In Re Disciplinary Action Against Zotaley

546 N.W.2d 16, 1996 Minn. LEXIS 248, 1996 WL 187056
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 19, 1996
DocketC1-95-982
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 546 N.W.2d 16 (In Re Disciplinary Action Against Zotaley) 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 Zotaley, 546 N.W.2d 16, 1996 Minn. LEXIS 248, 1996 WL 187056 (Mich. 1996).

Opinions

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

The Director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility filed a petition for disciplinary action against respondent, Byron L. Zotaley, for submitting an insurance endorsement form taken from another client’s file during an insurance arbitration and for failing to take remedial action after being informed that the arbitrator relied on the endorsement form as the basis for his decision. On appeal, the Director recommends that a six-month suspension is the appropriate discipline. We conclude that Zotaley’s failure to inform opposing counsel that the insurance endorsement form was taken from another client’s file, his submission of the form during arbitration, and his failure to take remedial action after learning that the arbitrator relied on the endorsement form as the basis for his decision warrant a six-month suspension.

Zotaley was admitted to practice in 1970 and has practiced for the past 26 years with a law firm located in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prior to the present case, he has never been subject to a disciplinary investigation.

This disciplinary action arises out of Zotaley’s representation of Rena Benkler, who was involved in an auto accident in 1990 in which she suffered personal injuries. At the time of the accident, Benkler and her husband owned two motor' vehicles, both of which were insured with St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company (the Company). Prior to retaining counsel, Benkler submitted a claim for no-fault wage loss benefits to the company. In her claim submission, Benkler made no representation as to whether she had stacking1 coverage. If Benkler had stacking coverage, she would have been entitled to a maximum of $40,000 in no-fault wage loss benefits, payable at a maximum weekly rate of $500. If she did not have stacking coverage, her maximum no-fault wage loss benefits would have been $20,000, payable at a maximum weekly rate of $250. The Company began paying no-fault wage loss benefits in the fall of 1990 at the rate of $329.39 per week, indicating that the Company had determined Benkler was entitled to stacking coverage.

In January 1991, Benkler retained Zotaley to represent her in a personal injury action arising out of the auto accident. At that time, wage loss benefits and stacking were not at issue because the Company continued to pay Benkler $329.39 per week. On June 14, 1991, the Company determined that Benkler was medically able to perform her job and stopped paying wage loss benefits.

By letter dated October 19,1992, the Company notified Zotaley that BenHer’s maximum wage loss benefits were $20,000, indicating that the Company had concluded that Benkler did not have stacking. This letter marked the first time since the accident that the Company claimed Benkler did not have stacking. Zotaley then wrote a letter to Benkler asking her to “double check your coverage limits and let me know if you disagree with [the Company’s] assertion” that she did not have stacking. Zotaley and Benkler had previously discussed whether Benkler had stacking, but Benkler had variously replied that it was possible that she had stacking because she and her husband always bought excess coverage, she did not know if she had stacking, and she did not think she had stacking.

In November of 1992, Zotaley filed a petition for arbitration of insurance coverage. At Zotaley’s repeated urging, Benkler searched for but was unable to locate anything which would determine whether or not [18]*18she had stacking. She then contacted her insurance agent to provide her with coverage information. In response, the insurance agent sent Benkler a summary of coverage, which Benkler gave to Zotaley. The summary of coverage did not indicate whether or not Benkler had stacking. However, the summary of coverage did refer to certain endorsements, but the endorsement forms were not included. Of particular relevance to this appeal is Form PP0567 (01-88) Personal Injury Protection (hereinafter PIP endorsement), which is an endorsement form concerning stacking.

Because Zotaley did not have Benkler’s original PIP endorsement, he pulled a PIP endorsement with the identical number, PP0567 (01-88), from another client’s file. The PIP endorsement form was a preprinted form which contained language, in type different from the other printing on the form, indicating that the policy provided for stacking coverage. At the time Zotaley obtained this form, he had no way of knowing whether or not this stacking language appeared in Benkler’s actual PIP endorsement.

On February 18, 1993, Zotaley wrote to Benkler and specifically informed her that he had a copy of the PIP endorsement form from another client’s file. Zotaley enclosed a copy of the form and again asked Benkler to cheek her records to see if she could locate the original form from her own records. At the same time that he dictated his letter to Benkler, Zotaley also dictated a letter to Thomas D. Jensen, counsel for the Company, and enclosed a copy of Benkler’s summary of coverage. However, Zotaley did not inform Jensen in this letter, nor at any other subsequent point during the ■ litigation, that the PIP endorsement form sent to Benkler had been taken from a different client’s file.

The arbitration hearing took place on Monday, May 3, 1993. On the previous Friday, Zotaley submitted Benkler’s statement of the ease to the arbitrator and, as an attached exhibit, included Benkler’s summary of coverage along with the PIP endorsement form. Zotaley did not reveal in his statement of the case that the PIP endorsement form was from the file of another client.

During the arbitration hearing, a representative of the Company produced a PIP endorsement form without stacking language and testified that this form was part of Benk-ler’s insurance policy. Although Zotaley now had direct evidence before him indicating that Benkler might not have stacking, he used the endorsement form with stacking coverage in his cross-examination of the claims representative and failed to reveal during the arbitration that the PIP endorsement form was from the file of another client.

On May 13, 1993, the arbitrator issued his decision. Although the arbitrator did not state a reason for his decision, the fact that the total award exceeded $20,000 indicated that the arbitrator had concluded that Benk-ler had stacking coverage. Even though the awarded amount indicated that the arbitrator had mistakenly relied on the borrowed PIP endorsement form, Zotaley did not immediately inform the arbitrator of his mistake.

Sometime after the hearing, Zotaley visited with the arbitrator in an attempt to determine the basis for the arbitrator’s decision. At this meeting, Zotaley did not inform the arbitrator that the PIP endorsement form was taken from another client’s file. By letter dated June 25, 1993, Zotaley informed Benkler of the basis of the arbitrator’s decision, noting that the arbitrator had given her the benefit of the stacking argument because the Company could not explain the source of the stacking language that Zotaley had- produced.

In late 1993, Benkler terminated Zotaley’s services and obtained successor counsel, who settled the lawsuit in mid-1994 for $21,000, $2,000 less than the amount that had been offered as settlement during Zotaley’s representation of Benkler. Zotaley initiated a proceeding to collect the attorney fees that he felt he was entitled to for his representation of Benkler. During this proceeding, Benkler alleged that the PIP endorsement form had not been properly submitted during arbitration.

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In Re Disciplinary Action Against Zotaley
546 N.W.2d 16 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
546 N.W.2d 16, 1996 Minn. LEXIS 248, 1996 WL 187056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-action-against-zotaley-minn-1996.