In re Anonymous No. 16 D.B. 77

20 Pa. D. & C.3d 382
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 24, 1980
DocketDisciplinary Board Docket no. 16 D.B. 77
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Pa. D. & C.3d 382 (In re Anonymous No. 16 D.B. 77) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Anonymous No. 16 D.B. 77, 20 Pa. D. & C.3d 382 (Pa. 1980).

Opinions

To the Honorable Chief Justice and Justices of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

PEARLSTINE, Board Member,

Pursuant to Pa.R.D.E. 208D of the Pennsylvania Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement, the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania submits its findings and recommendations to your honorable court with respect to the above petition for discipline.

I. HISTORY OF PROCEEDINGS

Respondent is an attorney who was admitted to practice law in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on December 7,1951. His office is located at [ ] Budding, [ ] Road, [ ], [ ] County, Pa.

The present proceeding arose out of a petition for discipline fded on behalf of the Office of Disciplinary Counsel on May 6,1977. A hearing committee was appointed to hear the testimony and receive the evidence. They held hearings as follows: July 5, 1977, July 6, 1977, August 2, 1977, May 1, 1978, June 5, 1978 and May 15, 1979.

On May 6, 1980, the hearing committee fded its [383]*383report recommending that respondent’s conduct as to Charge III of the petition for discipline evidenced professional misconduct and violation of the Code of Professional Responsibility and that Charges I and II be dismissed. The recommendation of the committee was that respondent be suspended for a period of six months.

Counsel for respondent filed his brief on exceptions followed by the designation of a panel consisting of Raymond Pearlstine, Chairman, Mary Bell Hammerman, Esq. and John M. Elliott, Esq., members, to hear oral argument. Oral argument was heard August 21, 1980 by a panel consisting of Raymond Pearlstine, Chairman, Mary Bell Ham-merman and Sidney Krawitz, substituting for John M. Elliott. The board at its meeting on September 19, 1980, unanimously agreed to adopt the recommendation of the hearing committee and recommended that its opinion to the Supreme Court follow that recommendation.

CHARGE I

In December, 1974, [A] consulted respondent with regards to the affairs of her late husband, [B], who was seriously ill at the time. Respondent advised her to withdraw all funds on deposit in any bank account of [A] and/or [B] and present them to him so that he could redeposit the said funds in an escrow account to prevent the dissipation of the funds by [B’s] daughter by a previous marriage.

Pursuant to instructions, [A] withdrew $4778 from the Main Line Federal Savings and Loan Association and presented the check to respondent who promised to deposit the funds in an escrow account and to maintain said funds in the escrow account on her behalf.

Respondent commingled the funds with his own [384]*384funds, converted the funds to his own use and purposes, even though he had promised [A] that he would deposit and maintain the $4778 in an escrow account.

The following month, January 8, 1975, [B] died and for a period of one year following that date, [A] made numerous demands orally and in writing of respondent to account for and return the fund to her. In December of 1975, [A] communicated with [ ] Esq., the Chairman of the Fee Bill Committee of the [ ] County Bar Association and requested that he intervene with respondent on her behalf. The fee Bill Committee Chairman contacted respondent on or about January 13,1976. Respondent presented [A] with a cashier’s check drawn on the Provident National Bank in the amount of $4778.

This conduct clearly violated D.R. 9-102(A) and various other Disciplinary Rules complained of in the Disciplinary Board’s complaint. There also is a violation of Rule 9-102(B)(3) requiring a lawyer to maintain complete records of funds, securities and other properties of the client. And finally, there is a clear violation of Rule 9-102(B)(4) requiring a lawyer to promptly pay or deliver to the client, as requested by a client, the funds in the possession of the lawyer which the client is entitled to receive.

The hearing committee [ ] dismissed this charge. The hearing committee was in error in its findings of fact (page 10) stating that [A] was given a receipt by [ ], the secretary of respondent, but that the money was to be held in an escrow account as security for [A], P-2 which was introduced in evidence is a receipt signed by respondent and witnessed by respondent’s secretary, acknowledging the receipt of a check from [A] in the amount of $4778, “to be deposited and held in my escrow account as security for [A] .”

[385]*385Beginning in July of 1975, [A] made numerous telephone calls and requests of respondent or his employes requesting the return of the same check she had given to respondent as well as the will which had been probated. After the pressure put upon respondent by the Chairman of the [ ] County Fee Bill Committee, [A] received a check from respondent drawn on his account for $4636, which was returned “Insufficient Funds.” This check was received by her on Christmas Eve. On January 9,1976, respondent sent [A] aletter saying that if the check for the amount which had been sent on December 23, 1975 would be returned, she would receive a cashier’s check. On January 13, 1976, she received a cashier’s checkin the amount of $4778. Respondent’s receipt, the retention of money, the failure to keep it in accordance with the Disciplinary Rules and failure to pay it over upon demand, was overwhelmingly proven.

CHARGE II

A friend of respondent and his wife, visiting their home learned that respondent was sorely in need of $5,000 to pay a fine which was imposed upon him by the Court of Common Pleas of [ ] County in a criminal case. She loaned him $3,000 and delivered her check to him and he agreed to make payments to her which he failed to do. This was a private matter having no relation to his professional capacity as an attorney. He paid some payments on account and then defaulted in the repayment of this personal loan. Since it was a private matter between a friend of respondent and his wife, the hearing committee acted properly in dismissing this charge.

[386]*386CHARGE III

This charge recites that respondent was retained to represent the Estate of [C] by the Administrator of the Estate, [D] and that pursuant to that retention respondent received two checks, the first being the check of Prudential Insurance Company in the payment of death claim in the sum of $974.76 endorsed by [D] on March 2, 1973. The second check in the sum of $1,000 was also received by him. When [D] was requested by respondent to endorse the first check, he caused it to be cashed by an employe of respondent at his direction and he retained the proceeds and never deposited them in his attorney’s account. The second checkin the sum of $1,000 was also received by him and it was to be used for the purpose of effecting payment of the funeral bill of decedent to the [ ] Funeral Home. Respondent retained this money for over four years and faded to make the payment until suit was instituted against him personally by [ ] Funeral Home on the theory of a third party beneficiary contract. He did not file an answer to the complaint and judgment was entered by default. When execution was threatened he delivered a check to [ ] Funeral Home for the sum of $1279.30, representing the balance after applying the Social Security payment of $255 received by the Funeral Home. Despite testimony produced by respondent, there is no denial that he was in possession of the proceeds of the two checks and converted those proceeds to his own use.

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388 A.2d 1028 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1978)
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366 A.2d 227 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1976)
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425 A.2d 730 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1981)
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383 A.2d 952 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1978)

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20 Pa. D. & C.3d 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anonymous-no-16-db-77-pa-1980.