In Re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against McLeod

711 P.2d 310, 104 Wash. 2d 859, 1985 Wash. LEXIS 1302
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1985
DocketC.D. 3664
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 711 P.2d 310 (In Re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against McLeod) 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 McLeod, 711 P.2d 310, 104 Wash. 2d 859, 1985 Wash. LEXIS 1302 (Wash. 1985).

Opinion

Dolliver, C.J.

This matter comes before the court, pursuant to RLD 7.2, on the appeal of attorney Malcolm S. McLeod from a decision of the Disciplinary Board of the Washington State Bar Association recommending he be suspended from the practice of law for a period of 90 days. The vote suspending McLeod was 6 to 5. The five dissenters recommended McLeod be disbarred. Respondent McLeod makes six assignments of error to the findings and conclusions of the Disciplinary Board in its order of January 11, 1985. The sufficiency of the evidence supporting these findings and conclusions is the sole issue presented on appeal relative to those assignments of error. McLeod also claims error in the alleged irregularity of evidence submitted to the Disciplinary Board on September 12, 1984.

Malcolm McLeod was admitted to the practice of law in the state of Washington on August 26, 1950. He represented Christine Ruth Deaner for a number of years and, among other things, drafted her will in which he was named as executor. Mrs. Deaner is in her late eighties, with no relatives living in the state of Washington. In March 1981, Mrs. Deaner was involved in a pedestrian/automobile accident. McLeod represented her in a lawsuit from which she received a settlement of $22,500.

The check for $22,500 was deposited into McLeod's client trust account on December 16, 1981. On January 27, 1982, pursuant to his fee agreement with Mrs. Deaner, McLeod paid himself $7,499.96 as his legal fee. After paying various creditors of Mrs. Deaner, he gave her a check for $5,494.85 and advised her he was continuing to hold $4,000 in his trust account against possible subrogation claims. Whether there were any actual subrogation claims was a subject of conflicting testimony. The transactions at issue in this dis *861 ciplinary action arose out of McLeod's handling and treatment of the $4,000.

On February 15, 1982, McLeod sent Mrs. Deaner a letter of account with enclosures, which included a "hold harmless agreement". At some point this agreement was altered to include the words:

& you to hold $4000. in a 30 month,14% Certificate with Wn Mutual,as security.

The Board found this alteration took place after Mrs. Deaner had signed and returned the agreement by McLeod, or at his direction, and without Mrs. Deaner's knowledge or authority. This agreement was not presented at earlier requests for production or depositions by the bar association, but only introduced by McLeod at his first disciplinary hearing on January 12, 1983.

On February 14, 1982, state bar counsel wrote McLeod and advised that the bar association was investigating a complaint of Mrs. Deaner regarding his handling of her funds. On March 12, 1982, McLeod deposited Mrs. Deaner's $4,000 in a 30-month savings certificate of deposit with Washington Mutual Savings Bank in the name of "Malcolm McLeod or Ruth Deaner, joint with right of sur-vivorship." McLeod signed a signature card but Mrs. Deaner did not.

On March 17, 1982, McLeod sent a photocopy of the certificate to Mrs. Deaner. The date of maturity on the photocopy had been obscured by a piece of paper which was placed over the date. Thus, in the photocopy, it is ambiguous as to whether the certificate had a 30-day or a 30-month maturity date. Sometime in April 1982, Mrs. Deaner employed attorney Richard Kilpatrick to help solve her confusion over McLeod's retention of her $4,000.

This disciplinary action originally went to hearing on January 12, 1983, and was continued for final argument on March 24, 1983. The hearing officer found McLeod had failed to render and deliver promptly appropriate accounts to his client, Mrs. Deaner, in violation of former CPR DR *862 9-102 (B)(3) and (4) and recommended a 30-day suspension for McLeod. The Disciplinary Board reviewed these findings pursuant to RLD 6.1(a) and remanded the case for entry of findings and/or conclusions on three questions, as follows:

1. Whether Mr. McLeod had any improper motive in placing his client trust funds in the form of joint tenancy with a right of survivorship in himself?
2. Whether the covered material on the Xeroxed copy of the certificate of deposit (EX. 22) was done by Mr. McLeod or under his direction?
3. Whether the entry of additional words following "undersigned" on the letter dated February 15, 1982, (EX. D) was added after the document was signed by Christine R. Deaner.

The hearing on the order of remand was held on April 23, 1984. The hearing officer answered question one by concluding the evidence did not show by a clear preponderance that McLeod had any improper motive in his manner of handling of the funds in question. He answered question two by concluding that the photocopy of the certificate which was sent to Mrs. Deaner obscuring the maturity date was prepared at McLeod's direction. He did not find by a clear preponderance of the evidence that the certificate was obscured at McLeod's direction. In response to question three, the hearing officer found the agreement was altered after it was signed by Mrs. Deaner and returned to McLeod's office. The hearing officer again recommended a 30-day suspension.

On September 12, 1984, the Disciplinary Board made certain modifications in the hearing officer's findings and conclusions. The Board, upon review of the record, found the alteration to the agreement was done by McLeod or at his direction and without Mrs. Deaner's knowledge or authority. It also found the photocopy of the certificate was obscured at the direction of McLeod. The Board concluded McLeod offered the agreement in the disciplinary hearing knowing it was false or altered evidence.

The Board added a new conclusion of law providing that *863 McLeod's placement of funds in a certificate rather than in a separately identified trust account constituted a violation of CPR DR 9-102.

The six findings of fact and conclusions of law of the Disciplinary Board to which error is assigned are as follows:

1. Finding of fact 1.9(d):

According to Mr. Beck, the February 15, 1982, "hold harmless agreement" bears several alterations, as follows.
d. The last two lines of the text commencing with "& you to hold ..." shows crowding and contraction in the way that it is typed, leading Mr. Beck to conclude that it may have been altered after it had been signed by Mrs. Deaner and that it was typed in the contracted form in which it appears in order to crowd it into the available space.

2. Finding of fact 1.11:

The "hold harmless agreement" dated February 15, 1982, was mailed to Mrs. Deaner on or about February 15, 1982. At that time, the last two lines commencing with "& you to hold ..." did not appear on the "hold harmless agreement". The "hold harmless agreement" was in Mrs. Deaner's custody until she signed it and returned it to Mr. McLeod's office.

3. Finding of fact 1.12:

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Bluebook (online)
711 P.2d 310, 104 Wash. 2d 859, 1985 Wash. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-disciplinary-proceeding-against-mcleod-wash-1985.