In Re Quinn

738 N.E.2d 678, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 1110, 2000 WL 1737778
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 2000
Docket49S00-9902-DI-129
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 738 N.E.2d 678 (In Re Quinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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 Quinn, 738 N.E.2d 678, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 1110, 2000 WL 1737778 (Ind. 2000).

Opinion

DISCIPLINARY ACTION

Per Curiam

Today we find that the respondent, James P. Quinn, should be suspended from the practice of law for commingling his personal funds with those of his clients and allowing the balance in his client trust account to fall below an amount sufficient to satisfy outstanding obligations of his clients.

This attorney disciplinary matter has come before this Court for final resolution upon the hearing officer’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. The hearing officer concluded that the respondent engaged in misconduct as charged. The respondent, pursuant to Ind. Admission and Discipline Rule 23(15), has petitioned this Court for review of the hearing officer’s findings and conclusions. Where the hearing officer’s report is challenged, our review of the case is de novo in nature, and involves a review of the entire record presented. Matter of McCord, 722 N.E.2d 820 (Ind.2000).

Within the review framework described above, we now find that the respondent collected a $25,000 settlement on behalf of a client. Pursuant to a written contingency fee agreement with his client, the respondent was entitled to a $10,000 fee. The final settlement statement reflected that another $12,371 was to go to pay medical providers, $20 was to go to the respondent for expenses, and the remaining $2,609 to the client. On October 25, 1996, the respondent deposited the $25,000 check into his client trust account, then issued to his client a check drawn on the account for $2,609. Thereafter, the respondent failed to issue a check payable to himself for his fee.

Between October 1996 and March 1997, the respondent wrote several checks on the account for personal and business obligations unrelated to the client’s case, including a check for $1,915.69 to American Express and a check for $14,100 to a local automobile dealership. By February 24, 1997, the balance had fallen below $12,-371 — the amount needed to satisfy obligations to the client’s medical creditors. By March 24,1997, it had fallen to $265.79.

By August 1997, the client, receiving inquiries from his medical providers about the unpaid medical bills, attempted unsuccessfully to contact the respondent to learn the status of the situation. When he did finally speak to the respondent, the respondent failed to provide meaningful information.

During this time, the respondent maintained a second trust account at another bank. At hearing of this disciplinary complaint, the respondent testified that he had sufficient funds in that account to cover the obligations attendant to his client whenever the first trust account contained insufficient funds. However, hearing officer concluded and we so find that the respondent failed to present any evidence that the funds held in the second account were in any way connected with his client’s settlement and, therefore, that any funds contained in the second account on or before March 24, 1997, could not be considered when examining his safekeeping of his client’s settlement proceeds. The respondent contends that he ceased using the first account as a trust account in February of 1997, and instead thereafter established the second account as his attorney trust account. The record supports this assertion. However, the record also reveals that the respondent never directly transferred the $12,371 he was holding for the client and the medical providers from the first to the second account. He claimed that he effectively accomplished *680 this transfer by leaving earned attorney fees in the first account instead of withdrawing them, but never produced an accounting to support that assertion.

It is clear that by June 12, 1997, the respondent had established the second account as his sole attorney trust account. Between June 12 and August 20, 1997, the second account contained less than $12,371 (an amount necessary to satisfy obligations to the client, the client’s medical providers, and obligations to certain other clients) on 68 of the 70 days during this period. Additionally, the combined balance of the accounts was insufficient to cover obligations to the clients and the medical providers on 29 of those 70 days. The respondent also drew a check for a personal obligation on the second account during this period.

On October 27, 1997, the respondent provided a response to the client’s grievance to the Disciplinary Commission, stating therein that, “[tjhere is still held in escrow the amount of $9,836 that was withheld for the [medical providers], according to their bills ...” (Emphasis supplied). The respondent paid outstanding bills of the medical providers on September 9 and November 21,1997.

In his petition for review of the hearing office’s report, the respondent asserts that he believed that as long as he retained money in his trust accounts sufficient to pay'client and third party obligations, he was permitted to use his portion of the recovery in the trust accounts directly to meet personal and business obligations. The respondent contends that he maintained a general idea of what money out of the trust accounts was owed, but did not keep a specific or daily record, and that he always believed he had sufficient funds to cover client and third party obligations. In early 1997, the respondent learned of this Court’s standards for trust account management and at that time progressively and gradually used the second account as a client trust depository and began using the first account as an operating account. The respondent asserts: “Gradually, by not withdrawing his fee portion from recovery amounts deposited in [the first account], and employing the money in the [first account] for personal and business expenses, the Respondent, in effect, transferred obligated trust funds from the [first account] to the [second account].” Although the respondent’s statements may explain why his unauthorized use of client funds occurred, they do nothing to dissuade us from finding that the violations took place. The fact remains that while the first account was the respondent’s client trust account, the balance in that account, during relevant times, was consistently below an amount necessary to satisfy the obligations of his client’s third party medical providers. After the second account became his sole trust account, on numerous occasions it also contained insufficient funds to satisfy those obligations, and, in fact, the accounts’ combined balances on several occasions contained insufficient funds. Checks for the respondent’s personal obligations were drawn on each account during the times the respondent claimed each was his sole trust account. The fact that, in the end, no client or third party was permanently deprived of funds is good fortune, but not controlling as to whether the respondent engaged in misconduct.

In Indiana, conversion consists of the knowing or intentional exertion of unauthorized control over the property of another. IC 35-43-4-3. 1 The respondent’s bank statements reflecting account balances for the end of June 1997 showed that each account’s balance (as well as the accounts’ combined balances) was insufficient to cover obligations to clients and third parties. The respondent testified that he audited the sufficiency of his bank accounts by examining the monthly ac *681 count statements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
738 N.E.2d 678, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 1110, 2000 WL 1737778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-quinn-ind-2000.