Florida Bar v. Della-Donna

583 So. 2d 307, 16 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 419, 1989 Fla. LEXIS 597, 1989 WL 250259
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 22, 1989
Docket69324
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 583 So. 2d 307 (Florida Bar v. Della-Donna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida Bar v. Della-Donna, 583 So. 2d 307, 16 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 419, 1989 Fla. LEXIS 597, 1989 WL 250259 (Fla. 1989).

Opinion

583 So.2d 307 (1989)

THE FLORIDA BAR, Complainant,
v.
Alphonse DELLA-DONNA, Respondent.

No. 69324.

Supreme Court of Florida.

June 22, 1989.
Rehearing Denied August 20, 1991.

*308 John F. Harkness, Jr., Executive Director and John T. Berry, Staff Counsel, Tallahassee, and Donald A. Wich, Jr. of Sullivan, Bailey, Wich & Stockman, P.A., Special Bar Counsel, Pompano Beach, for complainant.

Larry D. Simpson of Davis, Judkins & Simpson, Tallahassee, Florida; John A. Weiss, Tallahassee, and George Kushinka of Wisse, Kushinka, Calhoun & Godwin, Warner Robins, Ga., for respondent.

COSTS MODIFIED ON REHEARING GRANTED

PER CURIAM.

Both the Florida Bar and Alphonse Della-Donna, a member of the bar, petition for review of a referee's report recommending that Della-Donna be disbarred. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article V, section 15, Florida Constitution, and agree with the referee that Della-Donna should be disbarred from the practice of law in this state.

Della-Donna drew up a will and estate-planning documents, including those for several trusts and foundations, for Leo Goodwin, Sr. (Sr.), who died in 1971, leaving an estate valued at more than $55,000,000. Under Sr.'s estate plan Della-Donna and his partner acted as legal counsel for the estate, the trusts, and the foundations, while Della-Donna held fiduciary positions as trustee and officer of the foundations and one trust. After the death of Leo Goodwin, Jr. (Jr.), in 1978, Della-Donna also became personal representative of Sr.'s estate. Della-Donna also prepared a will and documents creating several trusts for Pauline Burns, who died in 1974. He acted as legal counsel for the Burns estate and held fiduciary positions regarding that estate and the Burns trusts.

In 1986 the Florida Bar filed a complaint against Della-Donna in connection with the Goodwin and Burns estates. The first and second of the complaint's three counts deal with matters arising from the Goodwin estate; the third with the Burns estate. In count one the bar charged that Della-Donna brought Nova University (a major beneficiary of one of the Goodwin trusts) to the brink of financial ruin by, among other things, attempting to remove Nova as a beneficiary and to replace it with other organizations; fostering frivolous, unfounded, and unauthorized litigation involving Nova; blocking any release of trust funds to the beneficiaries; and demanding that Nova pay him $1,100,000 of its trust distribution to stop further legal proceedings. According to the bar, Della-Donna engaged in this conduct for personal and financial self-aggrandizement and charged clearly excessive fees, acted under actual conflicts of interest, and intentionally misused funds from Sr.'s estate. The second count alleged that Della-Donna, among other things, worked under a conflict of interest and promoted frivolous litigation to defeat the interests of Sr.'s illegitimate great grandaughter when all concerned parties agreed that she would take under Sr.'s will and general trust as a descendant of her deceased father. For the third count the bar claimed that Della-Donna improperly refused to disburse portions of the Burns estate in order to generate more attorney, executor, and trustee fees for himself and that he worked under a conflict of interest, breached his fiduciary duties, and charged clearly excessive fees, among other things.

The referee conducted a hearing that totalled thirty-five days over the summer of 1987. In the introduction to his lengthy report the referee rejected Della-Donna's claim that he could not be disciplined because he acted as a client rather than as a lawyer as to the charges regarding the Goodwin matters. Instead, the referee stated: "He is responsible as an officer of the Court for the plethora of litigious and frivolous Court proceedings in which he was involved plus matters wherein there were conflicts of interest on his part and excessive fees extracted on his behalf." The referee went on to state that the testimony and exhibits presented during the hearing established "a pattern of conduct and attitude" by Della-Donna "to misuse the judicial system for his personal advancement *309 and to disregard ethical considerations."

In his findings of fact, the referee specifically found Della-Donna's conduct to have been "motivated by personal and financial self-gain and aggrandizement;"[1] that Della-Donna "acted in complete derogation of his ethical and fiduciary responsibilities to enrich, unjustly and financially, himself and the attorneys working on his behalf;" and that "the evidence concerning Respondent's conduct taken as a whole, when viewed in a total perspective, is clearly indicative of fostering protracted unnecessary litigation for the self-interests and desires of Respondent alone." The referee also found that Della-Donna used funds from Sr.'s estate[2] "to advance issues in which ... the estate had no reasonable, actual or necessary interest" and that $100,000 of the $1,100,000 paid by Nova "constituted an excessive fee and was clearly an unlawful and unethical procurement." The referee concluded that clear and convincing evidence supported the first two counts.

As to the third count, the referee specifically found that Della-Donna "acted in derogation of his legal and fiduciary responsibilities," that he "caused extensive delay, damage and expense to the Burns' Estate and beneficiaries," and that he "acted in bad faith in handling the Burns' estate in ... misusing positions of trust for personal and financial gain." The referee also found $46,498.37 of Della-Donna's fees from the Burns estate to be "clearly excessive ... both in amount and ... the unethical manner in which" Della-Donna "extracted" that money. Although the referee decided that Della-Donna did not commit extortion, he found that clear and convincing evidence supported the bar's allegations.

The referee recommends that Della-Donna be found guilty of numerous violations as charged in the bar's complaint "on all allegations and charges except that the unethical conduct was not tantamount to extortion."[3] As punishment, the referee recommends that Della-Donna be disbarred for three years, that restitution be made to Nova University,[4] Sr.'s estate,[5] and the Burns estate,[6] and that Della-Donna pay costs in the amount of $104,700.10, plus interest from the date of the referee's report (January 27, 1988).

In his petition for review Della-Donna denies that he acted unethically and claims, as he did before the referee, that he cannot be disciplined for actions he took as a client rather than an attorney. He also claims that he cannot be disciplined for working under conflicts of interest when he did not act as a lawyer representing a client. The bar, on the other hand, argues in its petition *310 that Della-Donna should be disbarred for five, rather than three, years, that restitution should include the additional $1,000,000 paid by Nova, and that the referee erred in finding that Della-Donna did not extort the fees from Nova and the Burns estate.

Like the referee, we cannot agree with Della-Donna's contention that our rules and professional ethics do not apply to an attorney who acts, at some time or another, as a client rather than as an attorney. Conduct while not acting as an attorney can subject one to disciplinary proceedings. The Florida Bar v. Hefty, 213 So.2d 422 (Fla. 1968). As this Court has stated before, "`an attorney is an attorney is an attorney.'" The Florida Bar v. Bennett, 276 So.2d 481, 482 (Fla. 1973).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
583 So. 2d 307, 16 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 419, 1989 Fla. LEXIS 597, 1989 WL 250259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-bar-v-della-donna-fla-1989.