In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Brown

469 P.2d 763, 255 Or. 628, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 440
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 469 P.2d 763 (In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Brown) 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 Brown, 469 P.2d 763, 255 Or. 628, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 440 (Or. 1970).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The accused is charged with several counts of professional misconduct, all arising from the manner in which he handled the settlement of a personal injury case. The charges include, among others, that the accused made certain misrepresentations to hospital-creditors of his clients and that he commingled in his personal office bank account for several months the funds received by him in connection with the settlement. The accused has admitted the substance of the charges, except that he denies that he acted fraudulently and contends that he did not then realize that his conduct was wrongful.

In early 1966 the accused was engaged, on a contingent fee agreement, to represent Mrs. Helen Lange in her claim for personal injuries arising out of an accident on December 29, 1965, in which Mrs. Lange, as a pedestrian, was hit by an automobile and suffered serious injuries, resulting in some $15,600 in hospital and medical bills. The driver of the automobile carried $25,000 in insurance.

The accused filed a complaint on behalf of Mrs. Lange and the insurance company then offered to pay the full $25,000 in settlement of her claim. Mrs. Lange, however, was reluctant to enter into a settlement under which most of the proceeds would be expended for medical and hospital bills and for attorney’s fees. She also felt that one of the doctors who treated her had been guilty of malpractice and that she had not re *630 ceived proper care in one of the hospitals. The accused was also concerned that she might leave him and go to another attorney.

The idea was then conceived by the accused to divide the $25,000 settlement money into two parts, with $3,000 payable to Mrs. Lange in return for a covenant not to sue and with $22,000 payable to her husband for his claim of loss of consortium (which had not been filed and for which no previous demand had apparently been made), in return for a similar covenant. He admitted that one reason for this plan was to use the $3,000 settlement figure for the claim of Mrs. Lange as a means of inducing the hospitals to accept a substantially reduced pro rata payment in settlement of their bills.

A letter, dated May 22,1966, was then prepared by the accused and signed by Mr. and Mrs. Lange, by which they instructed him not to pay “one cent” to two of the doctors from the settlement payments of $3,000 to Mrs. Lange and $22,000 to her husband because of their belief that these doctors had been guilty of malpractice and to pay to the hospitals only the balance of the $3,000 remaining after payment of attorney’s fees and costs.

On the same date a letter was written by the accused to the two hospitals stating that “The case of Mrs. Lange (the only one of which the hospitals had knoAvledge) was resolved by her executing an agreement and covenant not to sue for the sum of $3,000; that, after payment of attorney’s fees and expenses, “there is a sum of $1,810.04 to distribute” between the two hospitals in payment of their bills, with balances totaling $5,393 (after part payment by National Hospital Association, which was also entitled to be re *631 imbursed from the settlement) and asking for advice how to distribute that sum between the two hospitals. In that connection he advised his clients that unless the hospitals foreclosed the liens for their bills within six months, the liens would be invalid. He also recommended that Mr. and Mrs. Lange file bankruptcy proceedings, which were later instituted by another attorney.

Meanwhile, payment was made to the accused of the settlement moneys and a portion of such funds were deposited in his personal office bank account for payment to the hospitals, in accordance with his regular practice at that time in the settlement of personal injury cases, although payment to the hospitals from that account was not made for several months. During the interim that account had overdrafts on two occasions and on several dates had balances in amounts less than the amount deposited for payment to the hospitals, although the accused may have had other funds sufficient to make these payments.

The accused did not, however, inform either hospital of the fact that the additional sum of $22,000 had been received in settlement of the claim of Mr. Lange for loss of consortium, which had never been filed and of which the hospitals apparently had no knowledge. He did, however, discuss the division of the settlement amount into payments of $3,000 and $22,000, in settlement of the two claims, with the attorney representing the insurance company, who insisted that the accused deliver to him letters under which the accused agreed to hold the insurance company and its attorney harmless from any and all liens, including “hospital liens because of payment made by you through my office without naming the hospital on the drafts.”

*632 The collection department of one of the hospitals, apparently not satisfied with the proposal by the accused, and apparently also concerned with his failure to respond to a request that the hospital lien be “honored”, then made a series of frequent telephone calls to the accused and also to other persons in an effort to get information relating to the trial date for the case and other information. Most of these telephone conversations were with a girl .in the office of the accused, who had been given strict instructions not to let any such calls through to him. The hospital office manager testified, however, based on her records of such calls (but not from independent memory), that on two occasions in August, 1967, she was able to talk with the accused and that she was told by him on one occasion that, the “trial will not be set until October” and on the other occasion that the trial was “reset again.” Meanwhile, Mrs. Lange’s case had been previously dismissed without prejudice and Mr. Lange’s claim had. never been filed.

These conversations were denied by the accused, but he admitted that in August he began to wonder whether he should have informed the hospitals of the $22,000 payment. No such action was ever taken by the* accused, however, until November, 1967, when he received demands from the attorneys representing both hospitals, who had by then learned of the $25,000 settlement and demanded that their bills be paid in full.

Even then the accused prepared letters to one of these attorneys and to the hospital represented by him, stating in both letters that the claim of Mrs. Lange had been settled for $3,000 and tendering part payment of the hospital bill. The attempted explanation of these *633 letters by the accused, to the effect that he delivered them personally to the attorney for the hospital with the intent to make a complete disclosure of the total amount of the settlement in a personal conversation with that attorney is hardly credible, to say the least.

Upon being confronted by the demands of the hospitals for immediate payment in full and upon being informed that they were aware of the full amount of the settlement in the sum of $25,000 and of his “hold harmless” agreement relating to the hospital liens the accused promptly paid the full amount of both hospital bills. He also cooperated completely with the Oregon State Bar in its subsequent investigation of this matter.

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Related

In Re Brown
956 P.2d 188 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1998)
Chesterman v. Barmon
727 P.2d 130 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1986)
In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Piper
534 P.2d 159 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)
Salem Sand & Gravel Company v. City of Salem
492 P.2d 271 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1971)
Stachniewicz v. Mar-Cam Corporation
488 P.2d 436 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
469 P.2d 763, 255 Or. 628, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-complaint-as-to-the-conduct-of-brown-or-1970.