Brussow v. Utah State Bar

2012 UT 53, 286 P.3d 1246, 2012 WL 3676655
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 2012
DocketNo. 20100206
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2012 UT 53 (Brussow v. Utah State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brussow v. Utah State Bar, 2012 UT 53, 286 P.3d 1246, 2012 WL 3676655 (Utah 2012).

Opinion

INTRODUCTION

{11 Attorney Franklin Brussow appeals from the decision of the Utah State Bar Ethics and Discipline Committee (Committee) to sanction him by public reprimand for violating rules 1.15(d) and 1.16(d) of the Utah Rules of Professional Conduct.1 After conducting a hearing, a screening panel of the Ethics and Discipline Committee (Screening Panel) concluded that Mr. Brussow had violated these rules and recommended that he be publicly reprimanded. Mr. Brussow filed an exception and requested a hearing to challenge the Sereening Panel's conclusion. After holding a hearing, the Chair of the Ethics and Discipline Committee (Chair) denied the exception and sustained the recommendation of the Screening Panel.

112 We uphold the Committee's conclusion that Mr. Brussow violated rule 1.15(d) by failing to provide his client with an accounting of the fees she had paid in advance. But because there is no indication that his failure to provide the accounting caused any injury or interference with a legal proceeding, we conclude that an admonition was the appro[1248]*1248priate sanction for this violation. We also uphold the Committee's conclusion that Mr. Brussow violated rule 1.16(d) by failing to provide his client's file upon her request. Because his client was injured by being forced to spend time and money attempting to retrieve or re-create her file, we agree that a public reprimand was an appropriate sanction for this violation.

BACKGROUND

13 Mr. Brussow represented Anita Langley in a domestic relations proceeding involving disputes with her ex-husband over child support, child custody, and parent time. On August 2, 2007, Mr. Brussow executed a fee agreement with Ms. Langley, stating that she would pay him a retainer of $3,750.00 toward twenty-five hours of service billed at the rate of $150.00 per hour. Following the execution of the fee agreement, Mr. Brussow represented Ms. Langley for about a year. But during this time, Mr. Brussow sent Ms. Langley only one billing statement totaling $337.50 for the services he performed. After sending this billing statement, he periodically requested and received and received additional payments from Ms. Langley in order to continue his services.

14 Mr. Brussow's representation of Ms. Langley culminated in a four-day trial in May and June of 2008. After the trial, Ms. Langley's current husband visited Mr. Brus-sow's office and requested transcripts of depositions taken in the course of the representation. Mr. Brussow gave Ms. Langley's husband the transcripts, and he maintains that her husband agreed to pay the court reporter's fees for the transcripts. But neither Ms. Langley nor her husband paid the fees, and Mr. Brussow eventually paid them himself.

1 5 Ms. Langley reports that she terminated Mr. Brussow's representation in August 2008, and subsequently hired a new attorney to replace him. Ms. Langley further states that she requested her file in September, but that Mr. Brussow ignored her request. Accordingly, her new attorney called Mr. Brus-sow to request the file, The new attorney also wrote to Mr. Brussow in early September, stating that Mr. Brussow was no longer Ms. Langley's attorney, requesting that Mr. Brussow produce Ms. Langley's file, and reporting that he (the new attorney) had a "desperate need" of the file in order to proceed with the case. Nonetheless, Mr. Brus-sow refused to provide the file until Ms. Langley paid the fees for the deposition tran-seripts.

T6 In October 2008, Ms. Langley filed a complaint with the Utah State Bar Office of Professional Conduct (OPC), claiming that Mr. Brussow had refused to provide her client file and that he had not provided regular billing statements or an accounting of the fees that she had paid. Ms. Langley also submitted an application to the Utah State Bar's Fee Arbitration and Mediation program with her complaint. In response, Mr. Brussow ultimately provided Ms. Langley with her file, but not until December 29, 2008.

T 7 In September 2009, the Screening Panel held a hearing regarding Ms. Langley's complaint, at which both Mr. Brussow and Ms. Langley testified. Ms. Langley reported that Mr. Brussow did not provide regular billing statements, but that she had paid him $17,500 in legal fees over the course of the year that he had represented her.2 Additionally, she claimed that she had requested an accounting of the fees she had paid Mr. Brussow on multiple occasions, but that he had never provided her with such an accounting.

18 Mr. Brussow testified that, after sending Ms. Langley an initial billing statement, he "got swamped with her case and the other ones" and had not sent any other billing statements. Nonetheless, he denied that Ms. Langley had requested an accounting, and he maintained that Ms. Langley had paid less than she claimed to have paid, although he [1249]*1249was unable to provide records of her payments to support his claim. He also indicated that Ms. Langley owed him additional payments for his services, but said that when it became obvious that she would not be cooperative about paying, he had not bothered calculating what she had paid or the total hours of work he had performed on her behalf.

T 9 Mr. Brussow acknowledged that he had received requests for Ms. Langley's file from Ms. Langley and her new attorney, but he argued that he was entitled to retain the file because Ms. Langley had failed to pay the fees for the deposition transcripts. He also argued that he had functionally provided the file to Ms. Langley by sending her copies of his work as he performed it. Finally, he claimed that retaining the file did not cause any harm to Ms. Langley.

T 10 After the hearing, the Screening Panel issued a written recommendation, which concluded that Mr. Brussow had violated rule 1.16(d),3 and 8.4(a) 5 of the Rules of Professional Conduct and recommended that he be publicly reprimanded for these violations. Mr. Brussow filed an exception to this recommendation and requested a hearing before the Chair.6

T11 The Chair held a hearing on Mr. Brussow's exception in January 2010. Mr. Brussow and an attorney from the OPC were present at the hearing, but Ms. Langley was not. At that hearing, Mr. Brussow conceded that Ms. Langley had requested an accounting "when the Bar got involved." The OPC claims that "[tlhe Bar's involvement that [Mr.] Brussow references was [Ms.] Langley's application to the Utah State Bar's Fee Arbitration and Mediation program, which she contacted in addition to her complaint with the OPC." The OPC explains that this means that Mr. Brussow admitted that he had been asked for an accounting no later than December 4, 2008, and by the date of the [exception [hlearing on January 19, 2010 he still had not provided an accounting to his former client."

112 Ultimately, the Chair concluded that Mr. Brussow had failed to satisfy his burden of showing that the Screening Panel's recommendation should be overturned. Accordingly, the Chair issued a ruling denying the exception and sustaining the recommendation of the Sereening Panel, and Mr. Brus-sow appealed to this court. We have jurisdiction to hear this appeal under article VIII, section 4 of the Utah Constitution 7 and rule 14-510(f)(1) of the Supreme Court Rules of Professional Practice.8

STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 UT 53, 286 P.3d 1246, 2012 WL 3676655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brussow-v-utah-state-bar-utah-2012.