Disciplinary Counsel v. Ward

2015 Ohio 237, 34 N.E.3d 74, 143 Ohio St. 3d 23
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 2015
Docket2013-1979
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2015 Ohio 237 (Disciplinary Counsel v. Ward) 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. Ward, 2015 Ohio 237, 34 N.E.3d 74, 143 Ohio St. 3d 23 (Ohio 2015).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

{¶ 1} Respondent, Richard Grove Ward of Cincinnati, Ohio, Attorney Registration No. 0037613, was admitted to the practice of law in Ohio in 1986. Relator, disciplinary counsel, charged Ward with violating the Disciplinary Rules of the former Code of Professional Conduct by accepting employment from a client whose interests were substantially related to and directly adverse to those of a long-term client of his law firm, using the confidences and secrets of his firm’s long-term client for the benefit of others and to that client’s detriment, and placing funds belonging to a second client in his personal investment account.

2} After hearing the case, a panel of the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline 1 recommended that Ward be suspended from the practice of law for one year based on findings that he (1) accepted employment in which his exercise of professional judgment on behalf of the client was affected by his own interests, (2) used a client’s confidences or secrets to the client’s disadvantage, (3) engaged in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation, and (4) failed to hold a client’s property separate from his own property. The panel found that this misconduct adversely reflected on Ward’s fitness to practice law. The panel also recommended that six other alleged violations be dismissed due to the insufficiency of the evidence.

{¶ 3} The board adopted the panel’s report in its entirety, and neither party has filed objections. We adopt the board’s findings of fact and misconduct, but instead of dismissing six of the alleged violations as recommended by the board, we dismiss only five. Consistent with the board’s recommendation, we find that a one-year suspension is the appropriate sanction for Ward’s misconduct.

Misconduct

Count I: Koons Confidences and Conflict of Interest

{¶ 4} Count I of relator’s complaint alleges that Ward has engaged in professional misconduct while working at the law firm Drew & Ward Co., L.P.A., with his father, Richard Hackney Ward (“Dick Ward”), by taking on the representation of a client whose interests were in direct conflict with those of his father’s long-term client John F. Koons III (“Bud Koons”). The alleged misconduct falls *25 into three distinct categories: (1) the improper disclosure or use of confidential' client information, (2) the acceptance of employment that will or is likely to adversely affect the exercise of the lawyer’s independent professional judgment on behalf of a client, and (3) general misconduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation and conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice. Before addressing the alleged violations, however, it is necessary to understand both the numerous relationships at issue and the timeline of the relevant events.

The Underlying Koons Representation and Its Relationship to the Cundall Representation

{¶ 5} Bud Koons was the principal owner of Central Investment Corporation (“CIC”), which became the seventh largest Pepsi-Cola bottler in the United States, and its successor Central Investment, L.L.C. (“LLC”).

{¶ 6} Dick Ward had a close personal relationship with Bud Koons that started in high school. From the early 1970s until 2005, he also served as Bud’s lawyer, confidant, advisor, and business associate. During this relationship, Dick served on the CIC board of directors and the LLC board of managers. Dick and the Drew & Ward law firm also represented Bud Koons in three divorces and several antenuptial agreements, handled various estate-planning matters, and prepared 25 trusts for him and his family. Dick personally served as trustee for at least 11 of those trusts, which Koons funded with annual gifts of CIC stock. During this time, the law firm of Taft, Stettinius & Hollister, L.L.P., also provided legal services for Koons and the various business entities he controlled. But most of Koons’s major business and personal matters were reviewed by a “committee of four” comprised of two partners from the Taft firm and two partners from Drew & Ward — Dick Ward and Bill Graf.

{¶ 7} After 26 years at Drew & Ward, 20 of them as a partner, Bill Graf departed from the firm in 2004. After Grafs departure, Ward joined the firm as a partner in August 2004. During his first seven months at the firm, Ward assisted his father on some matters involving Bud Koons’s personal and business interests. At that time, CIC was involved in litigation that threatened its Pepsi bottling and distribution business, and the firm’s billing records reflect that Ward performed some work related to the Pepsi negotiations.

{¶ 8} In January 2005, CIC agreed to settle the dispute and sell its business to PepsiAmericas, Inc. for approximately $400 million, and LLC was formed to hold the proceeds of that sale. Shortly thereafter, Bud Koons had another attorney request that Dick Ward disentangle himself from Koons’s business and personal interests. Consequently, Dick Ward resigned from his position as cotrustee of a major trust (Trust A, described below) on February 18, 2005, and resigned from the board of LLC no later than February 28, 2005. Contemporaneously with *26 these resignations, Koons offered and Dick Ward accepted a consulting agreement with LLC that would pay him $250,000 per annum for five years for his consulting services, plus separate compensation for any legal services that he might provide. The attorney who delivered the news to the Wards testified that Dick Ward “was delighted with the consulting agreement,” but that he “perceived hostility and unhappiness” from Ward.

{¶ 9} Bud Koons died on March 3, 2005, while residing in Florida.

{¶ 10} Central to allegations of Ward’s ethical misconduct is a trust created by Bud Koons’s parents in 1976 for the benefit of their grandchildren. Share A of that trust was designated for the benefit of Bud Koons’s family, and Share B was designated for the benefit of the family of his sister, Betty Lou Cundall. Bud’s parents designated him as the trustee for the entire trust, the original corpus of which consisted of shares of CIC stock. In 1984, CIC redeemed the CIC stock of Share B for cash, and Bud, in his capacity as trustee, invested the proceeds of the redemption in various stocks, bonds, and cash. None of Share A’s CIC stock was redeemed.

{¶ 11} On November 23, 1992, the original trust was divided into two separate trusts. The Share A assets were placed into Trust A for the benefit of the Koons family, and the Share B assets were placed into Trust B for the benefit of the Cundall family. Following the division, Bud Koons remained as the sole trustee of Trust B. But he resigned as trustee of Trust A and was replaced by three successor trustees designated by the original trust, namely, Dick Ward, attorney James J. Ryan, and Jeff Koons.

{¶ 12} Following Bud Koons’s death, Dick Ward asked Ward to review Trust B to determine how it was to be distributed. To complete this task, Ward reviewed files in the possession of Drew & Ward and participated with his father in a telephone call to Harry Badanes, accountant for the trusts, in an effort to determine the value of CIC stock.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 Ohio 237, 34 N.E.3d 74, 143 Ohio St. 3d 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disciplinary-counsel-v-ward-ohio-2015.