In Re Sheehan

2001 NMSC 020, 27 P.3d 972, 130 N.M. 485
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 2001
Docket26,871
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2001 NMSC 020 (In Re Sheehan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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 Sheehan, 2001 NMSC 020, 27 P.3d 972, 130 N.M. 485 (N.M. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

{1} This matter came before the Court upon recommendation of the disciplinary board to approve a conditional agreement admitting allegations and consent to discipline tendered by respondent, Dan E. Sheehan, pursuant to Rule 17-211 NMRA 2001 of the Rules Governing Discipline. We adopt the recommendation and hereby place respondent on deferred suspension for a minimum period of at least three years for his violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct.

{2} This matter concerns the perils inherent in representing family or close friends, and more specifically, of permitting those relationships to take precedence over the lawyer’s adherence to ethical obligations. It also demonstrates that, although certain discipline may be customarily imposed for violations of certain provisions of the Rules of Professional Conduct, the facts of a specific case may make a different resolution appropriate. In re Zamora, 2001-NMSC-011,130 N.M. 161, 21 P.3d 30. Typically, an attorney’s failure to appropriately safeguard funds belonging to a client or third party — a violation of Rule 16-115 — will result in the most serious discipline. See, e.g., In re Kelly, 119 N.M. 807, 896 P.2d 487 (1995) (disbarment appropriate sanction for wilfully taking funds from trust account). Precedent also exists for the imposition of lesser sanctions. See, e.g., In re Camacho, 106 N.M. 296, 742 P.2d 508 (1987) (lack of evidence of dishonest motives in commingling personal funds with client funds and wilting NSF check on trust account resulted in imposition of deferred suspension with probation). The facts of this case place it in the latter category of discipline.

I. Factual Background

{3} Respondent had known the subject client since he was a boy; she was a family friend and became a close friend of his. They maintained a close relationship until she became mentally incompetent in the early 1990’s. Respondent was primarily responsible for the client’s care and finances from the time her health began to wane until she was moved from her home to a nursing home shortly before her death in 1996. Respondent not only handled the irrevocable trust involved in this disciplinary proceeding, but also her personal business, rather extensive investments, and medical care. The client’s two grown daughters neither lived in New Mexico nor visited her frequently.

{4} Testimony at the hearing on the proposed consent agreement revealed that until her mental capacities diminished, the subject client was a strong-minded and capable businesswoman. As long as she was able, the client made all decisions on her personal business and respondent carried them out. Respondent’s loyal compliance with her directives served to bring him before this Court today. The client’s directives were at times inconsistent with respondent’s duties as a licensed attorney. No lawyer has the luxury of following such directives, no matter how well-intentioned they may be and no matter how close the lawyer is to the client.

II. Safeguarding Client Funds

{5} Each of the client’s daughters had one child. In 1982, the client established an irrevocable trust for the benefit of the two grandchildren. Respondent was named trustee for the irrevocable trust and essentially served as the only trustee, although the trust instrument provided for a co-trustee. The initial co-trustee, who was the client’s cousin, declined to serve; the replacement trustee named in the instrument was never appointed.

{6} The trust instrument provided for two equal trusts, one to benefit each grandchild. Separate trusts were never formed, and respondent distributed almost $30,000 more to her grandson than he did to her granddaughter. The evidence revealed no sinister motive in the disparity; rather, it appeal's to have been a case of the squeaky wheel getting the grease. The trust instrument called for annual accountings; respondent prepared only one in more than ten years of serving as trustee. In addition, respondent made improper disbursements of trust funds and failed to properly document loans made from trust funds.

{7} Respondent’s failure to properly disburse trust funds in accordance with the trust instrument violated Rule 16-115(A), as did his failure to produce annual accountings and document trust loans. Although Rule 16-115(A) customarily addresses attorney trust account issues, its scope is not so limited. The rule speaks of the property and funds of clients and third persons; it is broad enough to cover any circumstance in which a lawyer is in possession of client or third party funds in a fiduciary capacity. See, e.g. In re Hartley, 107 N.M. 376, 758 P.2d 790 (1988) (while serving as Treasurer for the State of New Mexico, attorney embezzled funds from regional treasurers’ association, which resulted in imposition of indefinite suspension).

{8} During the years he served as trustee, respondent also performed legal services for both of the client’s daughters at her request and direction. Limited services were provided to one daughter; far more extensive services were provided to the other, including the dissolution of one cattle company and the formation of another, as well as significant services for the newly-formed company. As the grandson testified in a lawsuit filed against respondent in 1996 by the granddaughter, respondent was viewed as the “family lawyer.”

{9} In the middle 1980’s, the cattle company owed respondent almost $30,000 in legal fees and was unable to pay. Acting at the client’s direction, respondent withdrew funds from the trust to pay these fees. Respondent labeled these withdrawals as “loans” from the trust to himself. The “loans” were not documented other than with notations on the memo line of the disbursement cheeks. In addition to the fact that this was an irrevocable trust that the trustor-client had no right to control, New Mexico law specifically prohibits a trustee borrowing from the trust he or she serves. See NMSA 1978, § 46-2-3 (loan of trust funds).

{10} By “loaning” trust funds to himself, respondent violated Rule 16-115(A) by failing to appropriately safeguard funds belonging to third persons. Notably, however, a loan to the daughter’s cattle company would not necessarily have been improper, if properly documented and secured, even if the loan proceeds were utilized to pay respondent’s legal bills. The fact that respondent characterized these disbursements as “loans” to himself, proves his misconduct, but not a finding of misappropriation or conversion.

III. Conflict of Interest

{11} Respondent testified that at the time he performed legal services for various family members, he did not view their interests as being adverse and did not think his representation would adversely affect his relationship with any of these parties. Rule 16-107 governs conflict of interest issues involving contemporaneous clients.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 NMSC 020, 27 P.3d 972, 130 N.M. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-sheehan-nm-2001.