In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Sundstrom

442 P.2d 604, 250 Or. 404, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 564
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 442 P.2d 604 (In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Sundstrom) 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 Sundstrom, 442 P.2d 604, 250 Or. 404, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 564 (Or. 1968).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is a disciplinary proceeding in which the Board of Governors of the Oregon State Bar has recommended that the accused’s license to practice law be suspended for a period of two years and thereafter until it is reinstated pursuant to Rule 8.55 of the Rules for the Admission of Attorneys. Three members of the Board of Governors recommended that the suspension be for a period of one year.

The Trial Committee found the accused guilty of being unavailable to his clients and the public for a two month period (Opinion No. 130 of Opinions of the Oregon State Bar Committee on Legal Ethics), the issuance of insufficient funds bank checks, commingling of clients’ funds with his own and the use of clients’ funds for his own purposes, untruthful and *405 wilfully deceitful testimony before the Trial-Committee and false representations made to an adverse party in pending litigation to that party’s damage.

Upon review the Board of Governors found the accused guilty of the above misconduct except the charge of false representations to an adverse party. We concur with the findings of the Board of Governors. The complaint contained additional counts charging the drawing and issuance of insufficient funds bank checks with intent to defraud. Of these the accused was found not guilty by the Trial Committee because of a failure of proof of an intent to defraud. The Board of Governors concurred and we adopt that finding. In re Kitchen, 157 Or 32, 68 P2d 1068 (1937). The evidence reveals, however, the drawing of numerous insufficient funds checks by the accused.

During the period to which these charges relate Mr. Sundstrom maintained a law office in the Executive Building in Portland. Prom April 27 to June 24, 1966, he was generally unavailable to his clients and those members of the public who might have occasion to contact him on business matters relating to his profession. He had neither an office nor residence telephone. His office hours were erratic. Often his only visits to the office were in the evening. His secretary worked on a part-time basis and was frequently not in the office during normal business hours. On occasion a note Avas posted to the outer door of the office indicating he could be reached through the telephone of a neighbor; on other occasions no such message Avas posted. Mail ordinarily was received by his office but the Oregon State Bar failed in its attempts to have a certified letter dehvered to him. To contact him was usually difficult and sometimes impossible.

*406 However, liis practice was quite limited. He testified that he had approximately ten clients. There is no evidence that his • unavailability prejudiced' the rights of any client. If this were the only charge against the accused, the discipline here ordered would be less severe.

Mr. Sundstrom represented a Mrs. Garen Francis in connection with á personal injury claim she had against an insured of Farmers Insurance Group.- In the evening of May 6, 1966, he went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis with a $2,000 draft from Farmers Insurance Group as a proposed settlement of Mrs. Francis’s claim. The offer was accepted and the Francises executed a release and endorsed the draft. They wished immediate payment and the accused drew and delivered to them two checks from his office account representing the amount due them after deducting his contingent fee, the fee due him from previous legal services rendered to them and the amount of a medical bill owed by the Francises to a Dr. Dowsett. He agreed to pay this bill to- the doctor on their behalf. Although he assured the Francises the cheeks were “good” he acknowledged in his testimony before the Trial Committee that he knew there were insufficient funds in his bank account to cover them. The Francises promptly cashed the checks at Meadows Pontiac and at a drug store. That same evening the accused cashed the draft at Portland Meadows racetrack. The management retained $650 as payment on a check drawn by the accused in that amount which had previously been returned to it by the bank because of insufficient funds in Mr. Sundstrom’s account. The balance of $1,350 was paid in cash to the accused. Of this he placed $200 in his pocket for his own use. This left insufficient money to *407 cover the Francis checks and the Dr. Dowsett bill. He remained at the track and placed bets that evening.

In the week following May 6, the Francises learned that the checks negotiated at the drug store and Meadows Pontiac had been returned because of insufficient funds on deposit in Mr. Sundstrom’s account. Mrs. Francis contacted Farmers Insurance Group and made complaint. A new draft Avas given to the Francises in the amount of $1,500. Farmers Insurance Group gave directions to stop payment on the original $2,000 draft, and, after a conference with the accused, gave him a draft for $500 representing his contingent fee on the settlement. On May 16, 1966, the accused picked up the checks from the drug store and MeadoAvs Pontiac by paying cash therefor. By inadvertence the $2,000 draft Avas honored. Thus, Farmers Insurance Group had paid $4,000 on a $2,000 settlement. This Avas not discovered until October 1966, at Avhich time the accused Avas sued for $2,000 by the insurance company. This law suit was settled by the parties for $500. The Francises have refused to repay any sum of money to the insurance company or Mr. Sundstrom. From all that appears in’ the record, the insurance company has suffered a loss of $1,500.

The accused issued checks to the Francises Avhen he knew he did not have' funds in the bank to cover them, he commingled clients’ funds Avith his own, and converted to his OAvn use funds belonging to his clients and Dr. Dowsett. He made no effort to deposit funds in. his account to cover the Francis checks, although he kneAv they would be dishonored.

The accused was found guilty of giving untruthful and wilfully deceitful testimony before the Trial Committee. This arose from his testimony concerning the negotiation of the Farmers Insurance Group draft at *408 Portland Meadows. Mr. Sundstrom testified unequivocally that when he cashed the draft he placed approximately $1,800 in a sealed envelope and left it with Mrs. Medax, who was in charge of cashing checks at Portland Meadows, and that he placed the balance of the money in his pocket. He testified that upon leaving the premises he obtained the envelope from Mrs. Medax and took it to his home. He made no mention of a not sufficient funds cheek of his held by Portland Meadows. At the conclusion of testimony, the attorneys for the Oregon State Bar asked leave to continue the proceedings to obtain further evidence. When trial resumed the Bar produced Mrs. Medax as a witness. She testified that the racetrack management had been holding a not sufficient funds check previously drawn by the accused in the amount of $650, that she cashed the draft by returning Mr. Sundstrom’s check and paying him $1,350 in cash. She denied that any money was placed in an envelope or that she retained any money in an envelope for him. The accused admitted that her testimony may have been correct and the Trial Committee so found. Further, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
442 P.2d 604, 250 Or. 404, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-complaint-as-to-the-conduct-of-sundstrom-or-1968.