Cincinnati Bar Ass'n v. Alsfelder

103 Ohio St. 3d 375
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2004
DocketNo. 2003-2080
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 Ohio St. 3d 375 (Cincinnati Bar Ass'n v. Alsfelder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati Bar Ass'n v. Alsfelder, 103 Ohio St. 3d 375 (Ohio 2004).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} Respondent, Robert F. Alsfelder of Cincinnati, Ohio, Attorney Registration No. 0014829, was admitted to the practice of law in Ohio in 1981. On August 12, 2002, relator, Cincinnati Bar Association, charged respondent with having violated the Code of Professional Responsibility while representing a client who had consulted him about a trust established by her deceased father. A panel of the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline heard the cause on May 30, 2003. Based on the parties’ stipulations, exhibits, testimony, and character reference letters submitted on respondent’s behalf, the panel made findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a recommendation.

{¶ 2} The client, a woman in her forties, contacted respondent in the summer of 1998, asking for his legal assistance with her father’s trust. The trust [376]*376contained assets, primarily real estate and Procter & Gamble stock, valued at least at $2,000,000. Three trustees had been appointed to oversee the trust — the client and two of her cousins.

{¶ 3} The client was the sole income beneficiary of the trust, which was to be paid in monthly or quarterly installments to the client during her lifetime. Upon the client’s death, the trust was to be terminated and the principal distributed to her issue. If the client died without children, one-half of the trust principal was to be distributed to her father’s next of kin and one-half to her mother’s.

{¶ 4} The client had no children and adamantly wanted to control distributions from the trust so that the assets passed into her estate and she could bequeath them to charity or a local park district, disinheriting her cousins. She also wanted to increase the income that she was receiving from the trust. Before retaining respondent, the client had enlisted the services of another attorney, whom she had dismissed because he did not accomplish her objectives. The client subsequently engaged respondent, and on August 25, 1998, they entered into a written fee agreement providing that respondent would be paid $225 per hour.

{¶ 5} The client’s income from the trust depended on whatever dividends Procter & Gamble declared on the trust shares each year. On October 14, 1998, respondent represented the client at a meeting at which the trustees agreed to increase the client’s annual income from the trust to $75,000, more than double what she had been receiving. To achieve this, the trustees agreed to supplement the Procter & Gamble dividends from the stock by selling some shares of trust stock in a way that did not substantially affect the trust principal.

{¶ 6} Two days later, on October 16, 1998, the client paid respondent $10,000 for the work he had performed before and at the October 14 trustees’ meeting. Respondent recalled that he gave his client an itemized account of his services to justify the $10,000 bill, but his client did not remember this, and respondent was unable to locate the original invoice. At the hearing, respondent presented an accounting in which he had attempted to reconstruct his billable hours for the $10,000 fee. He acknowledged, however, that the number of hours for which he could account with contemporaneous time records fell far short of justifying the legal fee.

{¶ 7} Respondent and his client’s professional relationship continued from October 16, 1998, until September 2001. The parties stipulated to the fees that the client agreed to pay respondent:

{¶ 8} “On or about October 16, 1998 the fee agreement between Respondent and [the client] was converted to a fixed fee arrangement.

[377]*377{¶ 9} “The new fee agreement was a $13,000 fixed fee and covered the time period of October 16, 1998 through June 1, 1999. There was no written contract for the fixed fee agreement between Respondent and [the client].

{¶ 10} “Respondent and [the client] entered into a second fixed fee agreement for the period covering June 1, 1999 through June 1, 2000 for the sum of $12,500.

{¶ 11} “Respondent and [the client] entered into a third fixed fee agreement for the period covering June 1, 2000 though June 1, 2001 for the sum of $15,000.

{¶ 12} “Respondent and [the client] entered into a fourth fixed fee agreement for the period covering June 1, 2001 through June 1, 2002 for the sum of $20,000.

{¶ 13} “Between October, 1998 and September, 2001, [the client] paid the Respondent a total of $60,500 in legal fees.

{¶ 14} “On October 16, 2001 [the client] filed a grievance with the Cincinnati Bar Association.”

{¶ 15} Respondent testified that his client had asked him in October 1998 to change their agreement from an hourly fee to an annual fixed fee because she wanted to be able to anticipate exactly what her legal expenses would be each year. Respondent explained that he had arrived at the amount of his initial retainer based on his “basic and general appreciation of what the types of things that [his client] was looking for [him] to do.” As it turned out, the legal services respondent provided during the period from October 1998 to September 2001 consisted mainly of preparing the client’s tax returns annually, having her birth name restored on some deeds, preparing two powers of attorney, preparing her will, preparing a living will, and arranging for a prepaid funeral contract and some burial plots. At some point he checked on the satisfaction of a mortgage that his client had obtained to pay for respondent’s initial $10,000 legal fee. At his client’s request, he also tried to find a way to avoid the terms of her father’s trust and prevent the assets from passing to the client’s cousins after her death.

{¶ 16} Respondent proposed adoption as one way the client could prevent the cousins from benefiting from the trust. The client was not interested in adopting a child, and respondent ruled out the possibility of his client’s adoption of an adult. The client, however, was interested in another of respondent’s strategies — that the client designate as her heir at law an adult friend who would administer her estate in accordance with her wishes.

{¶ 17} Respondent suggested that his client designate an heir under R.C. 2105.15 even though, in his opinion, it was unlikely that this process would successfully circumvent the trust terms. Respondent knew that the court of appeals in his client’s district had recently affirmed a rule, established to honor a deceased settlor’s intent, that precluded a trust beneficiary’s designated heir from inheriting trust assets to the same extent as the trust beneficiary’s issue. See PNC Bank, Ohio, N.A. v. Stanton (1995), 104 Ohio App.3d 558, 662 N.E.2d 875 [378]*378(designated heir of a trust beneficiary may inherit from but not through the designator).

{¶ 18} Respondent advised his client that he thought her chances of designating an heir to “break the trust” were “slim”; however, he still hoped to argue away the adverse precedent. Thus, he asked his client to name someone who might be interested in becoming her designated heir. The client suggested an old friend of hers who resided in Phoenix, Arizona. Respondent subsequently took his family on two vacations to Phoenix, planning to discuss the designated heir proposal with the client’s friend and account for his part of the trips as a business expense.

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Bluebook (online)
103 Ohio St. 3d 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-bar-assn-v-alsfelder-ohio-2004.