Attorney Grievance Commission v. Aler

483 A.2d 56, 301 Md. 389, 1984 Md. LEXIS 373
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 1, 1984
DocketMisc. Docket (Subtitle BV) No. 11, September Term, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 483 A.2d 56 (Attorney Grievance Commission v. Aler) 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 Grievance Commission v. Aler, 483 A.2d 56, 301 Md. 389, 1984 Md. LEXIS 373 (Md. 1984).

Opinion

*391 COUCH, Judge.

Once again, we are confronted with an attorney whose abuse of alcohol has led Bar Counsel to charge him with violation of the Disciplinary Rules. Acting pursuant to the provisions of Maryland Rule BV9, Bar Counsel filed a petition with this Court on behalf of the Attorney Grievance Commission seeking disciplinary action against Charles Berkeley Aler, a member of the Maryland Bar since 1963. The charges raised by the petition focus upon Mr. Aler’s representation of a client, Rodney A. Roberts, who hired Aler on March 13, 1976 to represent him in a personal injury claim. Aler was successful in effecting a favorable settlement for Roberts. Roberts requested that Aler hold these funds in an escrow account, with payments to be made to Roberts as needed. It was alleged that, between April 13, 1976 and December 31, 1982, Aler “knowingly misappropriated and converted to his own personal use” these funds so entrusted to him. It was further alleged that Aler commingled Roberts’ funds with his own funds and failed to maintain any accounting of the funds Roberts had entrusted to his care, and that the payments which Aler occasionally made to Roberts “were not always from the funds which Roberts had entrusted to his care.” Instead, Aler’s own funds or funds belonging to other clients were allegedly used.

Pursuant to Rule BV9 we referred the matter for hearing to a judge of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. Judge Hennegan 1 heard live testimony and received certain stipulations of fact which were incorporated into the judge’s findings of fact. The hearing judge found:

“1. On March 13, 1976, Rodney A. Roberts (hereinafter referred to as “Roberts”) hired the Respondent to represent him as an attorney with respect to personal *392 injuries he sustained in an accident which occurred on November 1, 1975. In that accident, Roberts and his minor step-son, Dennis James Healy, Jr., were struck by a motorist while they were crossing a street in Baltimore City. Dennis James Healy, Jr. died on November 23, 1975, as a result of the injuries which he süstained in the said accident.
2. On April 22, 1976, the Respondent filed a law action on Roberts’ behalf in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, entitled Rodney A. Roberts vs. Timothy J. Colclough and John James Colclough, Law No. 93390. The accident of November 1, 1975, referred to above in paragraph 1 hereof, and the damages sustained by Roberts were the subject matters of the said law action.
3. The Respondent settled the case of Roberts vs. Colclough, referred to above in paragraph 2, with the Insurance Company of North America in December, 1978 for $19,500.00. The Respondent deposited the settlement check drawn by Insurance Company of North America in that amount to his escrow account at Maryland National Bank, account number 231-853-3 (hereinafter referred to as “escrow account”) on December 14, 1978, with the agreement of Roberts and certain of Roberts’ family members.
4. In the meantime, during the course of his representation of Roberts, the Respondent had received other funds belonging to Roberts____ The total amount of Roberts’ money which was entrusted to the Respondent was $40,934.62.
5. The Respondent and Roberts and Roberts’ family members agreed that the Respondent would hold the aforegoing sums in his escrow account in order to safeguard them, and they further agreed that upon Roberts’ request, the Respondent would pay portions of the said funds to Roberts in the approximate amount of $100 to $250 per month in order to cover Roberts’ monthly living expenses. However, there was no agreement between the Respondent and Roberts and/or Roberts’ family mem *393 bers as to exactly how long this arrangement was to continue.
6. During the period between May of 1976 and July of 1982, the Respondent made payments to Roberts at Roberts’ request in accordance with the arrangement described above in paragraph 5 hereof. Some of these payments were made in the form of cash and others were made in the form of checks drawn on the escrow account and other accounts....
7. Between December 14, 1978, the date on which the proceeds of the law action in the amount of $19,500 were deposited into the Respondent’s escrow account, and March 30, 1979, the Respondent paid from the escrow a total of $1,222.03 either directly to Roberts or on his behalf, and drew checks totaling $15,085 to his own order. Some of the latter checks bore notations which indicated that they pertained to the Respondent’s representation of Roberts____
8. During the period between December 14, 1978 and March 30, 1979, the Respondent misused Roberts’ funds from the escrow account for his own personal use and for office use, without knowledge or consent of Roberts or his family.
9. The Respondent, at various times, during his representation of Roberts between April, 1976 and July, 1982, commingled Roberts’ funds with his own and misappropriated Roberts’ funds to his own personal and/or office use.
10. The Respondent failed to maintain any accounting of Roberts’ funds which had been entrusted to his care, as related above, and failed to account to Roberts or to anyone else for their whereabouts until the Respondent, with the assistance of counsel, produced most of the relevant bank records at the Inquiry Panel hearing on this matter on January 28, 1983. At the said hearing, the Respondent did provide an accounting as to how much money he had received on Roberts’ behalf and how much money he had paid out either directly to Roberts or for *394 the use and benefit of Roberts during his representation of Roberts. Despite the said accounting, approximately $10,240.65 of Roberts’ money, which had been entrusted to the Respondent, as related above, is still unaccounted for.
11. That at times the funds with which the Respondent made payments to or on behalf of Roberts were the Respondent’s own funds or funds from other sources or funds belonging to clients other than Roberts.
12. The Respondent, between 1975 and 1982, also represented Roberts regarding a divorce, the defense of a motor tort action brought against Roberts (which Roberts won on summary judgment), the contesting of a guardianship proceeding brought by Roberts’ estranged wife, a matter involving the attempted repossession of Roberts’ car, and a matter involving Roberts’ call to jury duty. The Respondent never billed Roberts or any of his family members for this representation of Roberts in these other matters, although he was entitled to legal fees for these services____”

The trial judge concluded that the Respondent violated the following provisions of the Code of Professional Responsibility:

“Disciplinary Rule 1-102 Misconduct.
(A) A lawyer shall not:
(1) Violate a Disciplinary Rule.

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Bluebook (online)
483 A.2d 56, 301 Md. 389, 1984 Md. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-grievance-commission-v-aler-md-1984.