Fielding v. State Bar

509 P.2d 193, 9 Cal. 3d 446, 107 Cal. Rptr. 561, 1973 Cal. LEXIS 199
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1973
DocketL.A. 30096
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 509 P.2d 193 (Fielding v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fielding v. State Bar, 509 P.2d 193, 9 Cal. 3d 446, 107 Cal. Rptr. 561, 1973 Cal. LEXIS 199 (Cal. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is a proceeding to review a recommendation of the Disciplinary Board that petitioner be suspended from the practice of law for three months. 1

Petitioner who was admitted to practice in 1953, was charged in a notice to show cause with converting $1,253.30, which he held in trust and had a duty to apply in payment of medical expenses of his clients, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Gayhardt. Petitioner denied the charges.

The Evidence

About March 16, 1963, petitioner was retained by Mr. and Mrs. Gayhardt to represent them and their child in connection with personal injuries *448 they sustained. A few days later Kaiser Foundation Hospital addressed a letter to him signed by his clients directing him to pay to Kaiser its charges to them from any recovery. Petitioner testified he did not recall receiving the letter but admitted having a copy of it in his file.

Petitioner brought an action on his clients’ behalf and on February 21, 1967, obtained a $5,750 draft in settlement of the action.

That same day a bank advanced petitioner credit (apparently against the draft) for $5,750 and he paid the Gayhardts their share of the net proceeds, retained his attorney’s fees and costs, and with the balance secured a $1,253.30 cashier’s check payable to himself as trustee.

Petitioner was then aware his clients owed Kaiser $1,253.30. According to Mrs. Gayhardt, when petitioner disbursed the funds he stated his secretary would mail a check to Kaiser. On March 3, 1967, petitioner wrote the Gayhardts letters, which indicate that he understood the $1,253.30 was to be paid by him to Kaiser. 2 A declaration by Mr. Gayhardt shows he likewise so understood.

Petitioner admitted sending the March 3 letters but testified there “was a subsequent revocation . . . both orally and confirmed in writing by me as to part of those letters that relates to Kaiser . . . .” According to petitioner, he explained to the Gayhardts that there had been described changes in Kaiser’s policy regarding reimbursement in accident cases, and during conversations with Mrs. Gayhardt he said he would discuss with Kaiser whether its charges could be reduced. Petitioner stated that the conversations were confirmed in a letter he wrote Mrs. Gayhardt but that he could not find his copy of the letter. 3 Mrs. Gayhardt, however, testified that it was before the settlement that petitioner told her that it was sometimes possible to negotiate with Kaiser regarding a reduction in charges and *449 that after receiving a letter from petitioner (apparently the March 3 letter) she felt that Kaiser was paid.

On March 7, 1967, petitioner negotiated the $1,253.30 check, deposited $153.30 of that sum in his trust account, and took the remaining $1,100 in cash. That same month he loaned the $1,100 to a speculative business called Hydro Life Sales Company, in which he served as counsel and secretary. Hydro Life engaged in selling a device, which petitioner called “the Poor Man’s Jacuzzi.” About mid-1967 Hydro Life went out of business.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether Mrs. Gayhardt orally authorized petitioner to make the loan. She testified that she never gave petitioner authority to loan the money to anyone and that she never heard of Hydro Life. She stated that in 1969 or 1970 (i.e., at least 21 months after the loan was made) petitioner mentioned to her “something . . . about contributing money to some fund . . . some corporation or something that had ministers connected with it[ 4 ] but it was nothing by the name of Hydro Life” and that the conversation did not pertain to her loaning the money that was to be held for the medical bills. A declaration by Mr. Gayhardt states that he was never informed of any loan of the funds retained by petitioner.

Mrs. Gayhardt further testified that she thought Kaiser had been paid until she received demands for payment from Kaiser. The Gayhardts talked to petitioner several times about the matter, and on one occasion petitioner said that the money was tied up but he would pay Kaiser. According to a declaration by Mr. Gayhardt, on numerous occasions he tried to call petitioner and “was almost never able to speak with him as soon as the secretary found out who was calling.” 5

Petitioner testified that Mrs. Gayhardt orally authorized him to make the loan to Hydro Life. He admitted he lacked written authority from her and stated that he did not feel he needed her signature since the Gayhardts had been his clients since 1956. At the local committee hearing he testified to various details regarding the loan and stated, inter alia, that he did not remember whether any note was executed between Hydro Life and Mrs. Gayhardt. 6 Before the board, however, he testified that after the local *450 committee hearing he discovered a note in his files. The note recites “Received of Mrs. . . . Gayhardt . . . One Thousand One Hundred Dollars. I promise to repay said sum plus ten percent interest on or before April 20, 1967. Fulton G. Louis.” Petitioner stated that Louis was a representative of Hydro Life. Petitioner admitted that the note was never delivered to Mrs. Gayhardt.

Petitioner’s testimony that Louis executed the note is not in accord with Louis’ testimony before the local committee, and Louis was not recalled to testify before the board. At the local committee hearing Louis, who was called as a witness by petitioner, testified: He was vice-president of Hydro Life at one time. Petitioner gave him several cashier’s checks representing loans to Hydro Life and informed Louis that petitioner had borrowed the money from clients. One such check was for $1,100. Petitioner did not give Louis the lender’s name. Louis was not familiar with the name “Gayhardt” and never executed any notes on behalf of the corporation to petitioner for the money he advanced by way of cashier’s checks.

In September 1970 the State Bar notified petitioner that a complaint had been filed against him by the attorney for Kaiser, James Baldwin. The following month petitioner sent Baldwin a $1,253.36 cashier’s check, but it was refused. Payment of that sum was made to Baldwin in February 1971.

The Findings

The board found in brief: Petitioner was directed in writing by the Gayhardts to pay Kaiser its charges to them from any recovery. Petitioner received $5,750 in settlement of the Gayhardts’ action and retained $1,253.30 of that amount for the purpose and with the understanding of his clients that it would be used to pay Kaiser. He subsequently converted $1,100 of that sum by delivering it to a corporation without his clients’ knowledge or consent. It was not until over three and a half years later and after a complaint had been made to the State Bar that he paid Kaiser by tendering to its attorney a check for $1,253.36.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
509 P.2d 193, 9 Cal. 3d 446, 107 Cal. Rptr. 561, 1973 Cal. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fielding-v-state-bar-cal-1973.