In Re Conroy

266 A.2d 279, 56 N.J. 279, 1970 N.J. LEXIS 246
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 23, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 266 A.2d 279 (In Re Conroy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Conroy, 266 A.2d 279, 56 N.J. 279, 1970 N.J. LEXIS 246 (N.J. 1970).

Opinion

Pee Cueiam.

The Burlington County Ethics Committee filed two presentments with this Court charging respondent, John S. Conroy, III, with unethical conduct.

I

The first presentment arises out of a personal injury negligence case which respondent was retained to handle. In April 1967, Mr. Conroy had a conference with his clients, husband and wife, in connection with an offer of a $2500 settlement which had been proposed by the insurance carrier covering the tortfeasor. After being advised that the attorney’s foe would be $800, the clients authorized acceptance of the offer and shortly thereafter signed the necessary releases in respondent’s office.

Thereafter many telephone calls and three personal visits •were made by the husband to the Conroy office for the purpose of obtaining the proceeds of the settlement. Respondent was not available. On August 23, 1967, after inquiry of the insurance carrier, the husband learned that the settlement check drawn to him, his wife and the respondent had been issued on May 2 and cashed shortly thereafter. The names of all three payees had been endorsed by Mr. Conroy and on May 5 the check was marked “For deposit. Esc. Acct. No. 44r-6025.” On August 23, the husband was advised by respondent’s secretary that ho was in Florida, that their names had been endorsed on the settlement check pursuant to their power of attorney and that the check had been deposited. No money having been received by August 29, the clients filed the present complaint under oath with the Ethics Committee.

Before respondent knew of the complaint and before it was served on him, but after he had received a letter from a county judge concerning the matter, he arranged for another member of the bar to aid him in disbursing the settle *281 ment proceeds to complainants. Within a few days thereafter respondent went to his clients’ home and explained that since he had been their attorney for ten years he assumed that at the time of his retainer in the case he had taken a power of attorney from them to endorse and deposit any settlement cheek. He informed them also that the delay in making the disbursements was due to his illness, a vacation in Florida and his inability to get in touch with them. In any event, on this occasion he gave them the full proceeds of the settlement without' deducting the $800 which he had told them earlier would be the amount of his fee for services. The clients apparently were satisfied and then sought unsuccessfully to withdraw their complaint to the Ethics Committee.

At the Committee hearing, Conroy said it was his practice in negligence cases to .use a. form of retainer which contained a power of attorney to endorse the client’s name on the settlement check, deposit it and make the appropriate disbursements after it had cleared. The form of such retainer used by him was put in the record. It says in part:

He is to have full power * * * to execute any draft or check in - behalf and to make disbursements of the proceeds covering all medical and hospital bills and to retain-% of the total recovered if settled and -% if trial is had.

In this case it was Conroy’s recollection that he had given the retainer form to one of the clients, the other not being present at the time, and had requested him or her to take it home for signature and to return it to him. He believed it was returned to him thereafter duly signed, but he could not locate it in his file or office. On the basis of his belief that he held the power of attorney, he endorsed and deposited the settlement check. However, both clients denied they had ever signed such an authorization. The Committee found “as a fact that Mr. Conroy did not have a power of attorney.” But it did not find one way or the *282 other as to whether he honestly believed such power of attorney had been signed and delivered to him.

We pause at this point to make clear that we consider employment by members of the bar of the type of retainer and power of attorney described above to be highly improper. The practice of insurance carriers or other settlors in drawing settlement checks in the joint names of the attorney and the claimants is to protect and preserve the interests of all three parties to the transaction. The form of retainer in question facilitates the subversion of that purpose and is unqualifiedly disapproved.

Returning to the settlement check, after endorsement by Conroy, as noted above it was marked for deposit in “Esc. Aect. No. 44^6025.” The impression conveyed by the endorsement is that the deposit was made in an escrow or trust account. Actually, account No. 44^6025 was in the Beach Haven National Bank & Trust Company, Beach Haven, N. J. in the name of Evelyn S. Conroy, respondent’s wife, whose address is listed on the account as N. E. 5th Ave., Boca Raton, Elorida. The bank record shows deposit of the $2500 check in that account on May 5, 1967. It reveals also that 26 checks of varying amounts drawn thereon were paid by May 31, leaving a balance in the account of $59.79. These paid cheeks were not produced before the Ethics Committee, nor were their purposes shown. It is plain, however, that none of them represents remittance to respondent’s clients.

Respondent sought to explain the use of the bank account in his wife’s name by saying that he was having difficulty with the Internal Revenue Service, and he did not want to run the possible risk of having funds in his possession belonging to clients made subject to federal action of some nature. He testified further that he had accumulated a sum of monej' in cash in his office. He took $1688 of that cash, representing the balance due his clients after deducting his fee of $867 from the $2500, placed it in an envelope *283 marked with Ms clients’ name, and put it in Ms “office file safe.”

On May 5 or 6 he went to Ohio for five or six days. On his return he tried unsuccessfully to reach his clients. The reason for not making the disbursement at that time was because there were some problems connected with medical bills arising out of the accident. In addition he said they owed him some fees for services in other matters. Then he left for Florida and for health reasons became unable to return to his practice except on a part time basis until November. He said he was out of the office most of June and July and all of August. Respondent testified also that he informed his secretary about the clients’ cash being in the office file about a month after he put it there and gave her instructions in connection with disbursement when and if the clients made contact with her. According to the clients they made many unsuccessful attempts to communicate with him.

Respondent’s then secretary testified that he told her in August 1967 about the clients’ cash being in an envelope in an unlocked filing cabinet. There is much confusion and contradiction between her testimony and that of respondent on the matter. Among other things she said that, pursuant to instructions, at one time she took half the cash out of the envelope and delivered it to a local law firm. The record makes it clear that the payment was in another case. It is clear also that when this was done the cash balance in the office envelope was less than that necessary for a proper disbursement to the clients in the present matter.

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266 A.2d 279, 56 N.J. 279, 1970 N.J. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-conroy-nj-1970.