Board of Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Tennessee v. Bonnington

762 S.W.2d 568, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 248
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 762 S.W.2d 568 (Board of Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Tennessee v. Bonnington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Tennessee v. Bonnington, 762 S.W.2d 568, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 248 (Tenn. 1988).

Opinions

OPINION

FONES, Justice.

A hearing committee found that Respondent, Richard Bonnington, had misappropriated funds belonging to the estate of Cleo B. Durrah, deceased, and suspended him from the practice of law for a period of four years, conditioning his reinstatement on full restitution of interest, attorney’s fees and costs, respondent having returned the principal sums appropriated before discovery of his misdeeds. The Circuit Court of Hamilton County affirmed the judgment of the hearing committee and the Board of Professional Responsibility appealed to this Court, insisting that disbarment is the only appropriate disposition of a misappropriation case such as this.

Respondent, Richard Bonnington, was admitted to the bar in 1975. He began the practice of law in Chattanooga in September 1976. Between September 1976 and [569]*569early 1980 he practiced with four different law firms or lawyer groups. He was practicing alone in Red Bank in June 1980, when his lawyer friend, Mitchell Byrd, called him and asked him if he would handle the estate of Cleo B. Durrah. The sole beneficiary of the estate, Albert Sims, of Detroit, Michigan, was in Mr. Byrd’s office at that time. Respondent agreed and was duly appointed administrator by the Probate Court of Hamilton County and served as lawyer for the administrator. On 1 April 1981, Joe Harrison, Mitchell Byrd, and respondent began practicing law as partners with the firm name of Harrison, Bonnington and Byrd. Respondent continued to practice with that firm until he voluntarily withdrew from the practice of law in June 1986.

The gross receipts that came into respondent’s hands as administrator of the Dur-rah estate was $28,636.29. That sum included a check for $2,800 given as earnest money on the purchase of the house and lot belonging to the estate that was dishonored by the bank. Thus, the gross estate was actually $25,836.29. The house was eventually sold and respondent received the net proceeds of the sale, $19,640.08 on 15 April 1981. Upon receipt of that sum, respondent had $21,956.82 in the estate bank account. The disbursements he had made included an unauthorized check to himself on 19 August 1980 in the sum of $1,500 that he testified he used to purchase a copy machine.

On 9 June 1981, respondent disbursed $5,003 to Albert Sims, the estate beneficiary. On 26 February 1982, respondent paid himself $9,289.46 out of the estate account. On 1 August 1982, respondent returned that identical sum to the estate account.

Thereafter, respondent wrote unauthorized checks to himself as follows:

(1) 21 December 1982, $1,000;
(2) 14 February 1983, $1,100;
(3) 16 March 1983, $5,000;
(4) 18 May 1983, $3,000.

The only sum brought into the estate after the proceeds of the sale of the house was $262.57, on 11 February 1983, described as “Whitehead — Garnishment Proceeds.” On 9 March 1983, respondent made a second partial distribution to Albert Sims of $5,000. It is clear from the record before us that a final accounting should have been filed at that time, a full distribution made to Sims and the estate closed.

The Probate Court of Hamilton County approved the sum of $7,198.05 for respondent’s services and expenses as administrator and attorney for the estate. Respondent withdrew that sum from the estate on 31 October 1983.

Respondent reimbursed the estate for the sums he improperly withdrew, as follows:

(1) 1 November 1983, $10,000;
(2) 7 February 1986, $1,600.

At some date near the end of 1985 the Probate Court removed respondent as administrator and appointed Walter Grant-ham as his successor. The record does not reveal the date respondent learned of his removal but clearly implies that it was pri- or to 7 February 1986. On that date respondent wrote a check payable to the Dur-rah Estate, drawn on his law firm’s trust account for $1,600. That sum completed the return to the estate of all the principal that he had improperly withdrawn.

On 12 February 1986, respondent filed an accounting in the Probate Court that correctly reflected all of the receipts and disbursements except the six checks to himself totalling $20,889.46 and the three restitution checks totalling that same amount.

Albert Sims called Mitchell Byrd about closing the estate, apparently in early 1986, and that, and other events, led Mr. Byrd to have an accountant audit the firm trust account and the Durrah estate account. The results of that audit were delivered to Mr. Byrd at about the same time that respondent decided to and did reveal to his law partners that he had misappropriated funds from the Durrah estate.

Apparently respondent had theretofore advised the probate judge of the misappropriations. On 11 June 1986, respondent’s counsel, James C. Lee, advised the Board of Professional Responsibility that Bon-[570]*570nington had made unauthorized borrowings from the Durrah estate while serving as its administrator and attorney and that Bon-nington was voluntarily withdrawing from the practice of law.

At the time of the hearings below, respondent was represented by counsel other than Mr. Lee in the proceedings in the probate court to determine the exact amount due the estate. There was testimony in this case that the successor administrator had informally advised respondent that he owed approximately $4,000 interest plus the repayment of the fee allowed in the Durrah estate of approximately $7,000. Respondent acknowledged his indebtedness for those sums and it appears from this record that when respondent’s interest in the law firm and some real estate it owns is forthcoming, that that indebtedness to the Durrah estate will be satisfied. We will assume for the purpose of this proceeding that respondent will satisfy the judgment rendered by the probate court, expeditiously. It will be essential that he prove that he has done so as one of the prerequisites to restatement of his license to practice law if and when he makes application.

It is appropriate to observe at this point that a suspension of four years from the practice of law is only one year short of the maximum punishment of disbarment from the practice of law. A lawyer suspended for one year or more must apply for reinstatement and go through the same procedure that a disbarred lawyer must do after five years, to-wit: prove by clear and convincing evidence in the established tribunals of the disciplinary system that he or she has the moral qualifications, competency and learning in law required for admission to practice in this State and that his resumption of the practice of law within the State will not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar or the administration of justice or subversive to the public interest. See Supreme Court Rule 9, § 19.

At the hearing before Chancellor Inman, the attorney for the Board stated that no new evidence would be presented because “both sides basically accept the findings of fact” of the hearing panel. Thereafter, he observed that the Board’s only disagreement with the hearing panel was its finding that respondent’s admission of guilt was voluntary.

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762 S.W.2d 568, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-professional-responsibility-of-the-supreme-court-of-tennessee-v-tenn-1988.