In Re Christians

978 P.2d 910, 267 Kan. 240, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 16, 1999
Docket82,404
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 978 P.2d 910 (In Re Christians) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Christians, 978 P.2d 910, 267 Kan. 240, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 234 (kan 1999).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an original proceeding in discipline filed by the office of the Disciplinary Administrator against respondent Mitchell B. Christians of Salina, an attorney admitted to the practice of law in the state of Kansas. A formal hearing was held before a panel of the Kansas Board of Discipline of Attorneys. Respondent appeared pro se. The panel made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“FINDINGS OF FACT
“2. In late summer, 1992, Complainant Ken Fisher, hired Respondent to file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy for him. Mr. Fisher testified that he gave Respondent information about his creditors and income, and $95.00 for the fifing fee. Later Mr. Fisher paid Respondent three installments of $50 each and performed some tree trimming work to cover Respondent’s fee. At the time he first asked Respondent to file the bankruptcy, Mr. Fisher was- divorced, had numerous creditors and was paying $200 a month for child support. After garnishment for the child support, Mr. Fisher was left with $68 for a two week period.
“3. Respondent did not file the bankruptcy for Mr. Fisher, even tho[ugh] Mr. Fisher called and met with him many time[s] over the period from late 1992 until 1995 to discuss the several creditor lawsuits, to consult with him about letters and legal notices he received from creditors about unpaid bills and about court dates, and to discuss other legal matters including a suit arising from an auto accident, and the adoption of his child. Respondent and Complainant both testified that Respondent’s advice about the creditors was that the bankruptcy proceeding would handle their claims. Subsequently, one of his creditors, Memorial Hospital, obtained a default judgment against Mr. Fisher, when he did not appear at hearing. Respondent had advised Mr. Fisher that he did not need to défónd against the lawsuit, or obey court orders to appear, because the bankruptcy would discharge the debt. Consequently, Mr. Fisher was arrested and jailed-for failure to *241 respond to a court order. He was embarrassed at his place of employment when officers arrested him and he had to spend part of a day in jail. After the arrest, Mr. Fisher continued to seek help from Respondent, and Respondent continued to tell him that the bankruptcy proceeding would take care of the debt. When Mr. Fisher was summoned to court October 24,1995, Respondent did not provide bankruptcy documentation as Mr. Fisher requested, or attend the hearing with Mr. Fisher, even tho[ugh] Mr. Fisher met with him shortly before the hearing. Respondent never admitted to Mr. Fisher that he had not filed the bankruptcy. So when Mr. Fisher appeared before Judge Anderson, Mr. Fisher told the judge that his attorney said he filed the bankruptcy, but apparently he was now not sure what to believe. After the hearing, Mr. Fisher was unsuccessful in getting in touch with Respondent.
“4. Mr. Craig Crosswhite is the creditor’s] attorney who wrote Mr. Fisher about the Memorial Hospital bill. Mr. Fisher showed Mr. Crosswhite’s letters to Respondent. Mr. Crosswhite testified that he pursued Mr. Fisher for payment until Mr. Fisher told him that Respondent was handling his bankruptcy. Then Mr. Crosswhite wrote Respondent, and he searched court records for evidence of a bankruptcy filing. There was none. Even after Mr. Crosswhite left messages about Mr. Fisher on Respondent’s answering machine, Respondent never called Mr. Crosswhite back.
“5. , Mr. John Gatz is the attorney who investigated the complaint for the Disciplinary Administrator’s office. Respondent told Mr. Gatz he was delaying the bankruptcy filing until Mr. Fisher got a steady job or his income otherwise stabilized. Until that happened, Respondent reasoned that the creditors had nothing to garnish. Yet the Memorial Hospital default judgment did result in garnishment of Mr. Fisher’s wages although the child support payment took up the bulk of the Wage. Ms. Bonnie Selby is the attorney who finally filed Mr. Fisher’s bankruptcy in 1996. Mr. Fisher sought her help after he couldn’t get Respondent to help him with the court appearance before Judge Anderson. She filed the bankruptcy after she was unable to reach Respondent although she left several messages on his answering machine.
“6. Respondent explained to the Panel that he waited to file Mr. Fisher’s bankruptcy, thereby discharging the debts, until Mr. Fisher had steady income because bankruptcy can be filed only once in a seven year time period. He never explained this theory to Mr. Fisher. Respondent testified that during 1992 and 1993 he himself was experiencing several problems: He moved out of the apartment he shared with his wife. He and his wife divorced, a small claims court judgment for unpaid rent on his estranged wife’s apartment was taken against him. He left an office sharing arrangement, and started conducting his practice from his home. He began traveling around a several county area handling criminal appointments. Respondent admitted not returning calls from Mr. Crosswhite or Ms. [Selby] either because he didn’t have time or didn’t know the call concerned Mr. Fisher. Recently, Respondent closed his private practice and is working as a Public Defender in Salina, Kansas. When Mr. Hazlett questioned Respondent *242 about the money Mr. Fisher paid him for the filing fee and attorney fee, Respondent stated he put the money in his general account, not a trust account.
“CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
“The panel unanimously finds, by clear and convincing evidence, that Respondent violated Kansas Rules of Professional Conduct [KRPC 1.1 (1998 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 279) (competence); KRPC 1.3 (1998 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 288) (diligence); KRPC 1.4 (1998 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 296) (communication); KRPC 1.15 (1998 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 333) (safekeeping property); and KRPC 8.4 (1998 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 386) (misconduct)]. Respondent did not follow his client’s request to file the bankruptcy, did not admit to his client that it had not been filed, did not protect his client from his creditors and took money for the filing fee and did not keep it segregated in a trust account. Despite Respondent’s remarks to the contrary, the Panel finds that Respondent continuously represented to Mr. Fisher the bankruptcy was filed. Even after Mr. Fisher was arrested on a bench warrant, Respondent did not truthfully tell his client or the court that there was no bankruptcy on file. A simple phone call to the creditor would have helped Mr. Fisher, at minimal cost to Respondent.”

The respondent filed no exceptions to the panel’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. We accept and concur in the panel’s findings and conclusions.

We now determine the appropriate discipline to be imposed. The panel analyzed the situation and recommended discipline as follows:

“RECOMMENDED DISPOSITION
“In making its recommendations for discipline, the Panel has reviewed the ABA Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions.

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Related

In Re Wall
38 P.3d 640 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2002)
In re Christians
15 P.3d 1174 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
978 P.2d 910, 267 Kan. 240, 1999 Kan. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-christians-kan-1999.