In Re Connelly

55 P.3d 756, 203 Ariz. 413, 379 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 26, 2002 Ariz. LEXIS 128
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 2002
DocketSB-02-0055-D. Disc. Comm. No. 99-2417
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 P.3d 756 (In Re Connelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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 Connelly, 55 P.3d 756, 203 Ariz. 413, 379 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 26, 2002 Ariz. LEXIS 128 (Ark. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

McGREGOR, Vice Chief Justice.

¶ 1 This matter arose after Respondent Connelly’s client filed a complaint with the State Bar, alleging that Respondent charged an unreasonably high fee. We granted review to determine whether, when a client who has contractually agreed to submit fee disputes to binding arbitration files a complaint alleging his lawyer charged an unreasonable fee, disciplinary proceedings should begin before fee arbitration proceedings conclude. We hold that when a lawyer and client have agreed to binding fee arbitration and the disciplinary complaint involves no allegations of other misconduct, the State Bar should await the conclusion of fee arbitration proceedings before initiating formal disciplinary proceedings. We also consider the appropriate standard to use in evaluating whether an attorney’s fee constitutes a reasonable fee.

I.

¶2 Police arrested Gregory Richman in July 1998 and confiscated three grams of cocaine from his vehicle. After his release, Richman sought advice from Thomas M. Connelly, an experienced criminal defense attorney who had represented Richman in an earlier matter. Connelly told Richman to do nothing until the county attorney contacted him. In November 1998, Richman received a summons indicating a grand jury had indicted him for possession of narcotic drugs, a class four felony. Richman promptly notified Connelly of the charges against him.

¶ 3 When Connelly saw the indictment, he noted that although Richman was indicted for only a single charge of possession, the indictment set out seventy-four separate counts and named approximately twenty defendants. Based on the indictment and Con-nelly’s knowledge about the attorney who had prepared the summons, Connelly told Richman he believed Richman’s case would not remain a simple possession case but would involve considerable discovery, a motion to sever and a motion to suppress. Con-nelly estimated that absent a successful motion to sever, and should Richman’s case go to trial, the case could take eight months to two years to resolve. In addition, Connelly told Richman he might face either jail or prison time.

¶ 4 Connelly, Richman and Richman’s mother, an attorney in Chicago, discussed Connelly’s fee on two occasions. Due to the *415 difficulty he thought the case presented, Connelly initially stated his fee would be $75,000. After negotiations, however, he reduced that figure to $50,000 and discussed various flat fee options with Richman and his mother. Over the next several days, Rich-man considered the available fee options and agreed to a $50,000 “non-refundable” flat fee that would cover the entire case, excluding appellate matters. Connelly sent a fee agreement form to Richman for his signature. After asking Connelly to clarify portions of the form, Richman signed and returned the $50,000 flat fee agreement on January 4,1999. Under the terms of the fee agreement, Connelly and Richman agreed to resolve any fee dispute through binding arbitration.

¶5 The state filed no additional charges against Richman, and Connelly resolved the case without filing any motions or proceeding to trial. Connelly negotiated the TASC diversion program 1 for Richman which, upon Riehman’s successful completion, would result in a dismissal of criminal charges. The county attorney’s office moved to suspend Richman’s prosecution on April 7, 1999, approximately three months after Connelly began representing Richman.

¶ 6 In December 1999, after Richman successfully completed TASC and the court dismissed the charges against him, Richman filed a bar complaint accusing Connelly of charging an unreasonable fee. Richman had neither told Connelly of his dissatisfaction with the fee nor sought fee arbitration.

¶ 7 The State Bar initiated this disciplinary proceeding shortly thereafter. 2 When Con-nelly learned of Richman’s complaint, he conducted a retrospective review of his representation and fee, which included speaking with three other experienced criminal lawyers, and concluded that he had charged a reasonable fee. The State Bar subsequently filed a formal complaint against Connelly. 3

¶8 At his disciplinary hearing, Connelly presented an accounting, prepared subsequent to the filing of the bar complaint, of the hours he had spent on Richman’s case. According to that document, Connelly and his associate spent 116.8 hours on Richman’s case, and based on respective hourly rates of $200 and $350, earned $38,015. 4 Connelly testified that his representation of Richman included drafting a discovery request, reviewing an eighteen-page discovery response and looking at other significant evidence, including wiretap transcripts and police reports that referred to Richman. Connelly also testified that Richman was a very difficult and needy client who called and dropped by the office frequently.

¶ 9 Connelly’s expert witness, Michael Black, stated that he viewed Connelly’s fee as reasonable, both prospectively and retrospectively. He testified that he would have charged Richman between $75,000 and $100,000. The State Bar’s expert witness, Michael Kimerer, testified that a reasonable fee in this case, considered retrospectively, would have been in the range of $20,000 to $25,000.

¶ 10 Analyzing Connelly’s fee pursuant to Ethics Rule (ER) 1.5, Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 42, the Hearing Officer found that Connelly did not initially violate ER 1.5 by charging $50,000 because the case originally appeared labor-intensive and Connelly had substantial experience in this area. The Hearing Officer also found, however, that Connelly’s fee constitut *416 ed an excessive and unreasonable fee when viewed retrospectively at the conclusion of representation.

¶ 11 The Hearing Officer recommended that Connelly be censured and required to pay Richman restitution in the amount of $11,985, the difference between $50,000 and $38,015. Connelly appealed, and the Commission affirmed the Hearing Officer’s recommendation of censure. In addition, the Commission increased the amount of restitution to $25,000 because it did- not find Con-nelly’s hourly reconstruction credible and because Kimerer had testified that $25,000 constituted a reasonable fee.

¶ 12 We granted Connelly’s petition for review and exercise jurisdiction pursuant to Article VI, Section 5.6 of the Arizona Constitution and Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 53(e)5.

II.

¶ 13 Connelly asserts that the State Bar should have referred Richman’s complaint to the fee arbitration program rather than initially treat the complaint as a formal disciplinary matter. Under the facts of this case, we agree.

A.

¶ 14 Connelly and Richman signed a fee agreement that included the following language:

Should there be any disagreement or dispute concerning or arising out of or relating to our services, fees or costs, or our relationship with you, and in the event they are not capable of resolution between the Attorneys and Client, the Attorneys and Client both agree to final and binding arbitration under the procedures of the State Bar of Arizona for resolving such matters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 P.3d 756, 203 Ariz. 413, 379 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 26, 2002 Ariz. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-connelly-ariz-2002.