In re Complaint as to the Conduct of BACH

539 P.2d 1075, 273 Or. 24, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 298
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 539 P.2d 1075 (In re Complaint as to the Conduct of BACH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Complaint as to the Conduct of BACH, 539 P.2d 1075, 273 Or. 24, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 298 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Oregon State Bar filed 23 specific charges against the accused. Generally, the accused is. charged •with (1) failing to maintain adequate records and accounts of trust assets; (2) making improper loans of trust assets to clients and other persons who were not beneficiaries of the trust; and (3) misappropriating trust assets. The accused’s amended answer admits making many of the loans and that he used trust assets to secure a personal obligation. The trial committee found the accused guilty of mishandling his client’s trust account which “resulted in a substantial loss to his client” and recommended that the accused be permanently disbarred.

The accused’s client was an alcoholic and spendthrift. She was under the protection of a conservatorship until 1965. The accused first met his client when he successfully represented her at a competency hearing in 1964. Thereafter, the accused, at his client’s request, obtained the termination of the conservator-ship. At about the same time, the accused and his client executed a trust agreement naming the accused as trustee of a support trust for the benefit of the client. The conservatorship assets, approximately $168,-000 in real and personal property, were then conveyed to the accused as trustee. The accused also continued to act as attorney for his client.

A sister of the accused’s client testified that the accused’s client refused to permit others to interfere with her affairs because she “trusted him [the accused] and he was the only one that was going to help her.” The accused did not always maintain a reciprocal attitude toward his client. Mr. Bach’s secretary stated that the accused described his client as “a grouchy, old drunk I give money to every week.”

During the investigation and at trial the ac[26]*26cused was unable to produce records sufficient to reflect Ms management of the trust. The oMy fact wMch can be established with any certainty is that the trust fund is near exhaustion. The accused’s accountant was unable to prepare a proper accounting with the meager records available. According to the accused, he did not maintain complete records because “I have carried this stuff basically in my head and I basically have known where everybody was, I thought.”

The accused attributes his inability to produce complete records to a fire in his warehouse, to moving, to the childbearing activities of Ms secretary and to other sundry reasons-. TMs does not adequately explain the absence of records wMch the accused might have used to compute regular accountings for Ms client. Since the accused never rendered an accounting to his client since the creation of the trust in 1965, it is reasonable to assume that the accused did not maintain records necessary for the preparation of accountings as reqMred by the decisions of tMs court.

The accused bore the fiduciary obligations of the office of trustee and counsel. It is elementary that the accused had a duty to maintain complete records and to render appropriate accountings to his client. Disciplinary Rule 9-102(B); Wood v. Honeyman, 178 Or 484, 555-56, 566, 169 P2d 131 (1946). There is no evidence that excuses the accused from Ms obvious breach of duty.

Next, the accused admits that he loaned trust assets to his employes, to a former law associate, and to some of his other clients.

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Related

In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Eads
734 P.2d 340 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1987)
In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Robeson
652 P.2d 336 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1982)
In Re Complaint of Pierson
571 P.2d 907 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)
In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Albright
549 P.2d 527 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1976)
In Re Bach
539 P.2d 1075 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
539 P.2d 1075, 273 Or. 24, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-complaint-as-to-the-conduct-of-bach-or-1975.