In re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Hart

822 P.2d 264, 118 Wash. 2d 280, 1992 Wash. LEXIS 30
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1992
DocketNo. 1599
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 822 P.2d 264 (In re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Hart, 822 P.2d 264, 118 Wash. 2d 280, 1992 Wash. LEXIS 30 (Wash. 1992).

Opinions

Guy, J.

Richard W. Hart was disbarred by this court in 1977 following his conviction for misuse of estate assets that came into his charge as trustee. He petitions for reinstatement. We deny the petition.

Background

Richard W. Hart is 62 years old. Upon graduation from high school, Mr. Hart entered the United States Air Force and received a bad conduct discharge. In 1949, he was convicted of burglary. In 1950, he joined the United States Coast Guard, receiving a dependency discharge in 1952. Mr. Hart then entered San Francisco State University, where he was nominated to a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at Stanford University. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1959. Mr. Hart performed graduate work in economics and Asian languages at the University of Washington and was granted a Ford Foundation scholarship to study Asian law, entering the University of Washington Law School in 1964. In 1967, Mr. Hart graduated from the University of Washington Law School, where he had been a member of the Law Review. Mr. Hart immediately joined a Seattle law firm where he was assigned commercial collection litigation matters. After [282]*282approximately 6 months, Mr. Hart left that law firm and entered into a solo private practice. Mr. Hart worked long hours developing a good client base in collection and bankruptcy. He achieved financial success.

As a part of his bankruptcy practice, Mr. Hart was appointed trustee for various estates by the judges of the Bankruptcy Court for Western Washington. In 1969, Mr. Hart was appointed trustee of the estate of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Questad and a corporation wholly owned by them. One of the assets of the estate was a house which had an encumbrance approximately equal to the appraised value. As trustee, Mr. Hart attempted to sell the house but was unable to do so. In 1970, he obtained an order of abandonment from the Bankruptcy Court. The effect of such an order is to revert the property to the bankrupt. Thereafter, Mr. Hart approached Mr. and Mrs. Questad and advised them that he wished to purchase the house. Mr. Hart caused Mr. and Mrs. Questad to deed the property to his brother-in-law with the understanding that Mr. Hart would pay the secured encumbrances against the property. Mr. Hart then arranged with the mortgagee bank to permit a reinstatement of the mortgage in favor of the brother-in-law upon payment of the delinquent payments and late charges owing. Mr. Hart had been notified by the bank that it would foreclose the mortgage. Mr. Hart did not disclose to the Bankruptcy Court or tó the bank that he was the real party in interest. As a part of the overall acquisition and mortgage reinstatement plan, Mr. Hart obtained a court order permitting estate rental income from the property to be used to make the payments to the bank for the reinstatement. Mr. Hart and his family moved into the house, using it as their personal residence.

In 1975, Mr. Hart was indicted in the United States District Court for Western Washington on two counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 153 (1970), which at that time provided in pertinent part:

Whoever knowingly and fraudulently appropriates to his own use, embezzles, spends, or transfers any property . . . belonging to the estate of a bankrupt which came into his [283]*283charge as trustee, receiver ... or other officer of the court, shall be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

The allegations in the indictment charged that Mr. Hart, when acting as trustee, had: (1) appropriated property of the estate to his own use; and (2) used trust funds from the estate to pay the mortgagee bank to reduce the first mortgage on the property. On December 5, 1975, the United States District Court found Mr. Hart guilty on both counts, sentencing him to 3 years in prison. This sentence was reduced by the district court judge to 1 year, with actual time served being 9 months. On February 2, 1977, this court ordered that Mr. Hart be disbarred, based upon the fraud convictions in the United States District Court.

At the time of Mr. Hart's disbarment, an investigation was conducted of the accounts of other estates for which he had acted as either receiver or trustee, and no improprieties were noted. There had been no finding of misconduct on the part of Mr. Hart during his years of practice, when he had opened more than 6,000 case files.

Mr. Hart's conviction, sentence, and disbarment caused him to become estranged from his wife. Upon release from prison, Mr. Hart engaged in various business activities, including managing apartment buildings and finding opportunities for others to buy real property or to buy judgments through sheriff's sales.

In 1981, Mr. Hart applied for reinstatement to the Washington State Bar Association. The Board of Governors recommended against his reinstatement by a vote of 4 to 3. The Board was concerned about Mr. Hart's failure to inform the Board that he had been a party to a United States Tax Court action concerning his personal taxes for 1972. In that action, Mr. Hart was found subject to a penalty for tax fraud. The Board also found inadequate Mr. Hart's explanation of a shortage of approximately $3,500 in an account he had managed as a receiver for an estate in bankruptcy.

Mr. Hart did not respond to the Board's recommendation against his reinstatement, and consequently his petition [284]*284was deemed abandoned and not considered by this court. In 1985, Mr. Hart filed a second reinstatement petition, but he withdrew it after he learned that counsel to the Washington State Bar Association would oppose the application.

Following his unsuccessful 1981 reinstatement petition, Mr. Hart became involved in the health club business. He acquired a financially unsuccessful club in Everett, and later two other health clubs in Bellevue and Seattle. Through intelligence, good business practices and hard personal work, Mr. Hart made those ventures profitable.

In his present application for reinstatement, Mr. Hart states that every 6 weeks or so he obtains advance sheets and looks through them for cases that interest him. He testified that he follows legislative developments and is a member of a committee that drafts comments to the Attorney General regarding health club legislation.

On November 17, 1990, the Board of Governors held a public hearing regarding Mr. Hart's present reinstatement petition. By a divided vote of 6 to 4, the Board recommended reinstatement, subject to the conditions that Mr. Hart (1) report monthly to monitoring counsel, to be designated by the Supreme Court; (2) be required to pass the Washington State bar examination, paying costs incident to the reinstatement; and (3) be subject to any other conditions the Supreme Court might impose.

Issue

The issue presented is whether Mr. Hart has overcome those weaknesses which produced the conduct for which he was disbarred, demonstrating that his reinstatement will not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar, the administration of justice, or the public interest.

Analysis

The most recent reinstatement case is In re Moynihan, 113 Wn.2d 219, 221, 778 P.2d 521 (1989), where this court declared:

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822 P.2d 264, 118 Wash. 2d 280, 1992 Wash. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-disciplinary-proceeding-against-hart-wash-1992.