Attorney Grievance Commission v. Velasquez

846 A.2d 422, 380 Md. 651, 2004 Md. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 2004
DocketMisc. AG No. 14, Sept. Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 846 A.2d 422 (Attorney Grievance Commission v. Velasquez) 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. Velasquez, 846 A.2d 422, 380 Md. 651, 2004 Md. LEXIS 180 (Md. 2004).

Opinion

BELL, C.J.

The Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland, the petitioner, acting pursuant to Maryland Rule 16-751, 1 approved the filing by Bar Counsel of a Petition For Disciplinary or Remedial Action against Ray I. Velasquez, the respondent. In that petition, Bar Counsel charged him with misconduct, as defined by Maryland Rules 16-701(i), 2 and 16-812, and consisting of violations of various of the Maryland Rules of Professional Conduct, as adopted by the latter Maryland Rule. In particular, the respondent was alleged to have violated Rules *653 1.3, Diligence, 3 1.4, Communication, 4 1.5, Fees, 5 1.5, Safekeeping Property, 6 1.16, Declining or Terminating Representation, 7 *654 5.5, Unauthorized Practice of Law, 8 8.1, Bar Admission and Disciplinary Matters, 9 and 8.4, Misconduct, 10 of the Maryland Rules of Professional Conduct. We referred the case to the Honorable Sean D. Wallace, of the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, for a hearing pursuant to Rules 16-752(a) 11 and 16-757(c). 12 Following the hearing, the hearing court *655 found facts and drew conclusions of law as follows. Having been disbarred in 1984, see Attorney Grievance Comm’n v. Velasquez, 301 Md. 450, 483 A.2d 354 (1984), the respondent was reinstated in 1997 as a member of the Maryland Bar, after which he established his law practice in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. The respondent is not admitted to practice in Virginia.

In 2000, the respondent accepted a retainer to represent Milton Moreno in connection with his criminal conviction of rape in Virginia. Pursuant to the retainer agreement, executed by Mr. Moreno’s sister, the respondent agreed to investigate the charges of which Mr. Moreno had been convicted and request a new trial. Less than a month after the retainer agreement was executed, he visited Mr. Moreno at a Virginia State prison, during which he “offered [Mr. Moreno] legal advice about his case, including advice about grounds for a new trial and/or post-conviction relief.” The respondent did not inform Mr. Moreno that he was not admitted to practice in Virginia. He has not visited Mr. Moreno since. Nor has the respondent spoken to him by phone or communicated with him by written correspondence. No motions, petitions or other pleadings were filed in a court on Mr. Moreno’s behalf. In short, rather than rendering any meaningful service to Mr. Moreno, the respondent abandoned his representation of Mr. Moreno, without informing him of its termination.

The respondent was paid $ 1500.00 at the time of the execution of the retainer agreement and, subsequently, he received an additional $ 800.00. None of these monies was deposited into an attorney trust or escrow account and, because the only meaningful service rendered Mr. Moreno was the visit to the prison, little if any of the monies were, or ever have been, earned.

*656 Complaints were filed by Mr. Moreno with both the Maryland State Bar Association and the Virginia State Bar Association. 13 The Maryland State Bar Association forwarded the complaint filed with it to the petitioner, which, in the course of investigating it, sent several written requests for information to the respondent. The respondent failed to respond timely on two occasions. He did, however, provide some of the requested information, first by letter and subsequently by a document captioned, “Affidavit of Ray Velasquez.” Following up on the information in the affidavit, the petitioner made a written request for additional information from the respondent. The respondent did not respond at all to that request.

Based on these findings of fact, the hearing judge concluded that the respondent violated each of the rules charged, except Rule 8.4(a). Rule 1.3 was violated, he said, when, having been “engaged to provide legal services to Milton Moreno, [the respondent] failed to act with reasonable diligence and promptness in carrying out that representation.” Because the respondent did not keep Mr. Moreno informed as to the status of the representation or inform him that he was not licensed to practice law in Virginia, Rule 1.4(a) and (b) were violated.

Combining the respondent’s lack of a license to practice law in Virginia with his failure to render any meaningful services in connection with the representation he had undertaken and noting the respondent’s collection and retention of a fee, the hearing judge found a violation of Rule 1.5(a). Having collected the fee, the respondent’s failure to hold it in an escrow *657 account separate from his personal funds, until earned, violated, he determined, Rule 1.15(a). The Rule 1.16(d) violation consisted of the respondent’s abandonment of his representation of Mr. Moreno, without giving reasonable notice or returning the unearned fee.

With respect to Rule 5.5(a), the hearing judge concluded: “As determined by the Virginia State Bar’s Standing Committee on Unauthorized Practice of Law, and by this court upon its review of the evidence in this matter, the Respondent engaged in activity constituting the practice of law in Virginia, where the Respondent was not authorized to practice. He therefore violated MRPC 5.5(a), which prohibits a lawyer from practicing law in a jurisdiction where doing so violates the regulation of the legal profession in that jurisdiction. The Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia prohibit any person who is ‘not duly licensed or authorized to practice law in the Commonwealth of Virginia’ from engaging in the practice of law or in any [manner] holding himself out as authorized or qualified to practice law in the Commonwealth of Virginia. Virginia Rules of Court, Part Six, § I.”

The hearing judge added that, because Section 54.1-3904 of the Virginia Code Annotated provides that the unauthorized practice of law is a crime, a class 1 misdemeanor, punishable by both fine and imprisonment, the respondent’s unauthorized practice of law in Virginia also constituted the commission of a criminal act reflecting adversely on his honesty, trustworthiness or fitness as a lawyer in other respects, in violation of Rule 8.4(b).

The respondent’s unauthorized practice in Virginia, coupled with the failure to disclose that fact to the client and accepting a fee for representation that he could not perform, were, to the hearing judge, conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation. That conduct, he was satisfied, violated Rule 8.4(c).

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Bluebook (online)
846 A.2d 422, 380 Md. 651, 2004 Md. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-grievance-commission-v-velasquez-md-2004.