In Re Thompson

579 A.2d 218, 1990 D.C. App. LEXIS 199, 1990 WL 116932
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 14, 1990
Docket89-952
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 579 A.2d 218 (In Re Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Thompson, 579 A.2d 218, 1990 D.C. App. LEXIS 199, 1990 WL 116932 (D.C. 1990).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

In this disciplinary proceeding, the primary charge brought against respondent by Bar Counsel, and found to have been established by both a Hearing Committee and the Board on Professional Responsibility (the Board), is that respondent engaged in dishonest misappropriation of a client’s funds in violation of DR 1-102(A)(4). 1 The principal issue before us is how much weight properly may be given to an attorney’s failure to come forward with a satisfactory explanation for the usé of client funds when it has been shown by clear and convincing evidence that the attorney took the funds without prior authorization for a non-de minimis period of time and kept no records of their use.

We sustain the Board’s conclusion that respondent’s failure credibly to explain his *219 use of a client’s funds, when combined with the evidence of misappropriation established by Bar Counsel, supports a finding of dishonest misappropriation under DR 1-102(A)(4). We also agree with the Board’s conclusion that, other things being equal, respondent’s conduct would necessitate disbarment. We conclude, however, that a remand to the Board is necessary for further proceedings concerning an issue of possible mitigation under our decision in In re Kersey, 520 A.2d 321 (D.C.1987).

I.

Bar Counsel alleged misconduct by respondent in his legal services on behalf of two different clients. One of these clients, Ms. Fannie Grossman, was incompetent to handle her own financial affairs and respondent was appointed her conservator. Because, as the Board recognized, the more serious misconduct occurred in connection with respondent’s representation of Ms. Grossman, we shall set forth the facts concerning that conduct in the text and the facts relating to the other charged misconduct in the margin. 2

The Board summarized the facts of the Grossman matter, which are essentially undisputed, as follows:

Respondent was given control over Ms. Grossman’s bank account [in 1979], and thereafter he was responsible for the following transactions:

Date Transactions Involving Client’s Bank Account
June 14, 1982 Respondent withdrew $5,000 without court authorization
Aug. 12, 1982 Respondent redeposited $1,100
Nov. 15, 1983 Respondent redeposited $3,900

Respondent provided no explanation of the above transactions until questioned by the court after he had belatedly filed an annual accounting on January 24, 1984. He was subsequently removed as conservator for “irregularities” in handling his ward’s account.

As the Hearing Committee found, the explanation most favorable to Respondent was set forth in proposed factual findings submitted to the Committee by Respondent’s counsel. According to this explanation, Respondent withdrew the $5,000 so that he could invest it in a money market fund and earn more interest for his ward. Respondent further contends that immediately after the withdrawal, he changed his mind because he was dissatisfied with the interest rate then available and wanted to “wait” until money market interest rates had reached an even higher level. Therefore, according to Respondent’s explanation, he put the $5,000 in his office safe where it allegedly remained while Respondent was waiting for a rise in interest rates. Later, without ever investing the withdrawn sum in a money market fund or *220 any other type of investment, Respondent dribbled the withdrawn money back into his ward’s bank account in two deposits, the second of which was almost a year and a half after the withdrawal.

The Hearing Committee found, and the Board agreed, that this explanation was implausible and unworthy of belief:

As the Committee observed, any interest rate, however low, “would have produced [for respondent’s client] a higher yield than the zero percent return” from cash allegedly resting in Respondent’s office safe_ It is also noteworthy that Respondent does not even attempt to explain why the funds were returned to his client’s account in two separate deposits about 15 months apart. [Emphasis by Board.]

On these facts, the Hearing Committee concluded, and the Board agreed, that respondent had committed the following violations:

—intentional misappropriation constituting dishonesty in violation of DR 1-102(A)(4)
—commingling and misappropriation in violation of DR 9-103(A), because— even accepting respondent’s incredible explanation — his client’s funds were not “deposited in one or more identifiable bank accounts” as required by DR 9-103(A)
—failure to maintain complete records of all funds of a client in violation of DR 9-103(B)(3). 3

II.

In the present case, as in another recent one, 4 the Board was met with the argument that, although it was clear from the evidence that the attorney had misappropriated client funds, 5 Bar Counsel had failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence what use the attorney had made of the funds and thus that the conduct had been dishonest. See In re Hessler, supra note 5, 549 A.2d at 701, citing In re Hines, 482 A.2d 378, 380 (D.C.1984) (attorney’s reckless disregard for status of accounts gave rise to inference of intent to use funds as his own, and hence dishonesty under DR 1-102(A)(4)). In each of these cases, despite the attorney’s obligation under DR 9-103(B)(3) to “maintain complete records of all funds ... of a client,” the attorney had kept no accounting of the use of funds. 6 Bar Counsel, in the Board’s view, was thus faced with the obstacle

of tracing virtually untraceable cash funds in order to establish a violation of dishonest misappropriation. If a lawyer inexplicably withdraws funds from his client’s account for a non-de minimis period of time, ... does not deposit them into an identifiable account, and holds them, a *221 requirement that Bar Counsel trace the funds would impose a difficult and in many cases an impossible burden of proof.

In re Godfrey, supra note 4, Board Opinion at 12.

To resolve this difficulty, the Board determined that “[a] rebuttable presumption, shifting the burden of going forward to the party who has the knowledge of what happened to the funds, is just.” Id. Specifically, the Board adopted and applied in this case a rule that, “whenever a lawyer takes his clients’ funds for any non-cie minimis

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Bluebook (online)
579 A.2d 218, 1990 D.C. App. LEXIS 199, 1990 WL 116932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-thompson-dc-1990.