall on November 10, 1988 and made efforts on his own part to bring the account into balance. The account was brought into balance by December, 1988, prior to Mrs. Bart’s filing her complaint with the Com *430 mission. Indeed, the account was brought into balance prior to Mr. Berger being notified by Mrs. Bart’s attorney ... that she should receive the net proceeds of the settlement in February, 1989.”

As we shall demonstrate, the significant ultimate fact-finding concerning Berger’s state of mind was substantially predicated on a finding of primary fact which is erroneous. Because of that error, we shall remand for reconsideration.

Berger represented Mrs. Bart and her then husband, Alan Bart, concerning their claims arising out of a June 1984 accident in which Mrs. Bart suffered bodily injuries. There is a written fee agreement, signed by Mrs. Bart, providing for a fee of one-third of any and all sums received. Berger filed suit in February 1987, claiming, inter alia, for loss of consortium. The case was settled in June 1988 for $29,000 which was paid by an insurer’s draft dated July 13, payable to Mr. and Mrs. Bart and to Berger, as their attorney.

By this time the Barts had separated, had individual counsel, and were seeking a divorce. The Barts, through their respective counsel, and Berger agreed that Berger would hold their funds in his escrow account pending agreement on disposition of the net proceeds. Berger deposited the draft on August 1 to his escrow account.

Berger did not take his agreed fee from the recovery when it was received. That was not his practice. Even if he had rendered an accounting and made a distribution to the Barts upon receipt of the recovery, he would not have drawn a check to himself on his escrow account for the entire fee to which he was entitled. Rather, it was Berger’s practice to leave earned fees in the escrow account and to draw against those fees in increments, typically of $1,000 or $2,000. 1 For example, through the month of August 1988, Berger withdrew $15,250 from his escrow account by eight *431 checks ranging in amount from $1,000 to $3,000. Only one of these eight checks bears a notation identifying the matter where the funds were earned.

If Berger maintained individual client ledgers for the Barts’ account, or generally, they are not in evidence. The only evidence of any accounting “control” is Berger’s testimony that he kept at his desk a tally sheet on which he recorded the fees earned that were in the escrow account. From these he subtracted the incremental withdrawals as made. He said that this system seemed feasible because only three or four cases would be in settlement at any one time. Berger testified that he discontinued this practice on the advice of his present counsel whom Berger engaged after Mrs. Bart complained to Bar Counsel in early May of 1989. Berger testified that he had thrown away the tally sheet which reflected his withdrawals from escrow against his fee on the Barts’ matter. Any tally sheet which Berger might have been using in May 1989, at the time Bar Counsel notified Berger of the complaint, was no longer available to be introduced in evidence in this case as illustrative of the practice.

Berger’s position is that he took the fee on the Bart matter in the form of six checks drawn on his escrow account between September 1 and October 5, 1988. Five of the checks were written in September and total $8,100. The cancelled checks do not identify their purpose on their face. Only two other checks were drawn on the escrow account payable to Berger during September 1988. These totaled $4,166.

Berger maintained only one escrow account. By the end of September he had made no disbursements out of the Barts’ recovery other than for fee. If the Barts were Berger’s only clients, Berger’s escrow account at the end of September should have contained at least $20,900 ($29,000 less fee to that date of $8,100). On September 80 the escrow account balance was $14,838.48.

*432 On October 5 Berger withdrew $2,500 from escrow which he identifies as the balance of the fee on the Barts’ case. Berger made no other disbursements chargeable against the Barts’ recovery in October. On October 31 his escrow balance should have been at least $18,400 ($29,000 less total fee of $10,600). On October 31 his escrow account balance was $13,670.31.

On November 2 Berger drew on the escrow account a check to himself for $2,000 which cleared on November 3. On November 4 he drew on the escrow account a check to himself for $1,800 which cleared on November 7. On November 7 he drew on the escrow account a check to himself for $2,200 which cleared that day. At the close of business on November 7, 1988, the balance in Berger’s escrow account was $6,422.36, as compared to the $18,400 which, under Berger’s reckoning of his fee, he should have had in escrow for the Barts’ case alone.

On November 10 Berger made one disbursement chargeable to the Barts, an item of $70 for a medical bill paid to Dr. Robbins.

During this period Berger also settled a case for clients named Diener for $85,000 on which his fee was as much as $25,000. The $85,000 was deposited to the escrow on November 18, and the November ending balance of the account was $100,708.52.

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Bluebook (online)
593 A.2d 1103, 323 Md. 428, 1991 Md. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-griev-commn-of-maryland-v-berger-md-1991.