In Re a Member of the State Bar of Arizona, Scanlan

697 P.2d 1084, 144 Ariz. 334, 1985 Ariz. LEXIS 182
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1985
DocketSB-303
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 697 P.2d 1084 (In Re a Member of the State Bar of Arizona, Scanlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re a Member of the State Bar of Arizona, Scanlan, 697 P.2d 1084, 144 Ariz. 334, 1985 Ariz. LEXIS 182 (Ark. 1985).

Opinion

HAYS, Justice.

Respondent Fred T. Scanlan, Jr., is an attorney licensed to practice law in the state of Arizona. On December 8, 1983 a Local Administrative Committee of the State Bar of Arizona (the Committee) found that Scanlan, during his representation of Olson Dairy, Inc., violated several of the disciplinary rules of the Code of Professional Responsibility. 17A A.R.S. Sup.Ct.Rules, Rule 29(a). The Committee recommended that Scanlan be suspended from the practice of law for 90 days and be required to repay the $10,000 taken from Olson Dairy’s trust account. It also directed that Scanlan pay the costs and expenses of all disciplinary proceedings.

The Disciplinary Board of the State Bar of Arizona (the Board) agreed with the Committee’s findings. A majority of the Board' voted to adopt the Committee’s recommendations. The Board also called for an audit of all of Scanlan’s trust accounts. They recommended that Scanlan be required to employ a certified public accountant to audit the accounts and report the results to them. Scanlan objected to these findings, conclusions and recommendations. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 17A A.R.S.Sup.Ct.Rules, Rule 36(d).

Scanlan raises the following issues for consideration:

(1) Was the recommendation of a 90-day suspension warranted?
(2) Was the recommendation of repayment of the $10,000 warranted and practicable?
(3) Was the recommendation that Scanlan be required to employ a certified public accountant to audit his trust accounts warranted and practicable?

FACTS

In 1981, Fred T. Scanlan, Jr., was a sole practitioner, living in Tucson, Arizona. In September of that year, Scanlan hired a replacement secretary, Rachel Galvez. Galvez was referred to Scanlan through an employment agency. Scanlan apparently neither checked Galvez’s references nor did he contact any of her previous employers. At the time Scanlan hired her, she was under indictment for forgery and theft of funds. She had stolen money from two previous employers.

Galvez’s duties for Scanlan became extensive. Among her other activities, Galvez acted as secretary, file clerk, purchasing agent, and bookkeeper. Shortly after she began work, Scanlan made Galvez a signatory on his office “operating expenses” checking account. Generally, however, when Scanlan needed office supplies, he gave Galvez a signed blank check and allowed her to fill in the amount and the name of the payee.

In October of 1981 Scanlan discovered that he needed money. Galvez told him that she had recently sold her home and offered to lend him $10,000. Scanlan accepted the loan and executed a promissory note in her favor. The loan money did not, however, come from the sale of Galvez’s home; Galvez stole the money from Scanlan’s Olson Dairy trust account. Galvez, explained the circumstances surrounding the loan:

Q. What did he tell you about his financial difficulties?
A. Okay. At that time, it was in reference to a case that was pending on him — or I don’t know if it had been filed yet — in reference to Mrs. Armentrout.
Q. Who is Mrs. Armentrout?
A. Apparently, it was a previous client of Mr. Scanlon’s [sic].
Q. What did Mr. Scanlon [sic] tell you about the problem with Mrs. Armentrout?
A. Okay. That she had loaned him money, and — or, it was a gift, let’s say. It was a gift, in which the lady later came back and was asking for the money back.
Q. Did he tell you any more about that situation?
*336 A. Just the fact that they were going to file charges against him if he didn’t pay that money within a certain period of time.
Q. Did he ask you if you had any money to loan him?
A. No. I had offered it myself.
Q. How much money did you offer to loan him?
A. Okay. At that time, it was $10,000.
Q. Did you have $10,000 of your own funds at that point to loan Mr. Scanlon [sic]?
A. At that time, no. That’s when I first made that first check from the Olson Dairy.

In late 1981 or early 1982 Scanlan discovered that Galvez had been stealing money from his operating account. Apparently a creditor called Scanlan and demanded payment of an overdue bill. Scanlan explained that he had already paid the bill. The creditor insisted that Scanlan had not paid. Scanlan then realized that Galvez had stolen money from his operating account. He was still unaware of the thefts from the Olson Dairy account.

When Scanlan confronted Galvez, she admitted stealing money from the operating account. Scanlan determined that $3,784 had been taken from his operating account. He did not audit his other accounts. Scanlan told Galvez that if she would make restitution he would not fire her. Scanlan did not report the theft to the police, nor did he significantly change any of his office procedures. For a time Galvez continued to be a signatory on Scanlan’s operating account.

MS. WEZELMAN: So after you knew she had been embezzling, you didn’t really keep a closer eye on your operating account even?
THE WITNESS: Yes, I did. I started — I started reconciling the checkbook in— with February.
THE CHAIRMAN: But that’s two months after you found out, or at least a month after you found out that Rachel had taken the money.
THE WITNESS: Yes.
THE CHAIRMAN: What about that month or two in between? Why didn’t you at that point take over the account, take it out of her hands, even if you had forgiven her?
THE WITNESS: I guess because I felt that if I really had forgiven her, I would continue to trust her, and in the press of business, I just didn’t do it.

Galvez repaid the $3,784. She wrote herself a check for $3,784 on the Olson Dairy account, signed it, and presented it to the bank for deposit in Scanlan’s operating account. Galvez then gave Scanlan the deposit receipt to prove that she made restitution. Scanlan did not question the source of her funds.

From October through December of 1981 Galvez wrote five checks on the Olson Dairy account totalling over $15,000. One of these checks was the source of Scanlan’s $10,000 “loan.” One check for $900 was deposited in Scanlan’s operating account, presumably to cover shortages. All of these checks bore Scanlan’s signature. Scanlan cannot confirm or deny whether these signatures were forged. Galvez testified, however, that Scanlan did not know that he was signing any of these Olson Dairy checks. She stated that she obtained his signature by falsely representing that the checks he signed were to be drawn on the operating account and needed for the purchase of office supplies. She obtained these blank checks even though she was a signatory on the operating account:

Q. You just indicated that you wer e

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697 P.2d 1084, 144 Ariz. 334, 1985 Ariz. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-a-member-of-the-state-bar-of-arizona-scanlan-ariz-1985.