In Re Dorhauer
This text of 998 So. 2d 77 (In Re Dorhauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re Douglas Charles DORHAUER.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
*78 ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS
PER CURIAM.
This disciplinary matter arises from formal charges filed by the Office of Disciplinary Counsel ("ODC") against respondent, Douglas Charles Dorhauer, an attorney licensed to practice law in Louisiana but currently on interim suspension pursuant to a joint motion of the parties filed in April 2005. In re: Dorhauer, 05-0908 (La.4/21/05), 899 So.2d 1289.
UNDERLYING FACTS
In May 2004, while respondent was employed as an associate with the Baton Rouge law firm of E. Eric Guirard & Associates, PLC, he was assigned the representation of a personal injury client, Staci Delaune. Ms. Delaune, along with her four children, had been involved in an automobile accident in a Wal-Mart parking lot on April 15, 2004. Following the accident, Ms. Delaune sought medical treatment for herself and her children from Dr. Michael Keogh, a Baton Rouge chiropractor, and from Dr. Tara Ryan, a Denham Springs pediatrician. In due course, respondent submitted a settlement demand on behalf of his clients to Imperial Fire and Casualty Insurance Company ("Imperial"), the tortfeasor's insurer. Respondent attached copies of the medical records *79 of Drs. Keogh and Ryan in support of the claim for recovery. Imperial subsequently settled the personal injury claims of Ms. Delaune and her children for $23,697.65.
In the course of this representation, respondent learned from Ms. Delaune that she and two of her children had been involved in an accident on March 31, 2004, approximately two weeks prior to the Wal-Mart accident. The March accident was a hit and run which resulted in very minor damage to the rear bumper of Ms. Delaune's vehicle. Neither Ms. Delaune nor her children were injured in the March accident, and Ms. Delaune had settled her own property damage claim with the tortfeasor's insurer, Louisiana Farm Bureau Insurance Company ("Farm Bureau"). However, Ms. Delaune inquired of respondent whether she could collect anything for the "aggravation and mental stress" of the hit and run accident. In February 2005, without the knowledge of his client, respondent sent a settlement demand to Farm Bureau for bodily injuries allegedly suffered by Ms. Delaune and her children in the March 2004 accident.[1] In support, respondent included the same medical records he had previously provided to Imperial regarding the April 2004 accident; however, the medical records he submitted to Farm Bureau had been altered to reflect that the injuries suffered by Ms. Delaune and her children were associated with the March accident.
Farm Bureau's adjuster discovered the alterations in the medical records and initiated an investigation into the matter. After respondent was notified of the investigation, he informed the insurer that he wanted to withdraw the settlement demand he had submitted on his clients' behalf. Respondent then met with Ms. Delaune and gave her a check for $1,500 drawn on his personal checking account.[2] Respondent also had Ms. Delaune sign a settlement document which he represented she needed to sign for Farm Bureau.
On April 5, 2005, respondent was arrested by the Louisiana State Police and charged with four counts of forgery and one count of insurance fraud, stemming from the alteration of Ms. Delaune's medical records. Respondent denied any culpability with regard to the forgery, claiming that he obtained the altered medical records from Ms. Delaune. However, Ms. Delaune denied that she ever had possession of the records in question.
In October 2005, a grand jury in East Baton Rouge Parish returned an indictment against respondent for one count of insurance fraud, a violation of La. R.S. 22:1243.[3] In June 2006, the State amended *80 the indictment and charged respondent with the offense of inciting a felony, a violation of La. R.S. 14:28, in that he "endeavored to incite or procure another person to commit a felony, to wit, insurance fraud." On June 27, 2006, respondent pled guilty to the amended indictment. The State recited the following factual basis for respondent's guilty plea:
. . . Around the time her claim with Imperial was settled in February of 2005, Ms. Delaune sought advice from Mr. Dorhauer about whether she could make a claim against Farm Bureau, the insurance company for the driver in the March 31st, 2004 accident, for the aggravation resulting from that accident. According to Ms. Delaune, she only sought compensation for her time and trouble in tracking down the hit and run driver, but not for her medicals, as neither she nor her two youngest children were injured in the March accident. Mr. Dorhauer agreed to represent her and a claim was filed against Farm Bureau. However, the claim sought compensation for medical treatment from Farm Bureau and among the documents that were forwarded to the insurance company from the Guirard firm supporting the claims were reports of treatment from Dr. Keogh's office and from Dr. Ryan's office. Farm Bureau learned of the claim filed in the later April, 2004 accident and determined that the documents that had been forwarded to them supporting Ms. Delaune's claim against it were altered copies of the documents that had earlier been submitted to Imperial Fire and Casualty. . . .
Following his conviction, respondent was sentenced to serve two years in prison, deferred, and he was placed on two years of active supervised probation pursuant to the provisions of La.Code Crim P. art. 893. Among other special conditions of probation, respondent was required to perform 100 hours of community service work and pay $2,163.07 in restitution to Farm Bureau to defray the costs of its investigation.
DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS
In 2006, the ODC filed one count of formal charges against respondent, alleging that his conduct violated Rules 8.4(a) (violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct), 8.4(b) (commission of a criminal act reflecting adversely on the lawyer's honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer), and 8.4(c) (engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation) of the Rules of Professional Conduct. Considering this misconduct, the ODC further alleged that respondent has engaged in insurance fraud, thereby warranting consideration of the sanction of permanent disbarment under Guideline 6 of the permanent disbarment guidelines set forth in Supreme Court Rule XIX, Appendix E.
Respondent answered the formal charges and admitted his conviction of inciting a felony; however, he denied that he played any role in altering the medical records submitted to Farm Bureau and he denied that "insurance fraud" was involved in the proceedings relative to his guilty plea. Respondent further denied that permanent disbarment is an appropriate sanction for his misconduct.
Hearing Committee Report
This matter proceeded to a formal hearing. In his testimony before the committee, respondent maintained that he did not *81 alter the medical records which were sent to Farm Bureau on behalf of Ms. Delaune. Respondent testified that these records were provided to him by Ms. Delaune, and unbeknownst to him, had been altered. Ms. Delaune, on the other hand, denied that she ever, at any time, had possession of her medical records, as suggested by respondent. She unequivocally stated that she did not alter the medical records or ask anyone to do so.
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998 So. 2d 77, 2009 WL 50181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dorhauer-la-2009.