In Re Interest on Trust Accounts, Etc.

356 So. 2d 799
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 16, 1978
Docket51182
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 356 So. 2d 799 (In Re Interest on Trust Accounts, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Interest on Trust Accounts, Etc., 356 So. 2d 799 (Fla. 1978).

Opinion

356 So.2d 799 (1978)

In re INTEREST ON TRUST ACCOUNTS, A PETITION OF THE FLORIDA BAR to Amend the Code of Professional Responsibility and the Rules Governing the Practice of Law.

No. 51182.

Supreme Court of Florida.

March 16, 1978.

Russell Troutman, President of The Florida Bar, Winter Park, William E. Sherman, Chairman of The Florida Bar Committee, DeLand, Leonard H. Gilbert, Chairman of The Florida Bar Integration Rule and By-law Committee, Tampa, and Norman A. Faulkner, Staff Counsel, Tallahassee, for The Florida Bar, for petitioner.

Response to Petition by:

Henry P. Trawick, Jr., Sarasota, Russell E. Carlisle, Fort Lauderdale, and Robert L. Travis, Jr., Tallahassee, for Florida Legal Services, Inc., amicus curiae.

Earle W. Peterson, Jr. of McCune, Hiaasen, Crum, Ferris & Gardner, Fort Lauderdale, C. Gary Williams of Ausley, McMullen, McGehee, Carothers & Proctor, Tallahassee, for Florida Bankers Association, amicus curiae.

James H. Gilbert, Jr. of English, McCaughan & O'Bryan, Fort Lauderdale, and Robert M. Curtis of Saunders, Curtis, Ginestra & Gore, Fort Lauderdale.

ENGLAND, Justice.

The Board of Governors of The Florida Bar, with the concurrence of the Board of Directors of the Florida Bar Foundation, Inc., has petitioned this Court requesting that we amend the rules governing the practice of law in Florida to authorize attorneys to invest trust funds held for clients in order to generate investment income for the benefit of public interest programs related to the legal profession.[1] So far as we *800 can determine, this request is the first of its kind in the United States, although the use of clients' trust funds in the manner proposed has found acceptance in a number of other English-speaking jurisdictions.

We approve the Board's concept of authorizing interest-bearing trust accounts, under procedures and for uses more fully developed below, and we commend the Bar for proposing this significant and innovative program to improve the administration of justice and to expand the capabilities for its delivery.

I

Beginning in 1971, the organized bar of Florida began a study of the possible use of interest on clients' trust funds for public programs designed to improve the administration of justice. Extensive data was gathered from jurisdictions which have authorized like procedures, and periodic reports were developed both as to the feasibility and desirability of a proposal of this type in Florida. Activity on this project accelerated in 1976, and under the guidance of Bar president Ed Atkins, special committee chairman William Sherman, Bar Foundation president Burton Young, and Foundation special committee chairman Julian Clarkson, specific recommendations took shape. In late 1976, the governing boards of the Bar and the Foundation formally approved the concept of allowing interest-bearing trust accounts, after which specific implementing amendments to the Integration Rule, to the by-laws to the Rule, and to the Code of Professional Responsibility were presented to the Court.

II

The history of restrictions on the use of clients' trust funds is highly relevant to our decision today, as is the experience of other countries in authorizing their use. As regards the former, regulation of attorney trust accounts in Florida dates back to an 1828 act of the Legislative Council of the Territory of Florida.[2] In 1936 this Court adopted the Canons of Professional Ethics of the American Bar Association, incorporating the regulation of attorney trust accounts into the Court's rules.[3] After the regulatory structure of lawyers became formalized by integration of the bar,[4] the control of clients' funds remained subject to scrutiny under Rule XI, Section 2 of the Integration Rule.[5] In 1970 the Canons gave way to the present Code of Professional Responsibility,[6] which amplified the treatment of clients' trust funds through Disciplinary Rule 9-102.

The thrust of these several regulatory measures, as well as advisory opinions on the subject offered by ethics committees of the American Bar Association and The Florida Bar,[7] was to assure that lawyers, as *801 "trustees",[8] would neither misuse clients' funds nor impede their prompt delivery to the client on demand. Since general ethical proscriptions against misuse have not always been successful, we augmented those protections in 1966 by the creation of a Clients' Security Fund designed to compensate clients who might lose money held in trust for them by Florida attorneys.[9]

As the rules stand today, clients' funds held by an attorney must be segregated into a clearly labeled "trust account" unless they are received for the payment of fees or for the reimbursement of costs for services already rendered.[10] There is no inhibition, however, against an investment of clients' funds in a special trust account pursuant to the provisions of a specific trust document.[11] Clients' funds are not subject to counterclaim or set-off for attorney's fees,[12] and they must be available for prompt delivery to the client upon request.[13]

To guarantee compliance with these mandates, we recently amended trust accounting procedures to require attorneys in Florida to maintain strict records of all trust account transactions and to preserve these records for at least six years,[14] to reconcile trust account balances on a quarterly basis,[15] and to furnish to the Bar an annual certificate of compliance with trust accounting procedures.[16] A failure to comply with any of these requirements provides cause for the Bar to conduct an audit at the attorney's expense,[17] and any evidence of impropriety in the management of trust funds may, of course, lead to the initiation of disciplinary proceedings.

III

Absent any personal financial incentive to make clients' funds productive, and faced with the complex and expensive accounting problems inherent both in the investment of these funds and in the apportionment of their earnings among individual clients, attorneys have typically deposited clients' funds in non-interest-bearing commercial bank checking accounts.[18] Most attempts to devise a method whereby funds could be deposited in an interest-bearing account and, at the same time, be continuously available for prompt delivery to a client upon request, have run afoul of federal and state banking regulations which historically have barred the payment of any interest on *802 funds held in commercial bank checking accounts or the immediate withdrawal of funds held in savings accounts.[19] As a result of these forces, banks have been the beneficiaries of a system which requires substantial sums of interest-free money to be deposited with them for significant periods of time.[20]

IV

In several significant ways, recent changes and proposed modifications in U.S. banking practices, tracking earlier developments in other English-speaking jurisdictions, have eroded the various practical and legal problems which to date have barred the generation of earnings on attorney trust accounts.

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Ago
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356 So. 2d 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-interest-on-trust-accounts-etc-fla-1978.