In re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Starczewski

306 P.3d 905, 177 Wash. 2d 771
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 2013
DocketNo. 201,073-3
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 306 P.3d 905 (In re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Starczewski) 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 Starczewski, 306 P.3d 905, 177 Wash. 2d 771 (Wash. 2013).

Opinion

Owens, J.

¶1 We are ultimately responsible for disciplining attorneys who bring disrepute to the legal profession. In this case, the Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) charged Marja Starczewski with three counts of attorney misconduct because she represented her client without diligence, information, or honesty. At the disciplinary hearing, the hearing officer concluded the WSBA had proved all three counts. He recommended a sanction of $15,000 in restitution, 24 months of suspension, and 18 months of practice monitoring. The WSBA Disciplinary Board (Board) adopted the hearing officer’s decision except for the term of practice monitoring, which it amended to 24 months.

¶2 That decision is before us now. Because substantial evidence supports the findings and Starczewski does not present a clear reason to depart from the Board’s decision, we affirm it.

I. FACTS

¶3 This case of attorney discipline begins with a simple tort claim. In 2005, an employee of Walters & Wolf Curtain and Wall LLC (Walters & Wolf), Kelly Reeser, avoided [778]*778Dawn De La Fuerte’s stalled car on a King County highway. In doing so she hit Rajinder Singh’s taxi. Singh hired attorney Harish Bharti, who referred him to Starczewski on a fee-sharing basis.

¶4 Starczewski obtained a $15,000 settlement offer from Reeser’s insurance company, which Singh rejected. On the day before the statute of limitations ran in May 2007 Starczewski filed suit against Reeser, Walters & Wolf, and De La Fuerte in King County Superior Court. She claimed personal injury and lost wages and named Singh and his brother, Surinder Khangura,1 as plaintiffs.

¶5 After Starczewski filed suit the trial court issued a scheduling order, which provided an October 2007 deadline for filing a confirmation of joinder. Under King County Local Superior Court Rule 4.2, the plaintiff must file the confirmation of joinder and the plaintiff’s attorney must sign it. After filing, the trial court reviews the confirmation of joinder, and if it decides a hearing is necessary, it may issue a show cause order. If the trial court issues such an order, all cited parties must appear.

¶6 Between the issuance of the scheduling order and the deadline of the confirmation of joinder, Starczewski suffered financially and moved to East Wenatchee — presumably from somewhere in King County. Starczewski did not inform Singh of her financial hardships or how they might affect her work even though her financial hardships coincided with a series of professional shortcomings in Singh’s case: Starczewski did not respond to, or inform Singh of, a September 2007 settlement offer of $20,000 from Reeser and Walter & Wolf’s attorney, Julia Kyte. When Kyte followed up, Starczewski still did not respond. In October 2007, Starczewski neglected to timely serve and file a [779]*779confirmation of joinder for De La Fuerte. In response, the superior court ordered a show cause hearing on why it should not dismiss Singh’s case and order $250 in sanctions. Starczewski did not inform Singh of the hearing nor did she appear at it, which caused the superior court to order sanctions. The court continued the hearing to January 2008, however, and indicated it would strike the hearing if Starczewski filed a confirmation of joinder up to seven days beforehand. Starczewski did not inform Singh of the sanctions or continuance. Because she neglected to file the confirmation of joinder a second time and did not appear at the continued show cause hearing, the superior court dismissed Singh’s case on procedural grounds. Starczewski did not inform Singh of the dismissal.

¶7 Although Starczewski neglected Singh’s case, she did not abandon it, and in February 2008 she moved to vacate the superior court’s dismissal. Yet again she did not inform Singh of the status of litigation. In March 2008, the superior court heard oral argument on her motion and conditioned vacating its dismissal on Starczewski paying $250 in sanctions, complying with the case scheduling order, and serving and filing the confirmation of joinder by late April. Starczewski paid the sanctions but did not inform Singh of the March 2008 order, did not timely file the confirmation of joinder, and did not notify the superior court of any effort on her part to comply with the scheduling order.

¶8 Starczewski’s neglect was Singh’s loss, for in May 2008 the superior court issued a second and final order of dismissal. The order noted Starczewski’s failure to file a confirmation of joinder. As before, Starczewski did not inform Singh of the dismissal or his options. The day after the court dismissed Singh’s case the statute of limitations ran.

¶9 Since Starczewski had never updated Singh on his case, he was of course unaware that the case had been dismissed and the statute of limitations had run. Indeed it was a year after the dismissal that he first contacted [780]*780Starczewski for an update. Starczewski did not give Singh an honest account. In a July 2009 letter, she wrote Singh that the superior court had dismissed his case because it found opposing counsel’s arguments persuasive. She supported her assertion with excerpted portions of opposing counsel’s March 2008 “Response to the Motion to Vacate” where counsel argued the emergency doctrine defeated Singh’s claim. In other words, Starczewski told Singh that the court dismissed his case on the merits rather than that the court had dismissed his case on procedural grounds because of her failures. Admittedly, Starczewski did include the actual order of dismissal with her letter. However, that only served to confuse Singh because Starczewski did not explain the order and Singh is not fluent in English.

¶10 In January 2010, Singh filed a grievance letter with the WSBA that requested an investigation into Starczewski’s handling of his case.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶11 In January 2011, the WSBA charged Starczewski with three counts of professional misconduct: (1) failure to represent Singh with reasonable diligence and expedite his litigation in violation of RPC 1.3 and 3.2; (2) failure to inform Singh of the status of his case and explain matters such that he could make informed decisions about the representation in violation of RPC 1.4(a) and (b); and (3) failure to honestly inform Singh of the reason the court dismissed his case in violation of RPC 8.4(c).

¶12 These charges triggered a disciplinary hearing. The hearing officer bifurcated the hearing into a violation hearing and a sanction hearing. At the May 2011 violation hearing, the hearing officer found that the WSBA had proved all three counts by a clear preponderance of the evidence. At the October 2011 sanction hearing, the hearing officer applied the American Bar Association’s Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions (1991 & Supp. 1992). He [781]*781concluded that the presumptive sanction for all three counts was suspension. The hearing officer then applied six aggravating factors and one mitigating factor to the presumptive sanction and concluded the suspension should be 24 months long. He also recommended 18 months of practice monitoring following reinstatement and $15,000 in restitution to Singh.

¶13 That decision went before the Board in May 2012 on automatic review. With one board member recusing, the Board unanimously affirmed the hearing officer’s decision on suspension and restitution.

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Bluebook (online)
306 P.3d 905, 177 Wash. 2d 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-disciplinary-proceeding-against-starczewski-wash-2013.