In re Huskey

537 S.E.2d 276, 342 S.C. 409, 2000 S.C. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 11, 2000
DocketNo. 25194
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 537 S.E.2d 276 (In re Huskey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Huskey, 537 S.E.2d 276, 342 S.C. 409, 2000 S.C. LEXIS 193 (S.C. 2000).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In this attorney disciplinary matter, respondent and Disciplinary Counsel have entered into an agreement under Rule 21, RLDE, Rule 413, SCACR.1 In the agreement, respondent admits misconduct and consents to disbarment from the practice of law. We accept the agreement for disbarment. The facts in the agreement are as follows.

Client Files

Respondent worked at the Henson Law Firm (Firm) as an Equity Associate until November 1998. Although respondent does not recall retaining client files, respondent’s wife brought a box of respondent’s case files into the Firm after respondent was discharged. Respondent was not aware of his wife’s actions.

[411]*411 Social Security Matter

Respondent represented a client in a Social Security disability action for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Social Security Disability (SSD). The client was awarded SSI in the fall of 1997. Respondent billed the client for 25% of his past due SSI benefits because the Social Security Administration does not withhold attorney fees out of SSI awards. Client forwarded a cashier’s check in the amount of $1,452 payable to respondent on October 22, 1997. Client was later awarded SSD, and the Social Security Administration withheld $4,000 as attorney’s fees out of the client’s past due benefits.

In April 1998, the client tried to get a refund of the $1,452 from respondent without any success. The Firm’s manager investigated, but could find no records of the $1,452 being deposited into the firm escrow account. Respondent gave misleading statements to the office manager about whether he would resolve the matter personally. Respondent admitted to cashing the client’s check and converting all of the money for his own personal use. Respondent falsely stated that he refunded the $1,452 to the client after he received the $4,000 from the Social Security Administration. Respondent accused the client’s wife of stealing the check and cashing it without client’s knowledge. He produced an altered cancelled check for the $1,452 he had allegedly refunded to the client. However, there was no date on the back of the cancelled check where it had been processed by the bank. Respondent subsequently refunded the $1,452 out of his personal funds.

Failure to Prosecute

Respondent prepared a Summons and Complaint on behalf of a client. The Summons and Complaint was served approximately thirty days after its filing. The case was later dismissed for failure to prosecute one year after the filing of the case.

Statute of Limitations

Respondent failed to terminate representation of a client in a matter which lacked merit. Respondent also failed to advise this client that the statute of limitations was about to expire. [412]*412Respondent then failed to take action within the statute of limitations.

Tennessee Action

Respondent represented a client involved in a motor vehicle accident in Tennessee. Respondent failed to file suit or associate a Tennessee lawyer to file suit, within the statute of limitations.

Failure to Appear

Respondent represented another client involved in a motor vehicle accident which occurred on April 10, 1994. Respondent filed suit in Newberry County on April 10, 1997. Opposing counsel filed a Motion to Dismiss the action, arguing that the statute of limitations had run on the action. Respondent did not appear at the hearing on the Motion to Dismiss. • The court was unable to contact respondent at the time of the hearing, despite having given him proper notice of the hearing. Respondent went on vacation at the time of the hearing, but he failed to protect his absence by notifying the court or the opposing party. The court issued an order allowing respondent ten additional days to prove that the statute of limitations had not expired. Respondent did not respond to the court. The client’s case was dismissed with prejudice.

Settlement Funds Matter

Respondent represented a client' in a matter which was settled for $15,000. Prior to receiving the money, respondent allegedly loaned the client $10,000 without reducing the transaction to writing or suggesting that the client consult independent counsel. He failed to have the client sign a release in this matter. Respondent has no documentation to support his assertion that he loaned the client the funds.

A check was later issued which was payable to the client and respondent. The draft was endorsed and negotiated. None of the funds were deposited into the client escrow account at the Firm or at any other firm’s escrow account. On June 30,, 1998, the entire $15,000 was deposited into a passbook savings account at First Federal Bank, in the name of another client or “W. Vandy Huskey, her Attorney.” This [413]*413was not a trust or escrow account, and the other client named on the passbook savings account was unrelated to the client awarded the $15,000.

With the $15,000 in his personal account, respondent considered $10,000 of the funds to be reimbursement for the loan to the client. He later disbursed $2,000 to the client and converted the remaining funds to his personal use. Respondent failed to reduce that transaction to writing, failed to suggest that the client consult independent counsel about the transaction, and has no written documentation to support his claim that the funds were disbursed in that manner.

On July 15, 1998, respondent transferred $12,000 from the passbook savings account to a joint checking account he held with his wife. Respondent purchased an automobile with those funds. The balance in the joint account held with petitioner’s wife remained below $12,000 until December 31, 1998, when a cash deposit occurred unrelated to this case.

Passbook Account Matters

Respondent represented two clients injured in a motor vehicle accident which occurred in 1994. Respondent settled their cases independent of the Firm and without notice to the Firm. Respondent cannot locate these clients files nor any records of the financial transactions related to the cases.

Respondent received a settlement check for the first client for $250,001. He deposited those funds into the passbook savings account he had opened jointly in the client’s name and his name at First Federal Bank, not in the Firm escrow account or any other trust account. Respondent entered several false entries on the disbursement sheet. He disbursed a fee of $73,000 to “your firm for legal services.” The disbursement sheet also showed disbursements to the Firm of $295 for legal expenses and $243.53 for records. None of these funds went to the Firm.

Respondent also indicated on the disbursement sheet that $12,677.60 was “to be held in trust.” Of those funds, respondent disbursed only $1,215.12 to the client and converted the remainder to his own use. Respondent failed to answer two letters from Cost Recovery Systems, Inc., seeking reimburse[414]*414ment to a medical benefits plan from the proceeds of monies recovered from third parties.

Respondent settled the second client’s case for $90,000. He handled her case similar to the first client, using a passbook system account and taking a fee from that account independent and outside of the Firm.

Failure to Cooperate with Investigation

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Related

Trimble v. State
618 S.E.2d 163 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2005)
In re Gibbs
562 S.E.2d 639 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
537 S.E.2d 276, 342 S.C. 409, 2000 S.C. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-huskey-sc-2000.