In re Cohn

194 A.D.2d 987, 600 N.Y.S.2d 501, 1993 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6471
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 17, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 194 A.D.2d 987 (In re Cohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cohn, 194 A.D.2d 987, 600 N.Y.S.2d 501, 1993 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6471 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Respondent was admitted to practice by this Court in 1973. He maintains an office for the practice of law in Vestal, Broome County.

By petition dated September 13, 1990, and by supplemental petition dated February 26, 1991, the Committee on Professional Standards charges respondent with a number of allegations of professional misconduct.

A 19-day hearing was held in the fall and early winter of 1991 before Hon. Ross Patane, retired Madison County Court Judge. In a voluminous and exhaustive report dated February 11, 1993, the Referee found respondent guilty of 27 charges of professional misconduct covering 76 specifications. The petition and supplemental petition contained 32 charges covering 116 specifications.

Petitioner moves to confirm the Referee’s report. Respon[988]*988dent moves to disaffirm the report with respect to the charges and specifications sustained by the Referee and to confirm the report with respect to the charges and specifications not sustained by the Referee. Respondent agrees that specification 1 of charge I of the supplemental petition was properly sustained by the Referee.

Petitioner is not pursuing the charges not sustained by the Referee and those charges are not different in kind from those sustained. We confirm the Referee’s report with respect to the charges not sustained.

The Referee found that respondent had neglected bankruptcy matters entrusted to him by eight clients (charges I and XII [S] ["S” refers to the supplemental petition]). The sustained specifications allege failure to follow through on and complete bankruptcy matters, mistakes on bankruptcy documents submitted to court, and delays.

The Referee sustained six specifications under charges II and III accusing respondent of violating the provisions of Bankruptcy Rule 2016 (b), which rule requires a debtor’s attorney to disclose attorney fees. With respect to the inaccurate statements alleged in the five specifications of charge II, the Bankruptcy Court ordered respondent to remit $1,300 in total fees not properly reported and imposed a fine of $180 in each case. Respondent did not oppose the ordered remedy. With respect to the single specification of charge III, respondent returned a $300 fee to the clients after the Bankruptcy Trustee objected to respondent’s failure to properly report it.

The Referee sustained four specifications of neglect of the Rigo divorce matter and one specification each of neglect of the Corey and Repasky divorce matters (charge V). With respect to Rigo, the Referee found that respondent failed to notarize the signature of a process server on an affidavit of service; failed to respond to a demand for a complaint; failed to obtain financial disclosure from the opposing spouse as requested by the client; and failed to proceed to trial as the client wanted. Rigo eventually discharged respondent. With respect to Corey, respondent essentially admits to an 18-month delay in a filing for an amicable divorce. With respect to Repasky, the Referee found respondent simply did not execute the elementary task of insuring proper completion of an affidavit of service.

The Referee sustained three specifications of neglect of Family Court matters under charges V (A) and XI (S) accusing respondent of failure to file a modification of support petition, [989]*989failure to follow through on one client’s adoption of his 6-year old step-son, and failure to follow through on a child support modification petition.

Under specification 2 of charge VI, the Referee sustained an allegation of neglect of a real property matter. Respondent delayed effectuating a real property transfer from his client to one Govericki from the time of his retainer in September 1989 until the deed was recorded December 1, 1989, three days after his client’s death.

The sustained specifications of charges I, II, III and IV of the supplemental petition concern respondent’s handling of an adoption matter. He failed to file requisite documentation from his retainer in June 1989 until May 17, 1990; he failed to appear at a June 1, 1990 court conference; he failed to comply with the temporary guardianship application provisions of Domestic Relations Law § 115-c; failed to distinguish between his clients’ physical custody of the baby and his inaccurate characterization of them as legal guardians in a statement to the Broome County Health Department when the baby needed medical attention; put the wrong date on an affidavit accompanying the adoption petition; failed to disclose pursuant to section 806.14 (a) of this Court’s rules (Rules of App Div, 3d Dept [22 NYCRR] § 806.14 [a]) a $400 payment by the adoptive parents to the natural mother to help her pay rent during her confinement, for which payment respondent served as conduit; and represented both the adoptive and natural parents to some extent. Sustained specifications 1 and 2 of charge V (S) accuse respondent of failing to complete an uncomplicated adoption proceeding resulting in its eventual dismissal in the spring of 1989. It appears a new petition was filed a week before this disciplinary hearing commenced.

According to sustained specifications 1 and 2 of charge VII (S), 1 and 2 of charge VIII (S), and 1 of charge IX (S), respondent neglected a client’s criminal matter. He failed to respond in a timely fashion to a plea bargain offer until after his client was indicted by a Grand Jury. The client discharged respondent after he failed to notify the client of a scheduled arraignment on the Grand Jury indictment until 10 minutes beforehand. The client’s new attorney accepted a plea bargain. The Referee also found respondent falsely told his client he had responded to the plea bargain offer before the matter was presented to the Grand Jury.

The Referee sustained two specifications of misleading clients under charge VII. He found respondent misled client Rigo into believing he had applied for a court date for her [990]*990divorce case. He found that the Barneses had agreed to chapter 13 debt relief not knowing they were filing for bankruptcy because respondent did not properly explain it to them and because they were responding to his misleading newspaper advertisement touting "Immediate personal debt relief which [is] not a bankruptcy.”

The Referee found respondent guilty of five specifications in charges VIII and XIV (S) of failing to respond to telephone calls from five clients. Also, after client Repasky discharged respondent in a divorce matter, the Referee found respondent failed to timely forward a completed affidavit of service to the new attorney at the client’s request and at the attorney’s request (specification 6, charge VIII; specification 1, charge X).

The Referee sustained charges of failure to cooperate with the Broome County Bar Association’s investigation of six client complaints (charges XI, XV [S]) and of failure to cooperate with petitioner’s inquiries and directives (charges XII, XIII, XVI [S]).

Finally, the Referee found respondent placed a misleading ad on October 11, 1989 in the Binghamton Press (specification 1, charge XV). The ad referred in bold print to a "new federal law” which would provide "debt relief”, including halting the imposition of all interest and all lawsuits. However, the reference was actually to 1979 chapter 13 bankruptcy legislation; the word "new” actually referred to decisional law; lawsuits could continue under certain circumstances; and only interest on unsecured debts would cease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 A.D.2d 987, 600 N.Y.S.2d 501, 1993 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cohn-nyappdiv-1993.