In RE DISCIPLINARY ACTION AGAINST McCRAY

2008 ND 162, 755 N.W.2d 835
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 2008
Docket20070376
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2008 ND 162 (In RE DISCIPLINARY ACTION AGAINST McCRAY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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 DISCIPLINARY ACTION AGAINST McCRAY, 2008 ND 162, 755 N.W.2d 835 (N.D. 2008).

Opinion

755 N.W.2d 835 (2008)
2008 ND 162

In the Matter of the Application for DISCIPLINARY ACTION AGAINST Loren C. McCRAY, A Member of the Bar of the State of North Dakota.
Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of the State of North Dakota, Petitioner,
v.
Loren C. McCray, Respondent.

Nos. 20070376, 20070377.

Supreme Court of North Dakota.

September 3, 2008.

*837 Paul W. Jacobson, Disciplinary Counsel, Bismarck, N.D., for petitioner.

Michael R. Hoffman, Bismarck, N.D., for respondent.

SUSPENSION ORDERED.

PER CURIAM.

[¶ 1] Loren C. McCray and counsel for the Disciplinary Board petition this Court *838 for review of a hearing panel's report and recommendation that McCray be suspended from the practice of law for 120 days for violating the North Dakota Rules of Professional Conduct and the North Dakota Rules for Lawyer Discipline for activities related to "credit repair." We conclude there is clear and convincing evidence McCray violated N.D.R. Prof. Conduct 1.5, 4.1, 5.4, 5.5(e), 7.3(a), 8.4(c), (f), and (g), and N.D.R. Lawyer Discipl. 1.2A(3) and (8). We suspend McCray from the practice of law for six months and one day and order that he pay the costs of the disciplinary proceedings.

I

[¶ 2] McCray was admitted to practice law in North Dakota on November 7, 1994. Since then he has practiced law in Jamestown, Hebron, and Beulah, and he currently practices primarily bankruptcy law in Bismarck. In August 2004, McCray became employed by Bradley Ross Law, a California corporation owned by John T. McManus, an attorney licensed to practice law in California and Indiana. Bradley Ross Law performed credit repair services for its clients. McCray learned that Bradley Ross Law was looking for a North Dakota lawyer because Bradley Ross Law had determined North Dakota was one of the few states that allows trade names to be used for a law firm name and North Dakota has no credit repair organizations act. McCray opened a Bismarck office for Bradley Ross Law acting as a professional corporation in North Dakota through a certificate of foreign corporation. McCray also operated his own law firm, Loren McCray, Attorney at Law, from the same address with the assistance of one employee.

[¶ 3] In January 2005, McCray became the sole shareholder and employee of Bradley Ross Law, P.C., a North Dakota professional corporation, and in October 2005, he purchased the clients and business of Bradley Ross Law from McManus. The hearing panel described the business operations of Bradley Ross Law, P.C.:

In his work for Bradley Ross Law, P.C., McCray reviews client files, speaks with clients, disputes items on clients' credit reports with credit reporting agencies, and performs related work. From August 2004 to the present, Bradley Ross Law and Bradley Ross Law, P.C. have had no other employees, except McCray, in North Dakota. During the timeframe that McCray has been associated with Bradley Ross Law and Bradley Ross Law, P.C., there have been approximately 25 to 30 employees working for the corporations as leased employees in Fishers, Indiana. The employees, along with computer services, marketing services, a processing center, and other services are leased from a service provider by the name of Bellwether, Inc., or its affiliates. Several of the leased employees in Indiana are listed as legal assistants of Bradley Ross Law, P.C. (formerly Bradley Ross Law) and perform such duties as disputing items on client credit reports, making requests directly to creditors with respect to disputed items, responding to client inquiries, and performing related duties.

[¶ 4] McCray was paid $26,000 per year when he first became employed with Bradley Ross Law in 2004. Bradley Ross Law had 18,000 clients that year, and in 2003 the firm had $8,500,000 in gross income. After McCray formed Bradley Ross Law, P.C., he began drawing $50,000 per year from the business. In 2006 McCray earned about $75,000 from the business, which had gross revenue of $10,000,000 but had a tax loss of $10,000. That year Bradley Ross Law, P.C., had approximately 9,450 clients and McCray *839 spent about one-half of his time working for the business. Of the $10,000,000 in 2006 gross revenue received by the firm, about $9,500,000 was paid to Bellwether, Inc., or its affiliates. Bellwether, Inc., is owned by Steve Snyder, who gave seminars on how to improve credit scores. During 2005, Bradley Ross Law, P.C., and other entities sponsored approximately 25 seminars conducted by Bellwether, Inc., across the country. McCray did not personally attend any of the seminars.

[¶ 5] In January 2005, Dr. Michaela McKenzie, a dentist in Georgia, received a letter from Snyder inviting her to attend a seminar about regaining credit after bankruptcy. McKenzie, who had recently been through bankruptcy, decided to attend. The hearing panel described what occurred at the seminar:

Dr. McKenzie attended a seminar at a hotel in Atlanta, Georgia on February 26, 2005. Snyder presented this seminar to 400 to 500 people. Snyder explained that he was able to improve his credit score, after his own bankruptcy, by use of an attorney and explained how the attendees at the seminar could also improve their credit scores by use of an attorney who would write letters on their behalf. Snyder told the audience that they could, if they wanted to, use the law firm of Bradley Ross Law.
At the close of the seminar, Snyder invited people to sign up with Bradley Ross Law if they were interested in having their credit scores improved. Many of the attendees went through a hallway to another room where there was a bank of tables with approximately four people sitting behind them from Bradley Ross Law, P.C. Approximately 200 people from the seminar got in line to visit with the representatives of Bradley Ross Law, P.C. No other law firms were in attendance.
When Dr. McKenzie talked with a representative of Bradley Ross Law, P.C. on February 26, 2005, she was asked to sign a contract if she was interested in having Bradley Ross Law, P.C. assist her. She was advised that the standard charge was $79 per month, but if she signed up at the seminar, the cost would be $59 per month. Dr. McKenzie signed the contract. The contract stated that "[y]ou acknowledge that you intentionally sought out Bradley Ross Law in the State of North Dakota to perform legal services under federal law only in North Dakota." The contract also stated that the dispute letters that were created on behalf of a client by Bradley Ross Law were proprietary and were not kept in the client file. The client agreed to "waive any right to receive copies of letters created on my behalf." Dr. McKenzie skimmed the contract before signing it. In a letter dated May 13, 2005, Dr. McKenzie was advised that as a client on retainer, she was being charged $59 per month no matter how much work Bradley Ross Law, P.C. did for her.

[¶ 6] The contract McKenzie signed with Bradley Ross Law, P.C., also contained the following provision:

ITEMS TO BE APPEALED. If there are items on my credit reports I know to be accurate and verifiable, and do not want challenged, I will attach a separate list of these items at the inception of the agreement. Otherwise, I direct the law firm to dispute all negative credit listings, for I believe them to be inaccurate, outdated, or unverifiable.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 ND 162, 755 N.W.2d 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-action-against-mccray-nd-2008.