In re Green

331 A.2d 145, 1975 Del. LEXIS 582
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 17, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 331 A.2d 145 (In re Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Green, 331 A.2d 145, 1975 Del. LEXIS 582 (Del. 1975).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The Censor Committee of this Court has recommended disciplinary action against the respondent Peter Warren Green, a member of the Delaware Bar, upon the basis of findings of fact summarized as follows:

I.

On August 18, 1973, the respondent received from certain clients, the purchasers in a real estate settlement, the sum of approximately $24,000. which he was to pay over to a bank in satisfaction of two mortgages placed on the property by the seller, the satisfaction of the mortgages or a release from the lien thereof being necessary to clear title. The respondent failed to deliver the funds to the bank until February 4, 1974, after repeated demands upon him and complaint to the Censor Committee. Preliminary inquiry of the respondent by a member of the Censor Committee revealed that, although the respondent maintained a “Clients’ Account” and a personal “Office Account”, funds from the former frequently were commingled with funds in the latter. The respondent agreed in March 1974 to have an audit made of his books and to submit an audit report to the Censor Committee. The respondent failed to do so and, in July 1974, the respondent was called before the Committee on a rule to show cause why further action should not be taken against him.

At the July hearing, the respondent stated, as his reasons for failing to submit an audit report, that his books were not up to date and that he had personnel problems in his office. The respondent produced a statement prepared by a public accountant, retained approximately one week before the hearing, to show that the combination of respondent’s Office Account and Clients’ Account “at all times contained sufficient funds to have paid off the two mortgages in question”. However, the Committee found that the accountant’s statement was insufficient to show whether sufficient balances had been maintained to meet all escrow obligations. The Committee adjourned the hearing to September 10, 1974, for the purpose of affording the respondent opportunity to submit an account[146]*146ant’s report of the handling of “all moneys belonging to or held for the benefit of clients for the period from August 1, 1973 to the present”. The September 10 meeting of the Committee was further adjourned to September 30, 1974 upon the request of the respondent who stated that the accountant had not been able to complete the report “partly because of the poor state of the books and the fact that posting was still not up to date, and partly because of the large volume of transactions in the two accounts to be audited”.

At the September 30 hearing, a written report by the accountant was submitted showing an investigation of the respondent’s books and records for the period of August 1, 1973 through August 31, 1974. The report showed clients’ fund balances and the cash balances in the respondent’s Clients’ Account and Office Account at the end of each month. The accountant’s report showed “that at the end of every month during the period of investigation, the cash balances in Respondent’s clients’ account and office account added together were insufficient to meet Respondent’s escrow obligations”. The deficits shown by the accountant’s report after payment of substantially all legal fees to which the respondent was entitled, ranged from over $20,000. at the beginning of the period to over $45,000. at the end of the period. The accountant testified at the hearing that the increase of deficits was the result of funds having been withdrawn for the respondent’s personal use. The record showed that funds which should have been deposited in the Clients’ Account were not deposited therein, but were deposited in the Office Account instead. The accountant testified that an adequate bookkeeping procedures system was being initiated for the respondent from which he could henceforth ascertain balances in various accounts on a running basis.

The respondent testified at the September 30 hearing that he was not aware of the deficits; that his failure to be aware of the deficits was caused largely by the fact that his previous accountant had not set up an adequate set of books for him; that he had difficulties with bookkeepers, and that the pressures of conducting a one-man practice had resulted in inadequate organization of his books and records. The respondent testified that, upon learning of the deficits, he had immediately paid approximately $17,000. thereof from funds obtained from personal sources and had initiated arrangements to borrow sufficient funds necessary to meet the balance of the deficits.

By letter dated October 28, 1974, the accountant certified to the Censor Committee (1) that the respondent “had deposited sufficient monies from personal sources to his escrow account to cover all amounts that were owing for clients as of August 31, 1974”; (2) that “funds received from clients subsequent to August 31, 1974 have been accounted for and no shortages exist with respect to these new funds”; and (3) that a “new bookkeeping system was installed on October 22, 1974, and is in operation at this date”, and that the respondent’s employees had been instructed as to its application “and would be monitored on its use on an on-going basis”.

II.

Upon the basis of the foregoing, the Censor Committee concluded that the respondent has violated DR 9-102(A),

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429 A.2d 987 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
331 A.2d 145, 1975 Del. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-green-del-1975.