In Re Kline

11 A.3d 261, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 9, 2011 WL 102565
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 2011
Docket09-BG-1531
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 11 A.3d 261 (In Re Kline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kline, 11 A.3d 261, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 9, 2011 WL 102565 (D.C. 2011).

Opinion

FARRELL, Senior Judge:

Respondent Kline, in the Hearing Committee’s words, “committed a significant number of serious ethical violations” which the Board on Professional Responsibility (the Board) summarized as follows:

Respondent failed to make crucial litigation filings, and as a result, a default judgment was entered against his client, [The Ad Agency, Inc.]. Without telling his client about the default judgment, Respondent negotiated settlement terms with the adverse parties [collectively the Savino defendants] under which his client was to pay $50,000. He did not bring these terms to his client’s attention. Instead, he submitted a draft agreement that called for dismissal of his client’s $7,500 contract claim, but required no monetary payment from his client. When even those terms were not acceptable to his client, he forged his client’s signature on a settlement agreement containing the terms he had negotiated, paid the adverse parties $50,000 of his own funds[ 1 ] and presented the forged agreement to them as a valid settlement agreement.

Further, respondent commingled his personal funds with client funds in a trust account, and after he paid the $50,000 to the adverse parties by check from the trust account, the balance dropped to some $4,342.53 less than he was required to maintain for existing clients, resulting in misappropriation of client funds. For detailed reference, we attach to this opinion the findings of fact of the Hearing Committee and the Board.

On this evidence, the Hearing Committee and the Board determined that respondent had violated numerous Rules of Professional Conduct, chiefly 8.4(b) (com *263 mitting a criminal act, forgery, that reflected adversely on his fitness as a lawyer), 8.4(c) (conduct involving dishonesty or deceit), 1.15(a) (commingling and negligent misappropriation), and 1.3(b)(2) (intentionally prejudicing or damaging a client during the course of the professional relationship). The Board recommends that respondent be suspended from the practice of law in the District of Columbia for eighteen months, with nine months of the suspension stayed in favor of monitored probation with conditions, and without a requirement that he show fitness to be reinstated.

Respondent does not dispute the recommended sanction, but Bar Counsel argues, in his brief and reply brief, that respondent should be disbarred because (a) contrary to the Board’s conclusion, his misappropriation of client funds was reckless, not negligent, see generally In re Addams, 579 A.2d 190 (D.C.1990) (en banc); In re Anderson, 778 A.2d 330 (D.C.2001); and (b) in any case, the aggregate of his dishonest conduct — including the criminal act of forgery — compels that sanction. 2 We do not accept the Board’s recommendation of an eighteen-month suspension (much less the halving of it in favor of probation), because in our view that sanction takes inadequate account of the gravity of respondent’s misconduct, which included a criminal act, forgery, and multiple though related acts of dishonesty besides misappropriation. Instead, we will suspend respondent for three years in keeping with past sanctions ordered for analogously culpable behavior by an attorney. Like the Board, however, we do not believe that a showing of fitness is necessary before respondent may be reinstated.

I.

As neither respondent nor Bar Counsel seriously disputes the facts found by the Hearing Committee, and respondent takes no issue with any of the violations determined by the Board, the questions before us relate to the proper sanction. Our framework for consideration of that issue was summarized in In re Bettis, 855 A.2d 282 (D.C.2004):

This court’s Rules Governing the Bar state that the court ... shall adopt the recommended disposition of the Board unless to do so would foster a tendency toward inconsistent dispositions for comparable conduct or would otherwise be unwarranted. D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 9(g)(1). Generally speaking, if the Board’s recommended sanction falls within a wide range of acceptable outcomes, it will be adopted and imposed. However, “[w]hen the court disagrees with the Board as to the seriousness of the offense ... the Board’s recommendations are accordingly granted less weight.” In re Kennedy, 542 A.2d 1225, 1228 (D.C.1988) (citing In re Reback, 513 A.2d 226, 230-231 (D.C.1986) (en banc)). “In the final analysis, the responsibility to discipline lawyers is the court’s” ... In re Shillaire, 549 A.2d 336, 342 (D.C.1988); see also, e.g., In re Ryan, 670 A.2d 375, 380 (D.C.1996) (“the ultimate choice of a sanction rests with this court” (citation omitted)). We determine what the appropriate sanction should be by considering “the nature of the violation, aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the absence or presence of prior disciplinary sanctions, the moral fitness of the attorney, and the need to protect the legal profession, the courts, and the public.” In re Lenoir, 604 A.2d 14,15 (D.C.1992).

*264 Id. at 287 (citations and internal quotation marks partly omitted).

II.

In their briefs, Bar Counsel and respondent first dispute at length whether his misappropriation of client funds was reckless, requiring near-automatic disbarment under Addams, 579 A.2d at 191, or instead negligent, as the Board concluded. Bar Counsel makes only a feint at challenging the Hearing Committee’s finding that respondent in fact believed that the $50,000 he withdrew from the trust account belonged to him, in the form of earned legal fees he had neglected to remove from the account. Since that finding was based on an assessment of respondent’s credibility at the hearing, we accept it, see In re Micheel, 610 A.2d 231, 234 (D.C.1992), particularly because all but some $4,343 of the $50,000 was indeed (commingled) funds belonging to respondent.

Bar Counsel nonetheless argues that respondent’s handling of the trust account exhibited “a conscious indifference to the consequences of his behavior for the security of [unearned] funds,” Anderson, 778 A.2d at 339, in the first instance because, when the records of the account were destroyed by a crash of his laptop computer in late February or early March of 2005 (a fact found by the Hearing Committee and not disputed), respondent had no back-up record allocating the funds in the account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 A.3d 261, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 9, 2011 WL 102565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kline-dc-2011.