In Re Okpalaeke

648 S.E.2d 593, 374 S.C. 186, 2007 S.C. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 23, 2007
Docket26361
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 648 S.E.2d 593 (In Re Okpalaeke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Okpalaeke, 648 S.E.2d 593, 374 S.C. 186, 2007 S.C. LEXIS 282 (S.C. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an attorney disciplinary matter. The Office of Disciplinary Counsel (“ODC”) brought formal charges against Respondent Cletus K. Okpalaeke based upon several alleged acts of misconduct. The panel of the Commission on Lawyer Conduct (“the Panel”) found that Respondent committed numerous acts of misconduct and recommended that Respondent be disbarred from the practice of law. Neither ODC nor Respondent, who is in default, objected to the Panel’s findings or recommendation. We accept the Panel’s report, and we hereby disbar Respondent from the practice of law.

Factual/Procedural Background

In 2005, ODC formally charged Respondent with multiple ethical violations arising out of several otherwise unrelated events. The record indicates that despite attempted service by certified mail and by agents of,the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, Respondent was never served with these formal charges. The record also indicates that Respondent has not filed an answer to these charges. In early 2006, upon request from ODC, the Panel ordered that Respondent be held in default. 1

The formal charges in this matter describe approximately nine different instances of misconduct. Briefly summarized, these instances include:

A. The Drivers’ License and Office Management Matters

Respondent attended law school in Minnesota and graduated in 1998. Respondent moved to South Carolina in 1996, and *189 Respondent was sworn in to the practice of law in South Carolina July 23, 1997. 2 When Respondent moved to South Carolina, he had a valid Minnesota drivers’ license. Respondent did not obtain a South Carolina drivers’ license after his relocation. Instead, Respondent drove using his Minnesota license until it expired. Respondent then drove without a valid license until he was arrested in 1999 for driving under the influence of alcohol and for driving without a valid license. Respondent pled guilty to these charges.

Respondent’s law office was a solo practice, and Respondent rented office space from a friend, Doe. Respondent allowed Doe, a non-lawyer, to manage major aspects of Respondent’s law practice. Respondent gave Doe signatory authority on Respondent’s operating and trust accounts, and Respondent also gave Doe supervisory authority over the office while Respondent was out of the country.

According to ODC, Respondent failed to deposit client funds into his trust account and commingled his funds with client funds when he processed settlements through his operating account. Respondent also allowed Doe to handle client settlements without the supervision of an attorney and Respondent disbursed client settlement funds from his operating account in the form of checks made payable to “cash.” According to ODC, eleven checks drawn on Respondent’s operating/trust account were returned for insufficient funds during a six month period in 2000. During that same period, ODC alleged that the balance in this account dropped below zero thirty-four times.

B. The Court Reporter Matter

Respondent ordered copies of a deposition transcript and failed to pay the court reporter who prepared the transcript. When the court reporter attempted to collect on the bill from Respondent, Respondent asserted that it was his client’s obligation to pay the bill. Eventually, the court reporter sought assistance from the presiding judge, who wrote Respondent *190 two letters insisting that Respondent pay the bill. Although Respondent ultimately settled his client’s case for an amount that would have covered the bill, the client reneged on the settlement and refused to sign the release. Respondent never paid the bill, and the bill now totals $4,219.80.

C. The Jury Questionnaire Matter

In connection -with the same lawsuit, Respondent ordered a copy of a jury questionnaire packet. The invoice provided to Respondent requested payment of $344.06. Respondent did not pay this bill and instead asked his client to do so. The client did not pay the bill, however, and the bill allegedly remains unpaid.

D. The Client A Matter

Respondent received a call from a non-lawyer assistant who worked for an attorney who had been suspended from the practice of law. The assistant asked whether Respondent would take over some of the suspended attorney’s cases. After speaking with the suspended attorney, Respondent agreed to review some of the files. One of these files pertained to an automobile collision claim for Client A.

According to ODC, Client A, a resident of New York, had a potential personal injury claim and Client A’s mother had consulted the suspended attorney about pursuing this claim. Respondent reviewed this file, contacted Client A’s mother, and agreed with the mother that Respondent would send letters of protection to Client A’s medical providers. In these letters, Respondent indicated that Client A had retained Respondent’s firm to represent him in connection with the accident. According to ODC, these representations were false because Respondent had no intention of representing Client A unless the at-fault party was willing to pay a settlement in the matter.

Respondent also allegedly agreed with Client A’s mother that he would send a “scare letter” to the at-fault party. In the letter, Respondent falsely indicated that he had been retained by Client A and Respondent accused the at-fault party of perjuring himself in traffic court. Respondent demanded payment of Client A’s claim and Respondent asserted that if the party did not settle the case within two weeks, *191 Respondent would contact the local judge and prosecutor for the purpose of pursuing perjury charges. Respondent received no response and took no further action.

E. The Property Dispute Matter

A party involved in a dispute over the purchase of real property retained Respondent to represent him in the dispute. On his client’s behalf, Respondent sent a letter to the adverse party in the dispute informing the party of Respondent’s representation. The letter additionally accused the adverse party of extortion and grand larceny. Furthermore, the letter indicated that Respondent had contacted the solicitor’s office, who had in turn been in contact with the sheriff and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division about the matter. The letter stated that Respondent intended to file a civil action based on the dispute and the letter indicated that the solicitor was going to handle the criminal case. Respondent further asserted in the letter that he believed the adverse party “would likely serve prison time” as a result of his conduct.

According to ODC, Respondent’s representations that he had been in contact with the solicitor’s office and with law enforcement were false. In response to this letter, the adverse party offered to refund Respondent’s client’s money in exchange for a release. Seeking additional information, Respondent replied to this offer and requested a response from the adverse party within three days.

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Related

In Re Hursey
719 S.E.2d 670 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2011)
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In Re Jacobsen
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
648 S.E.2d 593, 374 S.C. 186, 2007 S.C. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-okpalaeke-sc-2007.