In Re Mitrano

952 A.2d 901, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 297, 2008 WL 2755102
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 2008
Docket07-BG-656
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 952 A.2d 901 (In Re Mitrano) 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 Mitrano, 952 A.2d 901, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 297, 2008 WL 2755102 (D.C. 2008).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge, Retired:

This original disciplinary matter is before us on the recommendation of the Board on Professional Responsibility to disbar respondent (hereafter Mitrano) and require restitution as a condition of reinstatement. The recommendation is based on findings of fact by a Hearing Committee, “adopted ... with minor revisions” by the Board, and the conclusions of both the Hearing Committee and the Board that Mitrano engaged in misconduct consisting of the following violations of the District of Columbia Rules of Professional Conduct: 8.4(b) (commission of “criminal act,” here theft); 8.4(c) (dishonesty); 1.15(a) (misappropriation); 1.15(b) (failure to notify client of receipt of funds); 1.15(c) (failure to segregate funds); 1.17(a) (failure to deposit funds in separate account); and 1.4(a) (failure to inform client). Underlying all of the violations is the Board’s determination that Mitrano took and spent for his own purposes the entirety of a January 8, 1998 check for $241,886.59 issued by the District of Columbia government to his client, Dano Resource Recov *905 ery, Inc. (Dano), knowing that the funds— or at least the major part of the funds— did not belong to him.

Like the Board, this court must accept subsidiary findings of fact by the Hearing Committee that are supported by substantial evidence in the record viewed as a whole. See D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 9(g); In re Micheel, 610 A.2d 231, 234 (D.C.1992). At the same time, the Board and the court review de novo the Hearing Committee’s determination of “ ‘ultimate facts’[,] which are really conclusions of law.” Id. (citation omitted); see also In re Appler, 669 A.2d 731, 738 (D.C.1995). Here, we agree with the Board that the Hearing Committee’s findings of fact have substantial, even strong, support in the record as a whole. Moreover, we agree with the Board’s legal conclusions and accept its recommendation of disbarment as required by our decisions. See, e.g., In re Addams, 579 A.2d 190, 191 (D.C.1990) (en banc). We adopt as our own the Board’s Report, appended hereto, and supplement it only with the following brief analysis.

Before the Board and the court, Mitra-no’s ultimate position has been that he honestly believed he was entitled to treat the $241,336.59 as his own because Michael J. Byorick, an officer of Dano, had endorsed the check over to him as legal fees for his representation of Dano in litigation with the District of Columbia. 1 Thus, as to the most serious violation found (Rule 8.4(b): the “criminal act” of theft), Mitra-no’s defense is essentially that he had a “claim of right” to the funds. See CRIMINAL JURY INSTRUCTIONS POR THE DISTRICT OF Columbia, No. 5.03 (2007 ed.); Simmons v. United States, 554 A.2d 1167, 1169 (D.C.1989). If Mitrano held a “good faith belief,” Instr. No. 5.03, that he was entitled to the proceeds of the check, then he could not be found to have committed the crime of theft. See, e.g., Richardson v. United States, 131 U.S.App. D.C. 168, 170, 403 F.2d 574, 576 (1968) (“If the jury finds that the defendant believed himself entitled to the money, it cannot properly find that he had the requisite specific intent for [the larceny-based crime].”)

That issue initially troubled us because of language in the Board’s Report suggesting that its conclusion that Mitrano “stole the vast majority of the proceeds of the Dano check” (hence violated Rule 8.4(b)) may have rested in turn on a finding that it was “unreasonable for [him] to rely on the ... endorsement by Mr. Byorick” (emphasis added) — when an unreasonable, but honestly held, belief would preclude the finding of theft. See id. (citing Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 72 S.Ct. 240, 96 L.Ed. 288 (1952), for the principle that “[a]n unfounded but genuine belief that the property taken had been abandoned negatives specific intent”). Reading the Board’s Report as a whole, however, we are convinced that its — and the Hearing Committee’s — finding of theft rested on the determination that Mitrano did not in fact believe he was entitled to all, or even the majority, of the proceeds of the check. The Committee’s Report is replete with findings, for example, that Mitrano “knew that the amount of the check greatly exceeded the fees to which [his] retainer agreement [with Dano] entitled him and knew ... that others had an interest in the proceeds of the check” (emphasis added). The Board’s conclusion that he “wrongfully took from others ... all the proceeds of the Dano check ... intend[ing] to deprive [them] of their right to that property and appropriated that property,” is an unequiv *906 ocal determination that he did not believe in good faith — genuinely or honestly — that he was entitled to all of the funds. 2

Mitrano challenges the Board’s repeated references to “others [besides Dano who] had an interest in the proceeds,” including Williams Industries, which had loaned Dano funds during the litigation to continue its operations, and Frank Williams, Jr., President of both Dano and Williams Industries. Mitrano argues that he could not have wrongly taken — either by theft or misappropriation — funds of these “others” without clear and convincing evidence that they owned the check proceeds or had a “just claim” to them. See In re Bailey, 883 A.2d 106, 116-17 (D.C.2005) (distinguishing claims of a client from “third party claims”). But, regardless of the claim that others such as Williams Industries had to the money — whether by de facto ownership of Dano or “creditor” status that remained unproven — the record amply confirms that Dano itself owned the proceeds. 3 Although functionally insolvent at the time the check was issued, Dano still existed as a legal entity, with Frank Williams, Jr. as its president. Thus, the Board correctly states, “at the time [Mitra-no] deposited the check,” Dano “had a sufficient interest in the proceeds of the check to preclude [his] unilateral action to cash the check and retain the proceeds.”

We deal, lastly, with Mitrano’s claim that Bar Counsel leveled an unsupported charge of forgery against him, which (besides unfairly stigmatizing him) had the effect of misleading him in the preparation of his defense to the charges ultimately proven. Bar Counsel’s Specification of Charges did not use the word forgery, and identified the criminal act being charged under Rule 8.4(b) as “theft.” Nevertheless, paragraph 14 asserted that Mitrano had “endorsed the check” from the District in the name of “Michael J. Byorick, Pres,” the implication being that he had done so falsely. On the basis of expert handwriting analysis that Mitrano adduced at the hearing, the Hearing Committee and the Board found that there was not “clear and convincing evidence ...

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Bluebook (online)
952 A.2d 901, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 297, 2008 WL 2755102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mitrano-dc-2008.