In Re Farmer

747 P.2d 97, 242 Kan. 296, 1987 Kan. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 11, 1987
Docket60,478
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 747 P.2d 97 (In Re Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Farmer, 747 P.2d 97, 242 Kan. 296, 1987 Kan. LEXIS 455 (kan 1987).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This original proceeding in discipline was filed by the Office of the Disciplinary Administrator against Michael W. Farmer, of Topeka, an attorney admitted to the practice of law in Kansas. The Kansas Board for Discipline of Attorneys found that respondent violated DR 1-102(A)(4) and (6); DR 2-106(A); and DR 7-102(A)(5) of the Code of Professional Responsibility. 235 Kan. cxxxvii-cxlviii. The hearing panel of the Kansas Board for Discipline of Attorneys unanimously recommended that the respondent be suspended from the practice of law. Respondent filed exceptions to the Board’s report and the matter is before this court for review.

The facts as determined by the hearing panel upon which the recommended disciplinary action was based are as follows:

Naomi Freeman was injured in an automobile accident on September 14, 1984. Freeman, who suffers from a nervous disorder, was given a list of attorneys by the Topeka Resource Center for the Handicapped. From that list she chose the respondent. Freeman and the respondent entered into a written contract which provided that respondent would receive as attorney fees 40% of any amounts recovered by settlement. In March 1985, respondent told Freeman that an offer of settlement of $7,500.00 had been made. Freeman authorized the acceptance of the settlement, and told respondent that she wanted to make sure that her medical bills were paid.

Subsequently, Freeman went to respondent’s office where she received a check in the amount of $1,257.65, representing her portion of the proceeds from the settlement. Respondent indicated to her what her medical expenses were and represented *297 that he would pay them. He had withheld $2,904.35 from the settlement proceeds for that purpose. Freeman testified that respondent never indicated he would attempt to compromise the medical bills, nor did they discuss or enter into any oral agreement in that regard. Thereafter, Freeman discovered that the Memorial Hospital bill and Dr. Patel’s bill had not been paid in full. Upon inquiry, she learned that a $94.00 courtesy discount had been given by Dr. Patel at respondent’s request.

Freeman then went to see respondent at his office. Accompanying Freeman was Mitch Cooper, the executive director of the Topeka Resource Center for the Handicapped. Freeman went to respondent’s office because she did not know anything about the discounting of her medical bills. In response to her inquiry, respondent told Freeman that, when attorneys paid bills for people, the attorneys were often given a discount. Respondent made no mention of a prior agreement or understanding that he was to attempt to discount the medical bills and keep the difference. His position was that the discounts resulted from his efforts and, therefore, he was entitled to keep the amount discounted. At the end of the meeting, respondent gave Freeman a check for $94.00, saying that he knew the Freemans had a low income and could use the money, and that he liked to keep his clients happy.

Freeman later went to see her regular health care provider, Dr. Robert Holmes, in connection with another matter. The bill she received for this visit also showed that $62.00 of the bill in connection with her automobile injuries had been written off as a “bad debt.” Freeman called the bookkeeper for Dr. Holmes, and asked if there was a mistake on her bill. Freeman then contacted other medical care providers, and discovered that the bills for their services had also been discounted. The respondent obtained the discounts by representing that Freeman’s settlement was not adequate to pay her medical expenses. Respondent informed one health care provider that, because of the inadequate settlement, he could pay only one-half of the bill. He told another that if it would not accept 50% of the medical bill like everybody else did, it would get nothing.

Respondent maintained that he had an oral agreement with Freeman to take care of her medical bills for her and that he told Freeman his compensation for paying the medical bills would be derived from discounts received in compromising the bills.

*298 Respondent’s administrative assistant testified that a sufficient amount had been retained from the $7,500.00 received in settlement to pay all of Freeman’s medical bills in full. She also testified that it would have taken her approximately one hour of time to send out the checks necessary to pay all of Freeman’s medical bills in full.

At the time of the automobile accident, Freeman was riding in a van owned by the Topeka Resource Center for the Handicapped. Respondent received a check from Hawkeye-Security Insurance Company representing the personal injury protection (PIP) benefits for the Resource Center. The $2,000.00 check listed both respondent and Freeman as payees. Respondent told Freeman that he would retain the check and return it to the insurance company upon a successful settlement of the case with State Farm Insurance, the insurance company for the tortfeasor causing the accident. After the settlement of the case, respondent contacted Hawkeye-Security about the return of the $2,000.00 in PIP benefits. Respondent testified that he was told by Hawkeye-Security that it automatically paid one-third of the amount of the benefits to the attorney who recovered them. Respondent then retained $667.00 of the $2,000.00 check as his fee. He did not, however, make an accounting to Freeman of the $667.00 of insurance proceeds which he retained.

Respondent first argues that there is insufficient evidence to support the panel’s findings that he violated the Code of Professional Responsibility. DR 1-102(A)(4) and (6) prohibit conduct “involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation,” and “other conduct that adversely reflects on his fitness to practice law.” DR 2-106(A) forbids charging or collecting an “illegal or clearly excessive fee.” DR 7-102(A)(5) forbids a lawyer in representing a client to “[kjnowingly make false statement of law or fact.” Supreme Court Rule 225, 235 Kan. cxxxvii-cxlviii. Supreme Court Rule 211(f) states that a finding of attorney misconduct requires proof “by clear and convincing evidence.” 235 Kan. cxxix.

Respondent argues that no clear and convincing evidence of disciplinary rule violations exists in the present case, relying upon his testimony and the testimony of an office worker who *299 allegedly overheard the conversations that he had an oral agreement with Freeman by which they agreed that he would attempt to compromise.the medical bills. Respondent also argues that, in discussing Freeman’s medical bills with her health care providers, he did not make any misrepresentations of fact.

In State v. Zeigler, 217 Kan. 748, 755, 538 P.2d 643 (1975), this court stated that, although the report of the disciplinary board “is advisory only, it will be given the same dignity as a special verdict by a jury, or the findings of a trial court, and will be adopted where amply sustained by the evidence, or where it is not against the clear weight of the evidence, or where the evidence consisted of sharply conflicting testimony.” In the present case, respondent’s denial of the factual allegations against him does not compel the finding that there is no clear and convincing evidence of misconduct on his part.

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Bluebook (online)
747 P.2d 97, 242 Kan. 296, 1987 Kan. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-farmer-kan-1987.