In Re Romansky

825 A.2d 311, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 305, 2003 WL 21373948
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 2003
Docket99-BG-1626
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 825 A.2d 311 (In Re Romansky) 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 Romansky, 825 A.2d 311, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 305, 2003 WL 21373948 (D.C. 2003).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Associate Judge:

The Board on Professional Responsibility (“Board”) concluded that respondent, Michael A. Romansky, acted dishonestly in violation of Rule 8.4(c) of the Rules of Professional Conduct when he: 1) added hours to the fee bills of two Firm clients in order to “premium bill” contrary to the provisions of their existing fee agreements that only hours actually worked would be billed and without notifying the clients of the premium billing and 2) authored, backdated and used, without the client’s approval, a purported letter from the client. For these violations, the Board recommended that Romansky be suspended from the practice of law for thirty days. Before this court, Romansky contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the Board’s finding that he possessed the requisite dishonest intent to commit a violation of Rule 8.4(c). Romansky also argues that the recommended sanction is too harsh. Bar Counsel takes exception to the Board’s finding that Romansky’s handling of a third account, his father’s account, did not violate Rule 8.4(c). Bar Counsel also contends that a sanction of six months should have been recommended by the Board because a thirty-day suspension is *313 inconsistent with prior decisions of this court. We disagree in part with the Board’s Report and Recommendation and remand for further findings consistent ■with this opinion.

I.

The primary facts of this case are largely not in dispute. Romansky is a partner with the law firm of McDermott, Will & Emery (“Firm”). From 1984 to 1995, Ro-mansky was the leader of the Firm’s health care practice group in Washington, D.C. As the partner in charge of the health care practice group, Romansky had significant client billing responsibilities. It was his handling of those responsibilities that led to an internal investigation by the Firm into Romansky’s billing practices, which culminated in Bar Counsel charging him with six instances of dishonesty in violation of Rule 8.4(c) of the D.C. Rules of Professional Conduct.

Romansky was charged with four instances of violating Rule 8.4(c) for dishonestly inflating the bills he sent to four clients. Romansky would add a premium without telling the clients what their bills would have been if Romansky had computed the bills strictly on the basis of the actual professional time invested in the representation at the agreed-upon hourly billing rates. Specifically, after reviewing a pre-bill for a client, Romansky would add time charges to the number of hours that another Firm attorney had recorded for working on that client’s matter and then send a final bill to the client, which listed only the amount due and did not disclose that a premium had been added to the bill. At the time of this conduct, the Firm was transitioning to a new client engagement letter. The old letter stated that the Firm’s “fees are determined by the actual time spent by our professional staff-” The new letter, however, stated that “fees will be based primarily on the time spent by each professional, although other factors may be taken into consideration.” (Emphasis added). In two of the instances, the Board found no violation of Rule 8.4(c) because the fee agreements with those clients permitted so-called premium billing, and no one has challenged that determination before this court. 1 In the other two instances, the Board found that Romansky’s conduct was dishonest within the meaning of Rule 8.4(c) precisely because the fee agreements did not permit premium billing. These clients, Dr. Siep-ser and Surgical Health, had signed the old engagement letter and should have been billed only for the actual hours worked. In reaching its conclusion that Romansky violated Rule 8.4(c), the Board did not make an explicit finding as to whether Romansky overbilled Dr. Siepser and Surgical Health knowingly or recklessly or instead did so in the good faith but mistaken belief that their fee agreements allowed premium billing.

The fifth alleged violation involved Ro-mansky’s direction to an associate attorney of the Firm to charge the time she spent working on a matter for Romansky’s fa *314 ther, Dr. Romansky, to another Firm client, Outpatient Ophthalmic Surgery Society (OOSS). OOSS pays a fixed annual retainer for legal services. The Board concluded that since the client had a fixed fee arrangement with the Firm and was never actually billed for the time the associate spent on Romansky’s father’s work, the matter was strictly an internal record keeping matter and Romansky did not violate Rule 8.4.

The final charge of dishonesty involved Romansky’s preparation and use of a purported client letter. In response to the internal Firm investigation of Romansky’s billing practices, Romansky asked the Executive Director of Federated Ambulatory Surgery Association (FASA), a client, to draft a letter regarding the quality and amount of work done by the Firm and Romansky. 2 The Executive Director agreed; however, she stated that since she would be out of town the following week, Romansky should send a draft letter to her secretary, which could be read to her when she called into the office. Rather than following the client’s directions, Ro-mansky called the client’s secretary and dictated a draft over the phone. Roman-sky then asked the secretary to backdate the letter, put it on letterhead and fax it to Romansky. The letter was never approved by the client. When the client discovered that the letter had been obtained without her permission, she requested the letter not be used for any purpose. Although Romansky assured the client that the letter had been destroyed and had not and would not be used, Ro-mansky had already attached the letter to a billing summary that he submitted to the Firm as part of the investigation. The billing summary falsely stated that the letter had been obtained “a month or so ago.” Romansky later spoke to the firm’s internal investigator and informed the investigator that he had acted improperly with regard to the FASA letter; however, Romansky did not inform the Firm that the FASA letter had not been received a month or so before.

The Board noted that the violation for the FASA letter alone would warrant a thirty-day suspension. The Board concluded that Romansky’s behavior in connection with the FASA letter demonstrated a series of dishonest acts conducted over a two-week period. He drafted a letter in the name of a client, which praised his work as an attorney, backdated it, and used it before the client could verify the content’s accuracy. He then lied to his client regarding the letter’s use and its continued existence in the Firm’s files. As the Board noted, Romansky’s misconduct “was not an isolated incident on a single day, under the pressure of an unanticipated, suddenly arising situation.” Instead, the Board specifically expressed that respondent “made a deliberate decision to engage in a pattern of dishonest statements ... in writing, in documents he prepared.” The Board additionally characterized respondent’s activities as calculated and disingenuous and that backdating the letter was “particularly troublesome.”

After finding three violations for dishonesty, the Board recommended a thirty-day suspension, noting that the FASA letter alone would justify the thirty days. Ro-mansky now challenges the Board’s decision. Romansky does not dispute the facts alleged by Bar Counsel in the complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
825 A.2d 311, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 305, 2003 WL 21373948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-romansky-dc-2003.