In re Klemp

418 P.3d 733, 363 Or. 62
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2018
DocketOSB 141-28, 15-01; SC S064893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 418 P.3d 733 (In re Klemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Klemp, 418 P.3d 733, 363 Or. 62 (Or. 2018).

Opinion

PER CURIAM

**63In two separate lawyer discipline matters, the Oregon State Bar charged respondent with violating various Rules of Professional Conduct (RPCs) in her dealings with two different clients, Boyce and Andrach. In the first matter, the Bar alleged that respondent failed to protect Boyce's interests upon terminating her representation of Boyce, RCP 1.16(d), by refusing to surrender documents belonging to the client until her fees were paid. In the second matter, the Bar alleged that, in taking certain actions, respondent assisted Andrach in diverting money from his incapacitated wife's trust account, thereby violating RPC 1.2(c) (assisting client in conduct the lawyer knows to be illegal or fraudulent); RPC 4.1(b) (failing to disclose a material fact when disclosure is necessary to avoid assisting an illegal or fraudulent act by a client; and RPC 8.4(a)(3) (engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation). The Bar also alleged that, in her efforts to obtain the wife's signature on a document giving Andrach power of attorney to manage the wife's financial affairs, respondent violated RCP 4.3 (failing to correct unrepresented person's misunderstanding about a lawyer's role in a matter).

After hearing evidence and argument on the two matters, the trial panel issued a divided decision. A two-member majority concluded that respondent had violated RPC 1.16(d), 1.2(c), 4.3, and 8.4(a)(3), and that the appropriate sanction was disbarment. The single dissenting member opined that the Bar had failed to prove any of the charges and that the complaint should be dismissed. On de novo review, we conclude that the Bar proved a violation of RPC 4.3 (failing to correct unrepresented person's misunderstanding about lawyer's role in a matter) but failed to prove the other charged violations by the requisite clear and convincing evidence standard. We further conclude that the appropriate sanction for the violation of RPC 4.3 is a public reprimand.

I. FACTUAL OVERVIEW

We consider and decide the two matters separately, but before we do so, we provide some general facts that are relevant to both matters. In our analysis of each matter, we **64discuss those facts and additional facts that we provide at that juncture.

In June 2012, respondent was working for a Bend-area law firm, Bryant, Emerson and Fitch, when a local man, Andrach, sought help from the firm in defending a lawsuit against him and his wife, Wells. The lawsuit had been brought by Exchange Properties, which owned a building that Wells and Andrach had leased for Wells's antique business, and alleged that Wells and Andrach breached their lease. At some point after that lawsuit was filed, Wells was charged with and ultimately convicted of a number of serious crimes in connection with a drunk driving incident, and she absconded to California before she could be sentenced for those crimes. Andrach thus was left to deal with the Exchange Properties litigation on his own.

Wells's absence also left Andrach to manage his wife's self-settled trust, the Wells Trust, which had been the couple's primary source of income over the years of their marriage. Wells was the sole beneficiary of the trust, which owned and generated income from rental properties. Although Wells also was the trustee of the trust, Andrach was identified in the trust documents as her successor trustee: If Wells herself was unable to serve as trustee, Andrach was supposed to *736step in and manage the trust, but solely for Wells's benefit. Other than that eventuality, Andrach had no legal rights or involvement in Wells's money or property; Wells maintained separate bank and credit accounts, and a prenuptial agreement provided that any property owned or acquired by Wells would remain hers alone.1 However, in May 2012, before absconding to California, Wells had signed a power of attorney in favor of Andrach, and he used that power of attorney to pay the trust's expenses out of Wells's bank and credit accounts.

That is how matters stood in June 2012, when Andrach sought help from respondent's law firm in the Exchange Properties litigation. Respondent did not work on the Exchange Properties litigation, which was handled by **65one of the firm's named partners, Bryant.2 However, respondent did agree to represent Andrach in a separate matter-a petition to have his personal debts discharged in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.3

While Andrach's bankruptcy petition was pending, respondent left the Bryant, Emerson and Fitch firm and set up as a sole practitioner. Respondent shared office space with Boyce, a woman who previously had worked at Bryant, Emerson and Fitch as a paralegal.4 In the early days of that office-sharing arrangement, Boyce sought respondent's assistance in a legal matter relating to the care that her parents had received at a nursing home, and respondent agreed to look into the matter. Boyce gave respondent a binder of documents that she thought were relevant to the matter, and respondent and her legal assistant, Nichols, started to research possible claims.

In August 2012, Wells returned to Oregon and immediately instructed her bank that she would resume control of her accounts. Soon thereafter, however, she was arrested and jailed in connection with her criminal convictions. Perhaps believing that Wells's instructions to her bank had affected the power of attorney that Wells had granted him in May 2012, Andrach retained respondent to obtain a new power of attorney from Wells. After multiple visits to Wells at the jail, respondent succeeded in obtaining Wells's signature on a document, dated September 19, 2012, naming Andrach as her attorney-in-fact.

Wells had a long history of mental illness and substance abuse and, while in jail awaiting sentencing, had **66appeared to be incapable of making rational decisions about the Exchange Properties litigation or her own health. On September 27, 2012, Andrach filed a petition for appointment of a guardian for Wells. A circuit court judge granted that petition on November 1, 2012, declaring Wells to be incapacitated and naming a longtime friend of Wells, Defoe, as temporary guardian and guardian ad litem in the Exchange Properties litigation.5 Upon the court's declaration of Wells's incapacity, Andrach understood that he had succeeded to the role of trustee under the terms of the Wells Trust. Thus, as of November 1, 2012, Andrach was holding himself out as both the trustee of the Wells Trust and Wells's attorney-in-fact under the power-of-attorney document *737that he had obtained in September 2012.

In November 2012, Andrach and respondent became involved in an intimate relationship. By March 2013, respondent was pregnant with Andrach's child. On March 5, 2013, respondent filed articles of incorporation to form a company, TLA Properties LLC, identifying herself and Andrach as the only members. On April 1, 2013, TLA Properties purchased a house, which became respondent's and Andrach's shared residence. Andrach contributed $65,000 to the $80,000 down payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
418 P.3d 733, 363 Or. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-klemp-or-2018.