In Re Fischer

89 P.3d 817, 2004 Colo. LEXIS 391, 2004 WL 1041598
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 10, 2004
Docket03SA49
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 89 P.3d 817 (In Re Fischer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Fischer, 89 P.3d 817, 2004 Colo. LEXIS 391, 2004 WL 1041598 (Colo. 2004).

Opinion

Justice COATS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Mark J. Fischer, the respondent in the underlying attorney discipline proceeding, appealed from the order of the Hearing Board disbarring him. See People v. Fischer, 63 P.3d 373 (Colo.O.P.D.J.2003). Fischer admitted that he violated the Rules of Professional Conduct by disbursing funds to his dissolution-of-marriage client, and to himself in the amount of his attorney fees, in a manner not in accordance with the terms of the separation agreement adopted by the court. The hearing Board held that disbarment was the presumed sanction for the respondent’s misappropriation of funds and his violation of the court’s order, and it found the mitigating circumstances offered by him insufficient to alter that sanction.

Because the Board did not appropriately consider and balance the aggravating and mitigating circumstances established as a matter of fact, and because it imposed an unreasonably harsh sanction on the respondent, we reverse its order of disbarment. Because we believe the proper application of the ABA Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions leads to the conclusion that suspension, rather than disbarment, is the appropriate sanction, we now order the suspension of the respondent from the practice of law for a period of one year and one day.

*818 I.

In July 2002, the Office of Attorney Regulation filed a complaint against the respondent, alleging violations of Colo. RPC 8.4(c) (“Engaging In Conduct Involving Dishonesty, Fraud, Deceit, Or Misrepresentation”); 1.15(a) (“Failure To Hold Property Of Clients Or Third Parties, Separate From Attorney’s Own Property”); 1.15(a) (“Alternative Claim of Negligent or Technical Conversion”); 1.15(b) (“Failing To Deliver To Third Persons Funds That The Third Persons Are Entitled to Receive”); 1.15(c) (“Failing To Keep Disputed Property Separate Until There is An Accounting And Severance Of The Disputed Interest”); and 3.4(c) (“Knowing Disobedience Of An Obligation Under The Rules Of A Tribunal”). All of the allegations arose from the respondent’s distribution of funds from the sale of marital assets to Ms. Fran McKinney, his client in a dissolution of marriage proceeding.

The respondent confessed all but the third claim, which alleged a. negligent or technical conversion by allowing his trust account to dip below the amount of the sale proceeds, and all but that claim were resolved against him, either by judgment on the pleadings or summary judgment. The parties then filed an “Agreed Trial Management Order,” which included a stipulated statement of facts and indicated that the third claim would be withdrawn. The trial management order further indicated the agreement of the parties that the only issue to be determined at trial would be the appropriate discipline and that, as a matter of law, the presumed discipline would be disbarment.

According to the stipulated statement of facts, in September 2001, Ms. McKinney and her husband, Mr. Gerald Hallman, entered into a Separation and Property Settlement Agreement, which was made an order of the court by its dissolution decree. The agreement called for Ms. McKinney to sell a piece of real property owned by the couple and a mobile home located on it. From the proceeds she agreed to pay certain enumerated debts, including three liens secured by the land, personal debts owed by her and Mr. Hallman, a $10,000 tax obligation, and $36,000 due on the purchase price of the mobile home, as well as $10,000 to Mr. Hall-man. Only after these payments were made did the agreement entitle Ms. McKinney to receive whatever proceeds remained from the sales. The agreement also provided for the payments to be made directly from the closing or from the proceeds deposited in the respondent’s trust account.

As it turned out, Mr. Hallman had neglected to get permits related to the mobile home and had failed to register it with the county. A certificate of occupancy had therefore never been issued. Certain taxes had also never been paid, all of which made financing difficult, and Ms. McKinney had trouble selling the property. Ultimately, the respondent was able to arrange a sale of the real property (but not the mobile home), including payment of $70,000 of the purchase price in November 2001, to be followed in December with payment of $23,000, secured by a promissory note.

Neither Mr. Hallman nor his attorney attended the closings, but by correspondence with the respondent, Hallman’s attorney confirmed her understanding that her client would receive his $10,000 from the proceeds of the sale held in the respondent’s trust account. After the first closing, the respondent wrote to Hallman’s attorney, indicating that the liens on the property had been paid from the $70,000 and that he had also paid certain of Ms. McKinney’s personal debts, including his own claim of $4,000 for attorney fees. He indicated that the other debts his client was obliged to pay by the terms of the agreement would be handled when the additional $23,000 was paid but that he had been instructed by his client not to pay Mr. Hall-man any money at that time, and perhaps not at all. As justification, he noted that Ms. McKinney had been forced to discount the property by at least $5,000 because of an inadequate and unapproved sewer system.

After not receiving any disbursement from the December payment of $23,000, Mr. Hall-man filed a Motion for Release of Money Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement. The respondent’s accounting, which he was ordered by the court to provide, indicated that Ms. McKinney had received a total of $53,108.30 and the respondent had received *819 an additional $6,468 as attorney fees. The $10,000 tax obligation had not been paid, and Mr. Hallman had not been paid the $10,000 required by the separation agreement. The respondent offered, as justification for refusing to pay Hallman, that his client had directed him as her attorney to withhold payment from her former husband because of the losses incurred due to his failure to disclose significant issues regarding the mobile home.

The district court found that the funds from the sale of the property were not disbursed in accordance with the agreement of the parties and order of the court, apparently for the reason that Ms. McKinney instructed the respondent to disburse funds contrary to the agreement. The court entered a provisional judgment in favor of Mr. Hallman and against Ms. McKinney for $47,083.82, which was vacated by stipulation of the parties after the respondent personally satisfied all of the financial terms and conditions outlined in the separation agreement. This satisfaction by the respondent included payments of $10,000 to Mr. Hallman, $3,794.97 to Hall-man’s attorney for additional attorney fees incurred by the respondent’s actions, the respondent’s personal assumption of the $36,000 debt on the unsold mobile home, payment of an additional $400 debt listed in the agreement, and payment of $3,596.48 to the Colorado Department of Revenue, fully resolving the “$10,000 tax obligation” referred to in the agreement.

In the stipulated' statement of facts, the respondent also acknowledged that he should not have deviated from the disbursement schedule of the agreement without first seeking court approval, and that his actions had damaged Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 P.3d 817, 2004 Colo. LEXIS 391, 2004 WL 1041598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fischer-colo-2004.