In Re Disciplinary Action Against Strid

487 N.W.2d 891, 1992 Minn. LEXIS 213, 1992 WL 186633
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 7, 1992
DocketC4-88-1993
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 487 N.W.2d 891 (In Re Disciplinary Action Against Strid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota 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 Strid, 487 N.W.2d 891, 1992 Minn. LEXIS 213, 1992 WL 186633 (Mich. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

Respondent Dennis W. Strid is before this court on a disciplinary matter for the second time since his admission to practice in 1962. On May 12, 1989, he was publicly reprimanded and placed on two years probation for misappropriation of client funds. In re Strid, 439 N.W.2d 721 (Minn.1989). The first disciplinary proceeding concerned, in part, respondent's mishandling of his father’s financial affairs in his role as guardian. That proceeding involved the same assets at issue here — the homestead property and the contract for deed. The present petition involves a loan transaction and alleges conflict of interest and professional misconduct. The alleged misconduct in this matter occurred before the first disciplinary proceeding but came to light in May 1989 when respondent became permanently disabled from a heart attack and stopped making payments on the loan. The referee found facts supporting the alie- *893 gations and recommended a one-year suspension. Respondent challenges the findings and conclusions as clearly erroneous and challenges the recommended discipline as excessive.

The referee found the facts as follows: Respondent was the sole shareholder, officer and director of Logan Financial Company (“Logan”) which was set up by respondent to handle his mother’s financial affairs. On June 29, 1984, Logan borrowed $15,000 from Herschel Swain, a diabetic with failing eyesight. Logan, by respondent, gave Swain a note and a mortgage on property which his parents had sold on a contract for deed. Respondent did not tell Swain about his parent’s ownership nor about the contract for deed. Respondent knew at the time he executed the mortgage that neither he nor Logan had title to the property. Swain believed that he was making a loan directly to respondent and that respondent was the owner of the house. Swain would not have made the loan without a mortgage to serve as security because he knew that respondent had financial difficulties in the past.

The transaction was completed in the office of attorney Norman Dahl with whom respondent had shared office space. Respondent paid Dahl a $1,500 finder fee for arranging the loan. Respondent had represented Swain between 1973 and 1978 in a series of transactions involving a business owned by Swain and in a tax matter in 1983, but there is no allegation that respondent was acting as Swain’s attorney in the loan transaction. Dahl had also represented Swain as a client in the past but testified that he was not representing him in this transaction. Swain thought Dahl was his lawyer in the loan transaction. He was not concerned with the technicalities, however, because “I thought I had two attorneys there, that either one of them would protect me.” Respondent took the proceeds of the loan, paid Dahl and transferred the remaining $13,500 from his trust account to his personal Merrill Lynch account. He never recorded the mortgage to Swain.

On August 11, 1984, respondent’s father died and his father’s interest in the contract for deed passed directly to respondent’s mother, Mildred Strid, by right of survivorship. On November 1, 1984, she transferred title to Logan. Logan subsequently sold the property to a third party, Gate Financial Corporation (“Gate”). On February 22, 1985, respondent filed simultaneously the documents passing title from Mildred Strid to Logan and from Logan to Gate thus eliminating the possibility of the Swain mortgage attaching. Respondent intentionally did not inform Swain that Logan had sold the property to Gate. He continued making payments on the Swain loan.

Only when respondent stopped making payments on the loan in 1989 after the disabling heart attack did Swain learn (1) that neither respondent nor Logan had any ownership interest in the property when it was mortgaged and (2) that the property had been sold to Gate in 1985. Approximately $14,000 is still owing on the promissory note, and Swain now has no security with which to enforce payment. Respondent insists he has done nothing wrong and that he spent $29,000 of his own money taking care of his parents, in whose behalf, he says, he did all these things. Both parents are now dead.

The referee concluded that respondent had engaged in fraud and perpetrated fraud through his solely-owned corporation, Logan, in violation of Rule 8.4(c), Minn.R.Pro.Conduct.

An attorney commits professional misconduct if the attorney engages in “conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.” Rule 8.4(c), Minn.R.Pro.Conduct. The elements of fraud, under Minnesota law, are

a false representation pertaining to a material past or present fact susceptible of human knowledge, knowledge by the person making the representation of its falsity or assertion of it without knowledge of its truth or falsity, an intention *894 that the other person act on it, or circumstances justifying the other person in so acting, and the other person being in fact reasonably induced to act upon the representation, relying upon it and suffering damage attributable to the misrepresentation.

8A Dunnell Minn. Digest 2d Fraud § 1.00 (3d ed. 1979).

The referee concluded that respondent perpetuated a fraud when he

offered a mortgage to property that was not in the name of the corporation and which was, in fact, titled to his parents at the time, subject to a contract for deed. He subsequently acquired title to the property, in Logan’s name, from his surviving parent. He, through Logan, sold the property to Gate Finance Corporation, knowing at the time that Logan had given a mortgage to secure a loan of $15,000 from Swain, and that the mortgage would be defeated by transfer of the property from Logan to Gates [sic].

Respondent contends that these findings are incomplete and do not support the conclusion of fraud. 1 The standard of proof in an attorney disciplinary proceeding is clear and convincing evidence. In re Ruhland, 442 N.W.2d 783, 785 (Minn.1989). On review, this court will not set aside the findings of fact of a referee unless they are clearly erroneous. Id.

The record before us fully sustains a finding of fraud. Respondent made a false representation pertaining to a material past or present fact susceptible of human knowledge when he signed the mortgage containing an express covenant of title that he was “lawfully seized of said premises [with] good right to sell and convey the same.” In fact, the property was not conveyed from Mildred Strid to Logan until November 1, 1984, and the transaction was not recorded until February 22, 1985.

Respondent knew the representation was false. He signed the mortgage form and the promissory note between Logan and Swain knowing that Logan had no interest in the property listed. There was no notation on either the mortgage or the note to indicate that Logan did not yet have an interest in the property listed or to indicate that the property was subject to a contract for deed.

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Bluebook (online)
487 N.W.2d 891, 1992 Minn. LEXIS 213, 1992 WL 186633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-action-against-strid-minn-1992.