Benson v. State Bar

486 P.2d 1230, 5 Cal. 3d 382, 96 Cal. Rptr. 30, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 260
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1971
DocketL.A. 29760
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 486 P.2d 1230 (Benson v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benson v. State Bar, 486 P.2d 1230, 5 Cal. 3d 382, 96 Cal. Rptr. 30, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 260 (Cal. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is a proceeding to review a recommendation of the Disciplinary Board of the State Bar of California that petitioner be disbarred.

Facts: Petitioner was admitted to practice law in California on June 10, 1959, and was employed in the office of the District Attorney of Los Angeles County from 1959 to 1960. Beginning in about 1961, he became closely acquainted with Pierce F. Carney and his wife, Violet Carney, and started to act as their attorney. In February 1962, at petitioner’s request, the Carneys lent him $10,000 to use in furnishing his office. Petitioner gave the Carneys a promissory note for that amount, due in five years or on demand, with interest at 6 percent per annum payable annually.

In April 1962, petitioner asked the Carneys to lend him an additional $5,000, and they did so. On April 27, 1962, he destroyed the February 1962 note for $10,000 and gave the Carneys a new note for $15,000, payable in five years, with interest at 6 percent per annum payable an *384 nually. On February 19, 1963, he paid them $900 as interest on the new note. This was the only payment he made on the $15,000 note.

During 1963, petitioner told the Carneys that he also represented a man named Jebia. He said Jebia was a very wealthy businessman involved in the warehousing of bananas and that an arrangement could be made under which if persons would deposit in a savings and loan association account sums of money which Jebia could use and invest, Jebia would pay such investor 8 percent interest on the money deposited, and the investor would also receive the regular 4.75 percent interest paid by the savings and loan association, giving a total return of 12.75 percent per annum. Petitioner further told the Carneys that although the money would be used by Jebia, it would have to be deposited in petitioner’s name.

On October 15, 1963, relying upon petitioner’s representations regarding the proposed Jebia transaction, Mrs. Carney gave petitioner a check for $20,000. The Carneys believed that petitioner would deposit the money in a savings and loan association account for the investment with Jebia. Mrs. Carney testified- with respect to the transaction, “We trusted [petitioner] and we believed that he would do whatever had to be done and whatever was right.”

According to petitioner’s testimony, Jebia had told him he would show petitioner a “proper investment” if petitioner raised $40,000, and petitioner needed the $20,000 from the Carneys to complete the required $40,000. Petitioner stated, “When Jebia found out that I had borrowed the money he would not let me invest it, and that started my road to ruin, I guess, as you call it.”

Petitioner admitted that he did not explain to the Carneys what had happened or offer to return the $20,000. He testified that he deposited the money in his “open” account at the Harbor Savings and Loan Association, in which he then had about $20,000 of other funds; that his office was in the same building and he later withdrew the Carneys’ $20,000 from his account at various times, making withdrawals as he needed money; and that before he knew it, the money was gone.- He also stated, “. . . I think I did everything to: bend over backwards not to tell the Carneys these were trust funds.” (Italics added.)

Some time after turning the $20,000 over to petitioner, the Carneys asked him for a “note of agreement” between Jebia and themselves, so that they would have something to show for the money they had invested. Petitioner told them, in April 1964, that “there would be no way of his having a note between [the Carneys] and Jebia, it would have to be between [the Carneys] and [petitioner].” He also told them that he would *385 combine the amounts they had first lent him, plus the interest due, with the $20,000 invested with Jebia, for a note in the total sum of $37,460 bearing 10 percent interest.

On April 18, 1964, petitioner gave the Carneys a note for $37,460, payable in five years, at 10 percent interest annually. He also gave them a summary sheet, which he used to show them that if they left their money “in” and allowed it to accrue with interest, in five years they would be able to receive the total sum of $60,329.71. He further told them that interest could be paid at any time in six-month, periods, that they would not be allowed to draw out anything in between, but that at the end of six-month periods they could draw “either the interest or the full amount, whatever [they] wanted.”

Mrs. Carney testified that they did not ask petitioner for interest again until April 1966, at which time they “had to have money” and asked petitioner if he would pay them at least $3,000, or approximately one year’s interest; that petitioner told her at that time that she was a day or two over the six-month period, “just too late to come in on that period and [she] would have to wait again until the October date when it would be due again and then [she] would be able to get the $3,000”; that in October 1966 they again asked petitioner for the $3,000; that because of the way he answered and equivocated, she finally asked him “if he had really invested that money for the full five years rather than on a six month basis”; that petitioner said “yes,” he had “put it in for a full five years period with the understanding he wouldn’t touch it until the end of the five years period"; that she and her husband continued, after October 1966, to ask petitioner for a $3,000 payment, which they “needed very badly”; and that petitioner kept saying he would be able to make payments to them from his own money that he had “coming in.” It is undisputed, however, that petitioner made no payments at that time.

Mr. Carney testified that he, also, had conversations with petitioner relating to the Jebia investment after October 15, 1963, when the money was turned over to petitioner; that “at different times" petitioner claimed he “was making plenty of dough, kidding along about it, until it finally came to a showdown . . .’’; and that the “showdown” occurred during the fall of 1967, when petitioner came to the Carneys’ home at Palm Desert.

The Carneys testified that at that time petitioner “finally confessed” that their money had never been invested by him with Jebia and that he himself had spent the money. With respect to the conversation, Mrs. Carney stated: “Well, I was the one that brought the subject up. I said, ‘Fred [petitioner], tell us the truth now, you really have never invested that money, it’s never been invested with Mr. Jebia, has it, you have *386 spent it yourself?’ and he said, ‘Yes, that’s true.’ ” She further testified that when they pressed petitioner concerning how he had spent the money, he could not say specifically, but he did say he had used some of it to buy a house for his father.

Mrs. Carney further testified that while petitioner was at their home in the fall of 1967, they told him that instead of requiring him to pay the full amount due (which was about $56,000), they would be willing to settle for $50,000 at 6 percent and have him amortize the loan in monthly payments he could meet.

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Bluebook (online)
486 P.2d 1230, 5 Cal. 3d 382, 96 Cal. Rptr. 30, 1971 Cal. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benson-v-state-bar-cal-1971.