In Re Crews

698 S.E.2d 785, 389 S.C. 322, 2010 S.C. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 16, 2010
Docket26870
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 698 S.E.2d 785 (In Re Crews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Crews, 698 S.E.2d 785, 389 S.C. 322, 2010 S.C. LEXIS 293 (S.C. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Following an investigation and hearing, a Hearing Panel of the Commission on Lawyer Conduct (Panel) found that Samuel Crews (Respondent) committed numerous acts of misconduct and recommended that Respondent be disbarred, ordered to pay costs of the proceedings, and ordered to pay restitution to clients and the Lawyers’ Fund for Client Protection. Respondent now challenges the Panel’s recommendation. As recommended by the Panel; we disbar Respondent, order him to pay restitution, and order him to pay the costs of the proceedings.

FACTS

The charges in this matter stem primarily from the complaints of two former clients. With respect to these matters, Respondent misappropriated client funds, put clients’ personal property to his own use, and engaged in various self-dealing transactions with regard to clients’ real estate.

I. Client A

Respondent was referred to Client A by friends who were concerned about his state of health. Client A wished to *327 execute a power of attorney (POA) so as to allow Respondent to handle his affairs while Client A was being treated for medical problems. At the time, assets owned by Client A or his father’s estate 1 included a residence on Oceola Street (Oceola Street) in Columbia, three Certificates of Deposit, and various personal property.

(1) Oceola Street

In July 2001, Respondent filed an Inventory and Appraisement of the Probate Estate of Client A’s father, which listed the appraised value of Oceola Street as $80,000. Client A inherited the property and, in February 2002, Respondent signed a Contract for Sale on Client A’s behalf, with Client A as seller and MDR Properties, Inc. (MDR) as the buyer. Michael Reynolds, Respondent’s office manager, was the president and sole owner of MDR. Client A testified that he was not informed that the property was being sold to Respondent’s office manager.

The Contract set the purchase price at $68,000 to include a $500 deposit, a certified check payable at closing for $33,500, and a second mortgage in the amount of $34,000 payable over fifteen years. In May 2002, Respondent used his power of attorney to sign a deed transferring the property from Client A to MDR. Respondent recorded the deed that same month.

Six months later, on November 7, 2002, Respondent’s office manager, Michael Reynolds, resold the Oceola Street property for $92,000 on behalf of his corporations. From the proceeds of the sale, $68,000 was deposited that same day into Respondent’s trust account for the benefit of Client A. Also on November 7, Respondent paid himself $7,500 in attorney’s fees and $8,273.12 in “expenses” from the trust account, leaving $52,226.88 from the sale in the trust account for the benefit of Client A. That same day, MDR paid $15,000 to Main Properties, LLC (Main Properties), which is owned by Respondent. The following day, Respondent paid $15,000 to himself from the Main Properties account. None of these transactions were made known to or approved by Client A.

*328 (2) Chateau de Ville Property

Again using his power of attorney, Respondent entered into a contract to purchase a condominium in Chateau de Ville in Columbia on behalf of Client A for $67,500. At the time, Respondent represented both Client A and the seller, an Estate. There is no evidence that either Client A or the heirs of the Estate were advised of the conflict.

In connection with the sale, $4,725 was paid to Sunvest Properties, Inc., as a real estate commission, and Sunvest then issued a check for $3,375 to Reynolds as his commission for the sale. Reynolds’s commission was based on an exclusive right to sell contract signed on the same day that the contract to purchase was signed. The right to sell contract provided for a commission of seven percent.

In May 2002, Respondent signed a deed on the Chateau de Ville property on behalf of Client A, conveying the property from Client A to Main Properties. The deed specified consideration as $69,000. Respondent signed a note on behalf of Main Properties promising to pay Client A $69,000 plus interest. 2 Client A testified that he never received any such payment. After the sale, Respondent rented the property and collected at least $16,000 in rent. He deposited $3,000 of rent into his trust account for the benefit of Client A and $13,000 into the checking account for Main Properties. Also after the sale, Respondent paid $3,189.10 from the trust account funds for Chateau de Ville regime fees.

Respondent paid $11,500 from trust account funds to Carolina Trucking, which performed demolition work for Respondent on several properties. The reference on the payment is “Portion of Chateau ...” The owner of Carolina Trucking testified that he did not recall doing work at Chateau de Ville for Respondent, but Client A had no interest in any of the properties listed on the receipt.

(3) Accounting

After Client A filed a grievance with the Commission on Lawyer Conduct, Respondent was asked on a number of *329 occasions to provide an accounting. In January 2004, Respondent was served with a subpoena requiring him to produce the accounting ledger for Client A no later than February 9, 2004. Respondent provided a client ledger for funds passing through the trust account on behalf of Client A and accounting journals for money market and checking accounts.

Client A’s new attorney also requested a final accounting in January 2004. In December 2004, Respondent presented Client A with an affidavit for his signature which provided that Client A had been given a complete accounting on many occasions. Client A testified that Respondent brought the document by his home in the evening and read the document to him, though he would not allow Client A to read it. Nonetheless, Client A signed the affidavit. The following day, Respondent filed an accounting with the Probate Court. Client A was given an opportunity to review the accounting and indicated that he was satisfied with the accounting.

II. Client B

In January 2002, Respondent was retained by Client B to probate the estate of his deceased wife. Client B agreed to pay Respondent $175 per hour and $75 per hour for paralegal work. In February 2002, Respondent drafted a durable power of attorney naming himself as attorney-in-fact for Client B. The document included a provision empowering Respondent to deal with himself in his own individual capacity “in buying and selling of assets, in lending and borrowing money, and in all other transactions, irrespective of the occupancy of the same person of dual positions[.]” ODC alleges that Respondent used his authority as attorney-in-fact to put Client B’s funds and property to Respondent’s own personal use.

(1) H & R Block Account

In March 2003, Respondent, acting under the power of attorney, withdrew $330,431.49 from Client B’s investment account at H & R Block. Respondent deposited the full amount into his trust account. Respondent explained to ODC that the funds were reinvested at Client B’s request and direction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
698 S.E.2d 785, 389 S.C. 322, 2010 S.C. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crews-sc-2010.