In Re Clarke

684 A.2d 1276, 1996 WL 660539
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1996
Docket95-BG-1792
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 684 A.2d 1276 (In Re Clarke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Clarke, 684 A.2d 1276, 1996 WL 660539 (D.C. 1996).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This matter is before the court on the Report and Recommendation of the Board on Professional Responsibility (“the Board”) that respondent, Ernesto Clarke, be disbarred from the practice of law in the District of Columbia, based on the Board’s finding that respondent’s misappropriation of client and third-party funds and professional conduct violated several disciplinary rules. We agree with the Board’s recommendation and order respondent disbarred.

I.

On December 27, 1994, Bar Counsel charged respondent, Ernesto Clarke, an attorney admitted to practice law in the District of Columbia, with misappropriation of client funds and failing to deliver funds promptly, in violation of Rules 1.15(a) and (b) (client property to be kept in separate account; prompt notification to client or third party when funds received on behalf of client or third party) and misleading his client into the belief that he would pay medical bills listed on a settlement sheet, in violation of Rule 8.4(c) (dishonesty, fraud, deceit, and misrepresentation) of the Rules of Professional Conduct.

The underlying facts were not in dispute. In 1990, Clarke agreed to represent Ms. Mary Narvaez, a Spanish-speaking domestic worker, on a contingency basis in a personal injury matter. Under a retainer agreement, respondent was to receive one-third of the gross amount of settlement before suit and ten percent of any amount collected on her personal injury insurance policy. With Nar-vaez’s consent, respondent executed an agreement with her treating physician, Dr. Avram Weinberg, to pay the doctor’s fee for services out of any settlement proceeds obtained for Narvaez.

In February 1991, respondent received a check for $8,500 from the civil defendant’s insurance company. Respondent deposited the check into a bank account (“account”) designated as a business checking account in the name of “Law Offices of Ernesto Clarke.” Checks drawn on the account carried the words, “escrow account.” In late May 1991, respondent received a check for $4,904 from his client’s personal injury policy, which he also deposited into his bank account. Under the terms of the retainer, respondent owed $5,486 to the client and $4,379 to Dr. Weinberg.

Respondent drew on the account by writing checks to others not connected with the Narvaez case, causing the balance to go below the amount needed to pay his client and her doctor. The end of the month account balances were as follows:

February 1991 6,704.00
March 1991 3,563.61
April 1991 3,351.61
May 1991 33,255.00 1
October 1991 749.34
November 1991 464.71
December 1991 127.93

Respondent presented a settlement sheet to Narvaez indicating the gross amount obtained for her ($13,404), expenses deducted ($185), attorneys’ fees deducted ($3,508.73), deductions for payment of a radiology bill ($30), and Dr. Weinberg’s bill ($4,379). In June 1991, respondent paid $5,486 to Nar-vaez.

Thereafter, while the respondent’s “escrow account” purported to contain the sum owed to Dr. Weinberg, the balance in the account *1278 fell below the amount owed the doctor in October, November, and December 1991. In January 1992, after Weinberg’s repeated requests for information and payment on his bill, respondent asked Dr. Weinberg to accept a check for $4,379 postdated to April 1, 1992. Respondent testified that during a telephone conversation with the doctor in January, he told the doctor that some unnamed person in the doctor’s office authorized a twenty percent reduction of the medical bill in return for respondent’s agreement to sign the authorization and assignment. Dr. Weinberg, however, testified that he did not know of any such arrangement, nor did any of his office staff have the authority to make such an agreement. There was no written acknowledgment of such an arrangement, nor did respondent discuss such an agreement with Narvaez.

In March 1992, respondent notified the doctor that he did not have funds sufficient to cover the postdated check. In April 1992, respondent mailed Dr. Weinberg a $2,500 check, which cleared. When respondent failed to remit $1,879, the balance of the bill due, Dr. Weinberg tried to cash the $4,379 check in July 1992, but it was returned for insufficient funds. Dr. Weinberg then filed an action in the Small Claims Branch of Superior Court obtaining a default judgment for $1,879 plus interest. To date, Dr. Weinberg has not received the remaining portion of the fee due to him.

On March 2,1995, respondent represented himself before Hearing Committee No. Nine (“hearing committee”) and admitted that his escrow account did not contain sufficient funds to pay his client and Dr. Weinberg. Respondent kept no records regarding the funds he removed from the account and he claimed that he had no knowledge concerning the use to which the funds were put, or the dates of their distribution. Respondent admitted that he was responsible for the funds and that he “was writing the check[s] in excess of what was due [him] and that’s why it [the account] fell short.” “The doctor was not a high priority,” respondent testified.

Ms. Narvaez testified 2 that she had assumed payment had been made to Dr. Weinberg and that when his office called to tell her that the doctor had not received payment, she became upset, nervous, and concerned. Dr. Weinberg testified that respondent told him during 1992 that “he had settled the case, that he had collected the funds and the he had spent the money that was to go toward my medical bill on himself because he was low on money.”

Based on the facts presented, the hearing committee found that respondent’s misappropriation of client funds did not fall into the narrow category of “simple negligent misappropriation” and that respondent had intentionally misappropriated funds of his client and a third-party doctor. The hearing committee also found that respondent failed to review bank records, keep accounting ledgers, or calculate his fees before withdrawing them from the account, and that he failed to promptly notify a third party of available funds in which the third party had an interest, concluding that respondent violated Rule 1.15(a) and (b). Furthermore, the committee found that respondent violated Rule 8.4(c) when he “dishonestly, fraudulently, and deceitfully” led his client to believe that he would promptly pay the full amount of her medical bills as acknowledged on the settlement sheet but did not do so. The hearing committee also concluded that respondent violated Rule 8.4(c) when he used funds collected on his client’s behalf for his own purposes without the client’s permission, authority, or knowledge.

The committee recommended disbarment because respondent intentionally misappropriated client and third-party funds and there were no extenuating circumstances present in this case to justify departure from such a sanction. The committee also recommended that respondent make restitution of *1279 the balance owed on Dr. Weinberg’s bill, with interest as of the settlement date.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
684 A.2d 1276, 1996 WL 660539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-clarke-dc-1996.