In Re Schlemmer

840 A.2d 657, 2004 D.C. App. LEXIS 1, 2004 WL 34986
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 2004
Docket02-BG-1450
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 840 A.2d 657 (In Re Schlemmer) 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 Schlemmer, 840 A.2d 657, 2004 D.C. App. LEXIS 1, 2004 WL 34986 (D.C. 2004).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Associate Judge:

We review a Report and Recommendation by the Board on Professional Responsibility (the “Board”) that Respondent Donald L. Schlemmer (“Respondent”) be publicly censured for violating disciplinary rules 1.3(a) and 1.4(a). Although Respondent does not challenge the Board’s findings of fact, he has noted an exception to the Board’s recommended sanction, arguing that an informal admonition is more *658 appropriate than public censure given the circumstances in this case. Because the Board’s recommended sanction appears to be inconsistent with sanctions that have been imposed in comparable cases, we remand this case to the Board for further consideration in light of this opinion.

I. Procedural Background

After receiving complaints filed on behalf of two clients whom Respondent had represented in immigration matters, Bar Counsel initiated formal disciplinary proceedings against Respondent on September 18, 2000. On September 26, 2001, an Ad Hoc Hearing Committee (“Committee”) concluded that Respondent had violated Rules 1.1(a), 1.3(a) and 1.4(a) in his representation of one client, but that he had not violated any rules regarding the other client. The Hearing Committee Report then recommended that Respondent receive an informal admonition as a sanction. Neither Bar Counsel nor Respondent noted exceptions to the Board regarding the Hearing Committee Report.

Upon review of the Hearing Committee Report, the Board adopted the Committee’s findings of fact. Although the Board agreed with the Committee that Respondent violated Rules 1.3(a) and 1.4(a), the Board did not find a violation of Rule 1.1(a). Despite the fact that the Board found fewer rule violations than were found by the Committee, the Board recommended that Respondent receive a public censure, a more stringent sanction than the proposed informal admonition recommended by the Hearing Committee. Respondent then noted an exception to the Board’s recommended sanction.

II. The Board Findings 1

Respondent has been a member of the District of Columbia Bar since July 15, 1988. A sole practitioner in the field of immigration law, Respondent estimates that he has handled “probably thousands” of immigration cases, many of which have been asylum cases like the two involved in this disciplinary matter. Because Respondent’s clients typically do not speak English, Respondent often employs independent translators. When representing Spanish-speaking clients, Respondent commonly utilizes the services of Immigration Consultants, a translation service and “independent paralegal company” operated by Julio S. Gagnon (“Mr.Gagnon”). In this case, both complainants were Spanish-speaking individuals who retained Respondent’s services because Immigration Consultants referred them to him. 2

Fidel Iraheta (“Mr.Iraheta”) was a forty-year-old construction worker from El Salvador who could neither read nor understand much English. In 1993, Mr. Iraheta retained Immigration Consultants to prepare a request for asylum and secure a work permit for him. When Mr. Irahe-ta’s asylum case was finally scheduled for a hearing before the Immigration Court in •October 1998, Immigration- Consultants recommended Respondent as a lawyer who could represent him in those proceedings. Respondent agreed to represent Mr. Iraheta at the preliminary hearing in October 1998 and again at a hearing on the *659 merits in August 1999. At the August 1999 hearing, the immigration judge denied Iraheta’s request for withholding of deportation and denied his request for asylum. The judge did, however, grant his request for voluntary departure.

Following the hearing, Respondent met with Mr. Iraheta and translators, Julio Cesar Santiago Gonzalez and Mr. Gagnon, in the offices of Immigration Consultants to discuss the possibility of an appeal. According to Respondent’s testimony, when Iraheta indicated that he wanted to appeal, Respondent explained that the appeal would cost $1500 plus a $110 filing fee, of which $750 and the filing fee were to be paid up-front. Respondent testified that after further negotiations, the parties agreed that Mr. Iraheta would pay the $110 filing fee along with $625 as an upfront partial payment for the appeal. In Respondent’s view, he had made it clear to Mr. Iraheta that he was not going to file the appeal unless he “ma[de] that deposit and br[ought] the filing fee.”

Mr. Iraheta presented a different version of the agreement that was made that afternoon. According to Mr. Iraheta, he and Respondent “also agreed on what it [would] cost me to submit the appeal, which was $630. That day I paid $325 and agreed that I’d pay the rest on another date, and we did not set a date. They were not rushing me to set a date for payment either.” Mr. Iraheta further testified that neither Respondent nor the two translators present ever told him that Respondent would not file the appeal.

Mr. Gagnon was the only translator present during the fee negotiations. According to the Hearing Committee Report, Mr. Gagnon’s testimony “appear[ed] to support Iraheta’s belief that the total amount of the fee demanded by Respondent was $630.” Mr. Gagnon’s testimony also suggested that Respondent had agreed to take part of that $630 fee at some later date. 3

After considering the testimony of Respondent, Mr. Iraheta, and both interpreters, the Committee concluded that “[t]he terms upon which Respondent testified he conditioned his filing an appeal on Irahe-ta’s behalf were not communicated to Iraheta with sufficient clarity.” Indeed, rather than paying the full amount Respondent required, Mr. Iraheta brought a $320 payment to the Immigration Consultants office on August 27, 1999, thirteen days before the appeal deadline. The receptionist gave him a receipt stating that the payment was for “Apeladas,” or “Appeal” in Spanish. Mr. Iraheta did not pay any more money for his appeal, and Respondent did not file the appeal because he believed his obligation to appeal was conditioned on Mr. Iraheta’s payment in full of $625 plus the $110 filing fee.

Respondent was aware that Mr. Iraheta had paid him the $320 and requested that Mr. Santiago contact Mr. Iraheta regarding the deficiency of his payment. Mr. Santiago made a number of attempts to contact Mr. Iraheta by telephone prior to the September 9, 1999 appeal deadline but was unable to reach him. 4 After the deadline passed, Mr. Iraheta went to the Immigration Consultants offices to check on the *660 status of his appeal and was told that it had not been filed.

Based on the foregoing facts, the Board concluded that “Iraheta reasonably believed that Respondent would file an appeal in his case after he paid the $820 to Immigration Consultants.” The Board further found that “the payment of that $820 in the circumstances was sufficient to communicate to Respondent that Iraheta intended for him to file an appeal.” Because an attorney-client relationship had been created with respect to the appeal, the Board found that Respondent violated Rule 1.3(a) 5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
840 A.2d 657, 2004 D.C. App. LEXIS 1, 2004 WL 34986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-schlemmer-dc-2004.