Disciplinary Counsel v. Ferfolia

2022 Ohio 4220, 214 N.E.3d 554, 170 Ohio St. 3d 468
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 2022
Docket2022-0715
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 4220 (Disciplinary Counsel v. Ferfolia) 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
Disciplinary Counsel v. Ferfolia, 2022 Ohio 4220, 214 N.E.3d 554, 170 Ohio St. 3d 468 (Ohio 2022).

Opinion

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as Disciplinary Counsel v. Ferfolia, Slip Opinion No. 2022-Ohio-4220.]

NOTICE This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65 South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.

SLIP OPINION NO. 2022-OHIO-4220 DISCIPLINARY COUNSEL v. FERFOLIA. [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as Disciplinary Counsel v. Ferfolia, Slip Opinion No. 2022-Ohio-4220.] Attorneys—Misconduct—Violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct— Conditionally stayed one-year suspension. (No. 2022-0715—Submitted August 2, 2022—Decided November 30, 2022.) ON CERTIFIED REPORT by the Board of Professional Conduct of the Supreme Court, No. 2021-028. ______________ Per Curiam. {¶ 1} Respondent, Donald Bryan Ferfolia Jr., of Brecksville, Ohio, Attorney Registration No. 0082049, was admitted to the practice of law in Ohio in 2007. In an October 2021 complaint, relator, disciplinary counsel, charged Ferfolia with five ethical violations arising from his representation of a husband and wife seeking long-term-care Medicaid benefits for the husband. The complaint alleged SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

that, among other things, Ferfolia failed to timely take actions necessary to obtain the desired Medicaid benefits, failed to comply with his clients’ reasonable requests for information, falsely led them to believe that he had filed a claim on their behalf with his professional-liability-insurance carrier, and failed to cooperate in the ensuing disciplinary investigation. {¶ 2} The parties entered into stipulations of fact, misconduct, and aggravating and mitigating factors. At a hearing conducted by a three-member panel of the Board of Professional Conduct, the parties recommended that we impose a conditionally stayed one-year suspension for Ferfolia’s misconduct. The board issued a report finding that Ferfolia committed the charged misconduct. It also adopted the parties’ stipulated aggravating and mitigating factors and their recommended sanction—with additional conditions on the stay. No objections have been filed. {¶ 3} After thoroughly reviewing the record, we adopt the board’s findings of misconduct and its recommended sanction. Misconduct The Schnurr Medicaid Application {¶ 4} In January 2019, Charles Schnurr resided in a Cleveland-area nursing home; his wife, Rita, lived in a Cleveland suburb with their adult daughter, Janice. Around that time, Rita learned that Charles had nearly exhausted his insurance coverage and that they would need to apply for long-term-care Medicaid to cover Charles’s ongoing nursing-home expenses. {¶ 5} Ferfolia was a licensed funeral director and vice-president of the board of the Ferfolia Funeral Home in Sagamore Hills, Ohio. He also practiced law part-time. Rita and Charles Schnurr knew Ferfolia through their church and the funeral home. Based on their understanding that Ferfolia was an “elder law” attorney, the Schnurrs hired him to apply for Medicaid benefits on Charles’s behalf. They did not sign a fee agreement, and Ferfolia did not charge them any fee.

2 January Term, 2022

{¶ 6} In March 2019, Ferfolia submitted an application for long-term-care Medicaid to the Ohio Department of Job & Family Services (“ODJFS”), designating himself as Charles’s authorized representative. The agency denied that application in September 2019 on the ground that Ferfolia had failed to timely provide information regarding Charles’s income. Ferfolia appealed, and a hearing officer reopened the application upon finding that the information had been provided but that the ODJFS web portal had directed the documents to the wrong county. {¶ 7} The parties stipulated that in 2019, an applicant had to have a monthly income of $2,313 or less to qualify for long-term-care Medicaid. At the time of his application, Charles’s monthly income was $3,263. In an October 2019 email, Ferfolia informed the nursing home that Charles’s income was about $3,000 and erroneously stated that that income was “under the [Medicaid] income threshold.” {¶ 8} On December 10, 2019, ODJFS informed Ferfolia that he needed to submit additional documents in support of Charles’s Medicaid application no later than December 23. That correspondence further stated, “If your gross income for 2019 is more than $2313 you may be required to open a Qualified Income Trust.” Ferfolia did not submit the requested documents to ODJFS before the deadline or take any other action to confirm Charles’s Medicaid eligibility, nor did he take any steps to open a qualified-income trust on Charles’s behalf. Over the following months, Ferfolia failed to respond to numerous communications from Rita, Janice, and Megan Marzola, the nursing home’s Medicaid manager, inquiring about the status of Charles’s Medicaid application. {¶ 9} In early February 2020, Rita and Janice informed Marzola that they had not heard from Ferfolia and that they needed to submit requested bank statements to ODJFS. Marzola retrieved the documents from Rita and Janice and submitted them to ODJFS. Later that month, an ODJFS representative informed Marzola that Ferfolia had failed to establish the qualified-income trust that was

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

necessary to establish Charles’s eligibility for long-term-care Medicaid. On February 12, nursing-home representatives helped the Schnurrs establish a qualified-income trust for Charles. One week later, ODJFS approved Charles’s Medicaid application with an effective date of February 1, 2020, rather than the March 22, 2019 application date. {¶ 10} The parties stipulated that as a result of Ferfolia’s failure to recognize the need for and to timely establish a qualified-income trust for Charles, the Schnurrs had incurred over $87,000 in nursing-home expenses that otherwise would have been covered by Medicaid. After Charles died in January 2021, Rita and Janice used his life-insurance proceeds and government-stimulus funds to pay those expenses in full. Although Rita asked Ferfolia to return the paperwork she had given him during the course of his representation, he waited nearly two years to return those documents to her. The Schnurr Legal-Malpractice Claim {¶ 11} In May 2020, Rita and Charles Schnurr hired attorney Drew Barnholtz to pursue a legal-malpractice action against Ferfolia. Ferfolia told Barnholtz that he had professional-liability insurance, but he did not give Barnholtz the name of his carrier. {¶ 12} In September 2020, Barnholtz sent Ferfolia an email stating that Ferfolia had failed to respond to numerous voicemail messages and emails from Barnholtz over the previous several weeks requesting information about the status and resolution of Ferfolia’s insurance claim. Although Ferfolia had not filed a claim with his professional-liability carrier, he falsely implied in his reply to Barnholtz that he had submitted a claim. {¶ 13} A week later, Marzola emailed Barnholtz, copying Ferfolia, to ask whether Ferfolia had received Barnholtz’s request that he follow up with his insurance carrier. Ferfolia replied to Marzola and Barnholtz and once again falsely implied that he had filed an insurance claim.

4 January Term, 2022

{¶ 14} In December 2020, Barnholtz filed a legal-malpractice action against Ferfolia in the Summit County Court of Common Pleas. The complaint alleged that Ferfolia’s failure to timely establish a qualified-income trust had delayed the approval of Charles’s Medicaid application and caused the Schnurrs to incur over $87,000 in unreimbursed nursing-home expenses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 4220, 214 N.E.3d 554, 170 Ohio St. 3d 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disciplinary-counsel-v-ferfolia-ohio-2022.