In re Cusack

97 A.D.3d 44, 945 N.Y.2d 104

This text of 97 A.D.3d 44 (In re Cusack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cusack, 97 A.D.3d 44, 945 N.Y.2d 104 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Per Curiam.

The Grievance Committee for the Tenth Judicial District (hereinafter the Grievance Committee) served the respondent with a verified petition dated June 17, 2009, containing 10 charges of professional misconduct.

Charges one and two emanate from a common set of factual allegations, as follows:

In or about 2000, the respondent was hired as in-house counsel by a company or companies owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, Thomas Kontogiannis and/or his family members or business associates (hereinafter collectively referred to as the Kontogiannis family).

Between in or about 2000 and in or about June 2004, the respondent worked as a salaried employee for a company or companies owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family. During that time, the respondent continued, on a limited basis, to represent private clients and practice law unrelated to his employment by the Kontogiannis family.

At or about that time, Thomas Kontogiannis, individual members of the Kontogiannis family, and/or companies owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family, were the owners of record of various parcels of real property.

[46]*46During this period, the respondent maintained an attorney escrow account at Astoria Federal Savings Bank denominated “Thomas F. Cusack, Mortgage Closing Account, Attorney Trust Account,” bearing account No. xx/xx/1634 (hereinafter the Astoria Federal escrow account).

Between in or about 2000 and in or about March 2004, the respondent utilized the Astoria Federal escrow account to deposit and disburse funds entrusted to him in real estate and/or mortgage loan transactions in which he represented lenders providing mortgage financing.

At all relevant times, members of the Kontogiannis family, including John T. Michael, a nonattorney and relative of Thomas Kontogiannis, owned and/or operated two mortgage companies, CIP Mortgage and Coastal Capital Corp., which originated and/or provided first and second mortgage loans to borrowers.

Between in or about 2003 and in or about March 2004, the respondent was appointed by the Kontogiannis family, Coastal Capital Corp., CIP Mortgage, or some other company owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family, to represent the interests of Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage, and act as their attorney, at closings on numerous mortgage loan transactions.

At or about that time, the respondent represented Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage, as attorney, at numerous closings on purchase-money mortgage and/or refinance mortgage loan transactions. In many of the transactions in which the respondent represented Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage, as attorney, the borrowers were members of, or individuals affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family, or were companies owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family. In some of these same transactions, the sellers/owners of the subject properties were also members of, or individuals affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family, or were companies owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family (hereinafter, transactions wherein the respondent represented Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage, as attorney, and a Kontogiannis family member or an affiliated individual company was the borrower and/or the seller/owner of the subject property, shall be referred to as Coastal/CIP-Kontogiannis transactions).

During this period, the respondent knew or should have known that his clients, Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage, and the borrowers and/or the sellers/owners of some [47]*47of the subject properties in the aforementioned transactions, were members of, or individuals affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family or companies owned by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family.

Between in or about 2003 and in or about March 2004, in many of the Coastal/CIP-Kontogiannis transactions, members of the Kontogiannis family attended the closings on behalf of the borrowers and/or the sellers/owners of record of the subject properties without the assistance of independent counsel.

In some of the Coastal/CIP-Kontogiannis transactions, Christopher Michael, a member of the Kontogiannis family, attended the closings in place of the respondent and provided services required to be performed by the respondent, as lender’s counsel, at the closings.

At or about this time, the respondent’s Astoria Federal escrow account received wire transfers of funds from Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage, representing mortgage proceeds attributable to Coastal/CIP-Kontogiannis transactions. In connection with those transactions, mortgage loan proceeds were disbursed from the Astoria Federal escrow account to members of the Kontogiannis family or to companies owned or controlled by, or affiliated with, the Kontogiannis family, including CIP Mortgage and Doc Prep, Inc., a document preparation and loan settlement agency in Greenvale, New York.

At many of the closings, the respondent did not disburse funds to satisfy or extinguish existing mortgages or liens on the subject properties; did not disburse funds payable to title abstract or insurance companies in order to purchase title insurance policies insuring the priority of Coastal Capital Corp.’s and/or CIP Mortgage’s new mortgage liens; did not disburse funds to title abstract or insurance companies or any other entities for the purpose of paying mortgage taxes or any other transfer taxes, as required; and did not disburse funds to ensure that the new mortgages and/or deeds would be recorded at the county clerk’s office in the counties in which the subject properties were located.

Following the closings of the Coastal/CIP-Kontogiannis transactions, the respondent failed to take appropriate steps to ensure that the new mortgages and/or deeds were recorded at the county clerk’s office in the counties in which the subject properties were located. The respondent’s failure to ensure that the new mortgages and/or deeds were recorded contributed to the lack of a public record of Coastal Capital Corp.’s and/or CIP [48]*48Mortgage’s liens against the subject properties and/or the identities of the new owners of the subject properties; enabled the Kontogiannis family to remortgage the subject properties and borrow additional funds against the properties from unsuspecting lenders and/or convey the subject properties to unsuspecting buyers without satisfying the Coastal Capital Corp. and/or CIP Mortgage loans; and contributed to the Kontogiannis family’s ability, through Coastal Capital Corp., to bundle the unrecorded notes and mortgages among legitimate notes and mortgages and sell those notes and mortgages as a package to investors on the secondary mortgage market, thereby obtaining additional funds secured, in part, by the subject properties, without notice to the investors that the purported liens evidenced by the mortgages were not of record.

Charge one alleges that the respondent engaged in a pattern of conduct adversely reflecting on his fitness as a lawyer by allowing nonattorneys to improperly regulate and/or influence his conduct and the management and use of his escrow account for the nonattorneys’ own purposes, in violation of Code of Professional Responsibility DR 1-102 (a) (7) (22 NYCRR 1200.3 [a] [7]).

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§ 90
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 A.D.3d 44, 945 N.Y.2d 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cusack-nyappdiv-2012.