In re Kazlow

483 A.2d 397, 98 N.J. 9, 1984 N.J. LEXIS 3246
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 9, 1984
StatusPublished

This text of 483 A.2d 397 (In re Kazlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Kazlow, 483 A.2d 397, 98 N.J. 9, 1984 N.J. LEXIS 3246 (N.J. 1984).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This disciplinary proceeding against respondent, Theodore J. Kazlow, arises out of two complaints filed by the District I Ethics Committee (Committee), identified as the Karwick and Crandley matters.

In the Crandley matter, the Committee found that respondent had committed unethical conduct by misrepresenting himself as a fully licensed attorney in violation of R. 1:21-3. The Disciplinary Review Board (DRB) found that the record not only supported the Committee’s finding, but found further that respondent had misrepresented the status of an action to a client in violation of DR 1-102(A)(4) and that respondent’s conduct adversely reflected on his fitness to practice law in violation of DR 1-102(A)(6).

The Karwick matter centered on respondent’s investment of his client’s funds in Compcord, Inc. and on the use of his client’s funds to operate his law office. The Committee found that [11]*11respondent had been “grossly negligent,” but stopped short of finding that respondent had intentionally misappropriated his client’s funds.

The DRB, however, found that the facts “compel the conclusion that respondent, when incorporating Compcord, Inc., saw an opportunity to make a quick profit for himself, and utilized his client’s money to take advantage of that opportunity.” Implicit in that finding is the conclusion that respondent intentionally misappropriated his client’s funds.

As found by the DRB, the relevant facts are:

I. Karwick Matter
In April of 1981, the respondent was retained by Loretta J. Karwick to represent her at settlement on the sale of her home. Mrs. Karwick was a neighbor of the respondent and his mother. She became depressed following tjhe death of her husband, and was under psychiatric care and taking medication for depression when she retained the respondent. Since she intended to undergo immediate voluntary treatment and would not be available for the scheduled settlement, she executed what she recalled to be a blank Power of Attorney in favor of the respondent. She testified that she understood that the respondent would attend the closing for her and would take possession of the net proceeds of the estate. Respondent was then to forward between $5,000 and $10,000 to Mrs. Karwick, and was to invest the balance in certificates of deposit. After reaching this agreement with respondent, Mrs. Karwick voluntarily entered the Seabrook Rehabilitation Center, a facility for the treatment of alcoholism. Mrs. Karwick remained there for five weeks. She then spent three months at a halfway house and thereafter moved to a ‘three-quarter’ home, where she remained until May of 1982.
Prior to entering Seabrook, and at the respondent’s suggestion, Mrs. Karwick gave her two checkbooks, one savings account passbook and a stock certificate to the respondent. The stock certificate was eventually returned to Mrs. Karwick. Excluding that stock certificate, the assets turned over to the respondent, including the funds gained from the sale of the house, totaled $78,080.01, according to the accountant who was retained by the Division of Ethics and Professional Services to investigate this matter.
Following receipt of the $62,394.88 obtained from the sale of the Karwick property, the respondent opened an account, entitled the Theodore James Kazlow Operating Account, at the Union Trust Company in Wildwood, New Jersey and deposited those monies in this account on April 30, 1981. Thereafter, on May 16, 1981, the respondent withdrew $50,000 and purchased a Certificate of Deposit for that amount in the name of Loretta Karwick. c/o Theodore
J. Kazlow at Union Trust Company. The certificate has a November 16, 1981 maturity date. The 1981 Statement of Earnings marked as Exhibit J-l in evidence at the ethics hearing shows that the Certificate of Deposit earned [12]*12$942.41 in 1981 but that a penalty of $1,999.90 was assessed due to early close out. Respondent claimed to have thereafter invested the $50,000 in a company known as Compcord, Inc., although he produced no supporting documentation.
At no time did Mrs. Karwiek authorize this ‘investment’. Indeed, she was unaware of respondent’s actions for some time and was unable to obtain an accounting from him.
The accountant’s report further indicates that, although respondent claimed administration fees of $1300 and expenditures on behalf of Mrs. Karwiek in the amount of at least $8,000, a total of $2,693.96 from the Karwiek funds deposited in respondent’s operating account could not be accounted for by the accountant. Additionally, although a total of 46 checks were written by respondent for the operation of his law practice, he deposited only $570 of his own money in the ‘operating account’ during this time. The accountant further determined that respondent maintained no other accounts for his law practice.
As to Mrs. Karwick’s remaining savings and checking accounts turned over to the respondent, the accountant found further problems. No activity was discovered with regard to First People’s Bank Checking Account Number 4-507-885 which contained $851.30 as of July 15, 1981. First People’s Bank Savings Account Number 1038-113312 contained $2,958.65 on July 25, 1981 when closed by the respondent. The respondent stated that $58.65 was given to Mrs. Karwiek, and $2900 was given to the principals of Compcord as additional investment. No record of this investment was produced. The remaining checking account was held with First National State Bank of South Jersey, Account Number 296-350-7. That account had a balance of $11,911.01 in May 1981 when respondent gained control. By September 9, that account contained $6.16. The checks which issued on this account were written to either Loretta Karwiek, cash, or Theodore Kazlow, and were endorsed ‘Loretta Karwiek by Theodore Kazlow.’
While the respondent contended that he invested a total of $65,175 in Compcord, Inc., this was never verified by any documentation. That corporation is no longer solvent. The respondent alleged to the accountant that he was attempting to shelter Mrs. Karwick’s money from a suit for specific performance against her, which arose from her failure to follow through on a contract for the purchase of a home in Burlington County. However, respondent’s explanation is inconsistent with the answer filed by him in that action on Mrs. Karwick’s behalf. There, he stated that Mrs. Karwiek was incompetent at the time the contract was entered into. Significantly, the contract to purchase the Burlington County home was entered into prior to the time she signed the Power of Attorney.
Following hearing on the matter, the District I Ethics Committee found as follows:
‘ 1. Respondent failed to maintain a trust account and failed to maintain the required bookkeeping records in accordance with R. 1:21-6.
2. The respondent commingled the funds generated by his law practice with those funds belonging to the complainant.
[13]*133. The respondent failed to accede to the complainant’s reasonable request for an accounting of funds belonging to her and further failed to segregate those funds and to pay them to the complainant upon her request.
4.

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In Re Wilson
409 A.2d 1153 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
483 A.2d 397, 98 N.J. 9, 1984 N.J. LEXIS 3246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kazlow-nj-1984.