In re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Trejo

163 Wash. 2d 701
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 2008
DocketNo. 200,477-6
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 163 Wash. 2d 701 (In re the Disciplinary Proceeding Against Trejo) 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 Trejo, 163 Wash. 2d 701 (Wash. 2008).

Opinions

¶1

George P. Trejo, Jr., appeals the Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) Disciplinary Board’s (Board) recommendation that he be suspended from the practice of law for three months. The WSBA charged Trejo with three counts of misconduct arising out of his trust accounting procedures and lack of oversight of a nonlawyer assistant. Trejo accepts responsibility for each of j these counts. The hearing officer and Board concluded that j Trejo violated former RPC 1.14(b)(3) (2002),1 former RPC 1.14(a) (2002),2 and former RPC 5.3(b) (1985).3 The hearing I [709]*709officer recommended a six month suspension. The Board, after applying an additional mitigating factor, imposed a three month suspension.

Fairhurst, J.

[709]*709¶2 Trejo challenges two of the hearing officer’s findings of fact. Trejo also argues that the Board erred in imposing a three month suspension because his actions were negligent rather than knowing. Thus, he argues, the presumptive sanction according to the American Bar Association’s Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions (1991 ed. & Supp. 1992) (ABA Standards) is a reprimand. In the alternative, Trejo argues that he should be suspended for only 30 days because the hearing officer and Board misapplied the ABA Standards aggravating and mitigating factors. The WSBA argues that the court should affirm the hearing officer’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and increase the suspension to six months because the Board erred in reducing the presumptive sanction when the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors.

¶3 We hold that the hearing officer and Board properly determined that Trejo knowingly violated former RPC 1.14(b)(3), former RPC 1.14(a), and former RPC 5.3(b), and we impose a three month suspension followed by two years of probation as recommended by the Board.

I. FACTS

¶4 Trejo was admitted to practice law in Washington State in 1990. He has practiced law in Yakima since 1990 [710]*710and maintained a sole practice since 1995. His practice, diming the relevant period of time,4 was mostly limited to criminal defense. Trejo has one employee, Maria Alvarez.

¶5 The current disciplinary proceeding arose out of a notification received by the WSBAin May 2003 that Trejo’s trust account was overdrawn. A few days later, Trina Doty, a certified public accountant employed as an auditor by the WSBA, requested an explanation of the overdraft from Trejo. Trejo explained that Alvarez, after being confronted by Trejo, admitted to writing checks to herself from the trust account without Trejo’s permission. Alvarez would deposit the check into her personal checking account to cover personal debts and, later, when her personal account was sufficiently funded, she would write a check back to the trust account. This happened approximately 12 times in amounts ranging from $20 to $2,050.

¶6 Alvarez’s check-floating scheme delayed payments to one of Trejo’s clients, Abraham Negrete, who was receiving checks every two weeks from the Department of Labor and Industries (L&I). The L&I check was deposited into Trejo’s trust account. Trejo would then issue a check for 90 percent of the L&I check to Negrete and issue a check to either himself or Alvarez for the remaining 10 percent. During the period of January 2002 to May 2003, there were insufficient funds in the client trust account to timely pay Negrete on five separate occasions. The shortages lasted from a few days to a few weeks. Once Alvarez replenished the trust account, a check was written to Negrete. Around May 2003, Alvarez’s check to the trust account bounced. This, in turn, caused the check issued to Negrete to bounce and resulted in the overdraft notification.

¶7 Alvarez also admitted to misappropriating two payments for her personal use. Alvarez took a check for $860, endorsed it by signing Trejo’s name, cashed the check, and I then misappropriated the funds. Alvarez was authorized to [711]*711sign checks using Trejo’s name.5 The other incident involved a wire transfer of $2,000 into the trust account. Alvarez issued herself a check for $2,000, again signing Trejo’s name without his permission. Trejo was unaware of any of these activities prior to the May 2003 overdraft notification because he did not review his bank statements.

¶8 Trejo’s law office maintained inadequate trust accounting procedures and records. Trejo’s records for the trust account “consisted solely of a hand written journal that listed the number of the checks written out of the trust account, the date on which the check was issued, the payee, and the amount of the check.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 514-15, ¶ 12. Some of the checks noted which client was associated with the check. Three trust account checks were not accounted for in the journal. The journal did not track deposits or reflect a running balance.

¶9 Trejo kept his monthly bank statements but did not review them. Trejo did not reconcile his journal with the bank statements. Trejo did not maintain individual client ledgers or any records that could be used to accurately determine client balances in the trust account. Thus, Trejo could not identify the funds in the trust account that belonged to each client.

¶10 Trejo did not maintain a bank account in Washington for his personal or business funds. The hearing officer found that Trejo “told Ms. Doty that he did not maintain a bank account in Washington other than his trust account because he did not want his creditors, including his former wife, to be able to attach his personal assets, i.e. bank account.”6 CP at 515, ¶ 20. When Trejo received a check or wire transfer from a client, the funds were deposited into the trust account regardless of their nature. Earned fees were deposited into the trust account 66 times during the [712]*712audit period.7 The earned fees constituted $117,782.74 of the $150,599.66 deposited into the trust account from January 2002 to May 2003. Once the earned fees were deposited, a trust account check was issued to Trejo or Alvarez. Trejo or Alvarez then cashed the check and kept the cash in Trejo’s office. Other than the L&I check deposits, client funds were deposited into the client trust account nine times during the audit period. In one instance, Trejo deposited money into the client trust account and then issued a trust account check to pay for a personal debt.

¶11 At the conclusion of the audit, Doty explained the proper procedures for handling a trust account and keeping complete records. On March 15, 2004, Doty conducted a follow up audit of Trejo’s trust account. Doty concluded that Trejo implemented a number of her recommendations. However, Doty also found that Trejo failed to use client ledgers consistently, failed to identify deposits by client, and failed to reconcile the client ledgers to the check register. Trejo also continued to deposit earned fees into the client trust account. From June 2003 to February 2004, $37,500 in earned fees were deposited into the trust account.

¶12 Trejo was previously disciplined twice for the inappropriate handling of client funds. In 2001, Trejo was admonished for violating former RPC 1.14(b) (1991) for “failing to promptly pay client funds held in [his] trust account to [a] client.” Ex. A7.

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