In Re Steffensen

39 P.2d 722, 85 Utah 380, 1935 Utah LEXIS 80
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1935
DocketNo. 5557.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 722 (In Re Steffensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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 Steffensen, 39 P.2d 722, 85 Utah 380, 1935 Utah LEXIS 80 (Utah 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

On complaint filed with the Utah State Bar and after hearing before the disciplinary committee and the making and filing of findings of fact and recommendations by such committee, the board of commissioners of the Utah State Bar approved the findings and recommendations of such committee and recommended to this court that K. K. Stef-fensen, an attorney at law duly licensed to practice and practicing law in all the courts of this state, be suspended from the practice of law for the period of three months and until he paid the costs of these proceedings. Mr. Steffensen petitioned this court for a review of the proceedings had before the committee and the board of commissioners praying that this court annul the decision and recommendations of the commission and dismiss the proceedings on the following grounds: (a) That the findings and recommendations of the disciplinary committee and of the board of commissnoners “are against the weight of the testimony and the law governing such matters,” and (b) *382 that “at the various hearings and actions the committees above named acted prejudicially and without warranted evidence or law in making the findings and recommendations made by them.”

There is little or no conflict in the evidence. The accused was himself the only witness called before the committee. He made no effort to conceal or deny any of the facts or circumstances on which the complaint rested, but merely sought to explain and excuse his failure to pay over money collected for his client. The facts alleged in the complaint, admitted by answer, testified to by the accused, and found to be facts by the committee are substantially the same. It appears that Steffensen, the accused, in the latter part of 1931 was in arrears in the payment of rent for his office in the Judge building in Salt Lake City. Halloran-Judge Trust Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, was agent for the building. It placed in the hands of the accused for collection the claim of Fannie C. Theobold, v. Joseph Kutschal, on the undertsanding and agreement that any fee earned by the accused in making collection would be paid to the company for credit on his debt for rent. In due time suit was entered and judgment obtained in the city court of Salt Lake City against Kutchal for $67.79 and costs. The full amount of the judgment and costs was collected by the accused from Kutschal in installments during the months of January, February, and March of 1932. No part of the money collected on this judgment has been paid either to Fannie C. Theobold or for her to her agents, the company, and no part of the fee earned was paid to the company for credit on the debt for rent by the accused. These proceedings were had against Steffensen because of his failure to pay over the money collected, it being alleged that he appropriated such money to his own use in violation of his trust and in violation of his oath as an attorney at law. Some time in the spring of 1932, suit was brought by W. J. Halloran against the accused to evict him from his office and recover the amount of rent due. While the *383 suit was pending, the accused went to California and was absent from the state for about thirty-five days. During his absence, notwithstanding he left the defense of the eviction case against him to his office associate, no steps were taken to contest the action and judgment was obtained by default. On his return to the state, the accused learned of the entry of judgment against him, but took no steps towards setting aside the default or reopening or appealing the case and the judgment became final. The accused now claims this judgment was for a larger sum than that actually due and that he had a good defense to the action because there had been no assignment by the company to W. J. Halloran of the claim sued on. Because of such facts, he attempts to justify his failure to pay the amount of his attorney’s fee in collecting the Theobold judgment to the company to be applied on rent or to pay the balance of the amount collected to Fannie C. Theobold or to the company as her agent. In his answer, the accused alleged he was entitled to retain for himself the sum of $35 out of the amount collected on the Theobold judgment because the company had obtained judgment against him “for all past due rent.” In his testimony before the committee he stated the Halloran judgment was $100 or more in excess of the amount actually due. In his brief in this court he argues that the excess is $200. The accused, however, failed to make it appear how much the company claimed against him for rent or how much he actually owed on that account. While frankly admitting he had collected the amount of the Theobold judgment and costs and that none of it had been paid to the client, he argued, as the reason for his failure to pay it over, or at least that portion due the client, that the company had claimed he had collected $116 on the judgment and would not admit hé had collected less. It is conceded by -the accused that he owes his client $38.99 which was the amount collected on the judgment, including costs less his claimed attorney’s fee, and he alleges that he has always been willing to pay such sum to the company if the *384 company would accept it. It nowhere appears in the record, however, that he had at any time actually paid or tendered that sum to the client or the company as her agent.

After a hearing, the disciplinary committee made findings of fact reciting substantially the above facts and concluded that because the accused had appropriated the money to his own use and benefit and had failed to pay over the money earned as a fee to the company to apply on rent in violation of his agreement to do so, or the balance due to the client or her agent, “he is guilty of unprofessional conduct and has knowingly and wilfully committed acts involving moral turpitude in the particulars set forth in the Findings of Fact,” and recommended that his license to practice law be suspended for a period of three months and until he pay the costs of these proceedings. These findings, conclusions, and recommendations were duly, after notice to the accused and a hearing, approved by the board of commissioners of the Utah State Bar.

The accused now contends the findings and recommendations thus made and approved are against the weight of the testimony. As already seen, the findings of fact are but a repetition of the facts admitted and testified to by the accused. The committee failed to find that the reasons offered by the accused were a sufficient excuse for his failure to pay over the money collected to his client. It would seem there is no sufficient reason proved which would justify a failure or refusal on the part of the accused to pay the entire amount collected to the company, the proportion thereof earned as a fee to be applied on rent due from the accused to the company, and the balance to be paid Fannie C. Theobold. As to the amount claimed as an attorney’s fee, it may well be that there was a colorable claim which might have been urged if it were true that the judgment obtained by W. J. Halloran was in excess of the amount actually due from the accused, but as to this the commission, in view of the facts shown and the *385 sive, was justified in making the findings and conclusions it did.

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Related

In Re Hansen
584 P.2d 805 (Utah Supreme Court, 1978)
In Re Steffensen
78 P.2d 531 (Utah Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 722, 85 Utah 380, 1935 Utah LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-steffensen-utah-1935.