In re Shufer

12 A.D.2d 208, 209 N.Y.S.2d 545, 1961 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13047

This text of 12 A.D.2d 208 (In re Shufer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Shufer, 12 A.D.2d 208, 209 N.Y.S.2d 545, 1961 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13047 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This is a disciplinary proceeding instituted against an attorney and counsellor at law, under section 90 of the Judiciary Law. Under an amended petition, hearings were conducted by a Referee appointed by this court. The Referee’s report found respondent guilty of the general charges and of misconduct in some 14 matters. In some 16 matters the Referee found that the proof was insufficient to sustain a conclusion of misconduct.

Respondent- was .charged, in effect, with operating a mass negligence practice based on solicitation for him by insurance brokers and others and the filing of exaggerated claims, supported by falsified bills of particulars and falsified bills for [210]*210services by physicians and others. He was also charged with settling infants’ claims without first obtaining the approval or the fixing of fees by the court. He was charged too with having promised and provided valuable consideration to persons for retaining him in accident cases and for soliciting cases on his behalf.

Respondent, born in 1919, was admitted to the Bar in this Department November 2, 1942. Except for a brief period in 1950 after his admission to the Bar and until 1954 he did not engage in the practice of law. Instead, he worked as a salesman of advertising gift goods. Sometime in 1954 he made an arrangement with an insurance broker by the name of Harold Zipperman. Under that arrangement he took space, for a modest rental, in Zipperman’s street store office. Thereafter, Zipperman referred large numbers of accident cases to him, most of which came from persons whose insurance was being handled by Zipperman. Later he obtained similar systematic referrals of accident cases from other insurance brokers, named Dorfman, Meister and Klein, all located in the 149th Street neighborhood in The Bronx, and some others as well. There were also automobile body repairmen who referred eases to him, particularly one Lutins, doing business as Topps Auto Body & Repair.

From 1954 until 1957 respondent’s operation ” prospered greatly. In all, he filed 3,404 statements of retainer in negligence cases involving 3,898 claimants. At his peak he employed three lawyers, four or five stenographers, and one clerk to handle matters for him.

In these years respondent never tried personally a single ease. Very few of the cases in his office were tried, and when they were it was done by others. The largest case that he handled was that of one Brennan which resulted in a settlement of $8,000. The bulk of the cases were small and they were settled for small amounts.

Respondent profited personally. His income increased in dramatic strides and his scale of living was proportionately expanded.

The proof establishes beyond peradventure of practical doubt that respondent effected the settlement of the cases reviewed by the Referee by submitting to the interested insurance companies falsified bills of particulars and false bills for services rendered by physicians and others. In most of the cases reviewed the claimant testified that he had not paid the physician and that he had not received the bill; that he had not received the services described in the bills; and, generally, there was only [211]*211one professional visit. Moreover, the claimants testified uniformly that they had not sustained all the injuries or all the consequences described in the bills of particulars. In similar fashion other elements of consequential damages, such as loss of earnings and property damage, were grossly exaggerated, and, in some instances, made out of whole cloth. It is not disputed by respondent that the documents filed with the insurance companies in these matters emanated from his office, but he attempted, feebly, to deny that he had personal knowledge of the falsifications contained in them or that he had personally handled the matters, rather than associates in his office.

The proof shows, and respondent does not deny, that he expended very large sums on Christmas gifts and entertainment for many persons, including especially the insurance brokers who had occasion to refer business to him. Illustratively, in his 1956 tax return, respondent reported $3,156.96 for Christmas gifts and $14,269.55 for entertainment. But, more significantly, respondent concededly issued large numbers of checks payable to cash in order to provide himself with cash to make personal and professional expenditures. This explanation is pressed by him despite the fact that on many occasions several of these “ cash ” checks were dated and cashed on the same day. With respect to none of the gifts, entertainment, or cash expenditures does respondent have adequate financial records to sustain their expenditure for either personal or professional purposes.

With respect to the settlement of infants ’ claims, respondent admits that he did not obtain court orders approving such settlements or fixing his professional fees. He argues that this practice was confined to infants’ claims not exceeding $500. He justifies the practice on the ground that the insurance companies permitted it and customarily dispensed with court orders on smaller claims, and that, therefore, he was merely following the usage.

Respondent gave testimony before the Grand Jury and before the Bar Association’s Grievance Committee variant from that before the Referee. At all times respondent has denied that there was solicitation or that it was done by prearrangement. He also denies that there was any promise or giving of consideration or other value for the solicitation of cases.

It may be true that in any particular case it might have been difficult to establish that respondent was guilty of solicitation, or that such solicitation involved the giving of a consideration to the solicitor, or that the claim, known to respondent, was exaggerated falsely in order to cheat the insurance company; but when the cases and respondent’s practice are viewed in the [212]*212large, as they should, the inference is inescapable that respondent was guilty of the charges against him. Respondent, for instance, admitted that Zipperman referred to him approximately 500 cases. No satisfactory explanation is given by respondent as to how that could have come about in the absence of prearrangement. The lavish giving of gifts and the provision of entertainment for Zipperman plus the inadequately explained use of “cash” checks, unsupported by financial records, require the practical conclusion that there was prearranged solicitation for value. Of course, it is not necessary to establish the giving of value in order to find improper solicitation (Matter of Schacht, 228 App. Div. 232, 238-239); but the giving of value makes the offense the more intentional and the more reprehensible.

Moreover, the high incidence of false claims in identical pattern with the various insurance companies establishes, too, a system for the making and presentation of false claims. In this connection, it is of little significance that, as respondent argues, there was no direct evidence that he personally presented any particular claim to the insurance company. It suffices that his office was engaged in precisely that kind of “business”; he had the sole responsibility for the general practice of his office. Moreover, it is inconceivable as a practical matter that respondent did not know of the common pattern with which the business was done, the very business that was reaping such huge and unaccustomed profits for respondent.

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12 A.D.2d 208, 209 N.Y.S.2d 545, 1961 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shufer-nyappdiv-1961.