Attorney Grievance Commission v. Powers

551 A.2d 465, 314 Md. 484, 1989 Md. LEXIS 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1989
DocketMisc. (Subtitle BV) No. 26, September Term, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 551 A.2d 465 (Attorney Grievance Commission v. Powers) 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. Powers, 551 A.2d 465, 314 Md. 484, 1989 Md. LEXIS 1 (Md. 1989).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

The Attorney Grievance Commission charged Van Stuart Powers, a Maryland lawyer since 1972, with multiple violations of the Code of Professional Responsibility. 1 We referred the matter to Judge G. Hovey Johnson of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County pursuant to Maryland Rule BV9 b. After extensive fact-finding, Judge Johnson concluded that Powers was guilty of numerous violations of the Code. Although Powers takes issue with some of Judge Johnson’s findings, as to which there was some conflicting evidence, our review of the record persuades us that those findings are all supported by clear and convincing evidence. We overrule Powers’s exceptions. See, e.g., Attorney Griev. Comm’n v. Harris, 310 Md. 197, 208, 528 A.2d 895, 900 (1987) (hearing judge’s findings of fact will be sustained if supported by clear and convincing evidence); Attorney Griev. Comm’n v. Parker, 306 Md. 36, 45, 506 A.2d 1183, 1188 (1986) (same); Attorney Griev. Comm’n v. Collins, 295 Md. 582, 548, 457 A.2d 1134, 1142 (1983) (same).

*486 The transgressions at issue here arose out of three separate and distinct sets of circumstances. The simplest set is that involved in the complaint of Clint A. Lauderdale. At a church benefit auction, Lauderdale had the misfortune to purchase two hours of legal consultation with Powers. As a result, Lauderdale retained Powers to handle two matters, each of a minor and relatively simple nature. The retainer was paid on 18 November 1983. In one matter, a collection case, Powers waited until about 15 February 1985 to advise Lauderdale that it would not be cost-effective for an attorney to proceed with it. In the other, a minor property damage claim, Powers neglected to file suit for almost two years after receiving the Lauderdales’ check for filing fees. Only after the Lauderdales filed a complaint with the Commission did Powers take action. In July 1986, Powers filed suit and settled the claim for an amount acceptable to Lauderdale. What we have here, essentially, is neglect and failure to represent a client zealously. Judge Johnson found violations of DR’s 6-101(A)(2), (3) and 7-101(A)(l), (2), (3).

The second set of circumstances, more serious and more complex than the Lauderdale affair, is the subject of a complaint initiated by the Commission’s inquiry panel. It appears that until 1986 Powers maintained several noninterest bearing escrow accounts. At some point in that year, during a casual conversation “with a couple of lawyers at the Old Town Inn,” Powers learned that “lawyers could have interest-bearing accounts.” Without troubling to check further into the matter, for example, by reviewing Maryland Code, Article 10, § 44, 2 Powers proceeded to *487 establish interest-bearing accounts, into which he sporadically transferred clients’ money from noninterest bearing *488 escrow accounts, intermingling these funds on occasions with his own money. He kept no records by which he could readily identify whose money was being moved around. He removed money from the interest-bearing accounts in a similarly whimsical fashion. For the most part, he kept the interest himself, although once, when a client demanded it, he attempted to compute the interest on that client’s money and sent it to him. He transmitted no interest to the Legal Services Corporation. See Art. 10, § 44(a)(2), (3). Judge Johnson found violations of Article 10, § 44 and DR 9-102(A), (B).

Finally, we come to the complaint of Mary Shaw. Marge Atwell, a former client of Powers, introduced him to Mary Shaw in July 1982. At that time Atwell and others in her family resided with Shaw and helped care for her. Shaw was an elderly widow, of limited education, and not in the best of health. 3 Shaw wanted a will and generally needed help with her affairs. Powers first had Shaw execute a power of attorney, naming him as her attorney-in-fact. Next, he had the names of her sister and brother-in-law removed from Shaw’s accounts. These included four certificates of deposit, totalling $35,000, and a checking account. In January 1983 Powers prepared and Shaw executed a declaration of trust naming him as trustee and conveying to him, in that capacity, virtually all of Shaw’s assets (her home and the aforementioned CDs and bank account).

Powers’s management of Shaw’s affairs, as attorney and trustee, was abysmal. He failed to prepare and file income tax returns timely, thus incurring (for Shaw) penalties for the year 1982. He failed to pay 1983 property taxes on the *489 house, which was sold at a tax sale on 11 June 1984, and was not redeemed until 18 September 1984, 4 at further expense to Shaw’s estate. His late payment of utilities bills resulted in Shaw’s service being interrupted. Moreover, he failed to assure (until January 1985) that only he had access to Shaw’s checking account. Atwell and her daughter had induced Shaw to pay them substantial funds from this account. Bank statements for October and November 1984 contained cancelled checks totalling $2,800 written to At-well, her daughter, or both. Powers was unaware of this because he never examined the bank statements with any care and never reconciled them. In fact, he testified (and confirmed at argument before us) that he did not and does not know how to reconcile a bank statement.

In December 1984 receipt of a particularly bulky bank statement prompted Powers to look at it, and he found over $5,000 in checks payable to Atwell, her daughter, or both. After that, he closed the old checking account, but he recovered only $275 from Atwell. 5

Eventually, Shaw’s sister intervened. On 30 October 1985, at the sister’s insistence, Shaw filed a complaint with the Commission. Powers’s response was to pay himself $1,500 in legal fees — fees for which he never billed Shaw; indeed, he never informed her that he had paid himself. On 26 November 1985 Shaw signed a letter, written by her sister, discharging Powers. Powers prepared an authoriza *490 tion to make the necessary arrangements to return her property to her and to deduct therefrom his legal fees. Once again, he paid himself $5,668 for legal fees and $261.83 for costs, without any billing or accounting to Shaw. He returned to her some $14,500 in cash, as opposed to the over $35,000 he had received from her in January 1983. As part of this winding up process, he cashed prematurely, and without Shaw’s permission, a CD, thereby incurring a penalty of $420.70. The last of Shaw’s money was finally returned to her at the first inquiry panel hearing in this case, in October 1986 — almost a year after Shaw had discharged Powers.

The Commission did not charge Powers with actual misappropriation of any of Shaw’s money.

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Bluebook (online)
551 A.2d 465, 314 Md. 484, 1989 Md. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-grievance-commission-v-powers-md-1989.