In Re Wimmershoff

3 P.3d 417, 2000 WL 655898
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 12, 2000
Docket99SA27
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 3 P.3d 417 (In Re Wimmershoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wimmershoff, 3 P.3d 417, 2000 WL 655898 (Colo. 2000).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an attorney regulation case. A hearing board found that the attorney-respondent, Nicholas A. Wimmershoff, charged his client an unreasonable fee, deposited part of this unreasonable fee into his operating account (although it had not been fully earned), failed to adequately explain the basis of his fee to the client, and violated the rules governing contingent fee agreements. A hearing panel of our former grievance committee 1 approved the board's findings and its recommendation that Wimmershoff be publicly censured and be required to disgorge the unreasonable part of the fee to his former client. The complainant excepts to the recommendation as too lenient; he asserts that Wimmershoff should be suspended for a year and a day because the evidence shows that he negligently misappropriated client funds. Wimmershoff also filed exceptions to the panel's action. He alleges that the board erred when it found his fee to be unreasonable, and that the misconduct that remains warrants only private discipline.

To be consistent with our recent decision in In re Sather, 3 P.3d 403, 417 (Colo.2000), we will not discipline Wimmershoff for failing to deposit the unearned portion of what is arguably a flat fee into a trust account. We conclude, however, that Wimmershoff did charge an unreasonable fee, did not adequately explain the basis of his fee to the client, and violated the rules governing contingent fee agreements. We believe that a public censure plus restitution is the appropriate sanction for these ethical violations.

I.

Nicholas A. Wimmershoff was admitted to practice law in this state in 1979. The misconduct charged in the complaint relates to Wimmershoff's representation of Pamela Sue Thompson in a workers' compensation case and a social security disability proceeding, *419 both arising from a single injury. This disciplinary proceeding focuses on Wimmershoff's misconduct in the workers' compensation case. At the hearing, the parties sharply disagreed about the meaning of the terms contained in Wimmershoff's fee agreement, and the effect of the agreement itself. Taking all of the conflicting evidence into account, the hearing board made the following findings by clear and convincing evidence.

Thompson and Wimmershoff entered into a contingent fee agreement dated December 1, 1993, with respect to the workers' compensation case. The agreement provided that Thompson "agrees to pay to [Wimmershoff] for services in this case 20% ... of any and all ... Workmen's Compensation benefits received." The contingency on which the payment of this fee was based was "the receipt of ... Workmen's Compensation benefits by [Thompson]." Wimmershoff modified this agreement on or about April 14, 1994. The board specifically found that the complainant did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that Thompson did not approve this modification. - Wimmershoff became concerned that his efforts would not generate a recovery large enough to make the 20% contingency fee worthwhile, at least from his standpoint. So Wimmershoff requested, and Thompson paid him, an additional $1000 on April 14, 1994. The parties characterized this $1000 in a number of different ways. Thompson testified that she thought it was a "retainer." Wimmershoff testified that he had performed services for Thompson in the amount of $672 by April 14, based on his hourly rate of $120.00. By this reckoning, Wimmershoff stated that he had over $1000 invested in the case by June 13, 1994. At the hearing, Wimmershoff characterized the $1000 as a "maximum" fee. But the board found that this characterization was not supported by the parties' conduct. For one thing, Wimmershoff never credited the $1000 toward the contingency fee. Moreover, he sometimes called the $1000 a "minimum" fee, but never explained what services it covered. The board concluded that the $1000 was an additional fee, over and above the contingent fee. In any event, Wimmershoff placed this $1000 in his operating account and spent all of it by April 28, 1994. Thus, by his own account, Wimmershoff treated the entire $1000 as if it were his own property before it was completely earned. See In re Sather, 3 P.3d at 411, 412-413, 2000 WL 655914.

Under the 20% contingency fee agreement, Wimmershoff was entitled to $2,499. However, he charged and collected a total of $3,499, including the $1000 additional fee. The hearing board found that in 1998, contin-geney fees in workers' compensation cases were restricted to a maximum of 20%. It therefore concluded that "when a lawyer in a workers' compensation case charges a fee which exceeds the statutory maximum he has charged a fee which is 'unreasonable' in violation of Colo. RPC 1.5(a)." 2

The board also found that Wimmershoff violated Colo. RPC 1.15(a) 3 when he'deposited the $1000 into his operating account, despite his own admission that at least part of this fee had not been earned when the deposit was made and thus was the property of the client. The board concluded, however, that this did not necessarily violate Colo. RPC 8.A4(c) 4 and that the complainant did not prove that Wimmershoff's commingling of personal and client funds constituted a knowing misappropriation.

Finally, the board determined that Wim-mershoff failed to adequately convey the basis and rate of his fee to the client, contrary to Colo. RPC 1.5(b), and that he violated Colo. RPC 1.5(c) 5 because the agreement did not comply with Chapter 28.3 of the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure, "Rules Governing *420 Contingent Fees," Rule 4(a)(8), which requires that a written contingent fee agreement contain an estimate of the expenses necessary to bring the matter to a conclusion.

IL.

The hearing panel approved the board's findings and the recommendation that Wim-mershoff be publicly censured and ordered to reimburse the $1000 "additional fee" to Thompson. The complainant argues that suspension for a year and a day is warranted because the evidence showed that Wimmer-shoff negligently misappropriated at least part of the $1000 by depositing it into his operating account and treating the unearned portion of it as his own property. Wimmer shoff, on his part, recognizes that he should not have commingled the unearned part of his $1000 fee in his operating account, but contends that the board's finding that he did not misappropriate the funds should be upheld. However, Wimmershoff challenges the board's finding that his fee was unreasonable, in violation of Colo. RPC 1.5(a).

Notwithstanding the board's findings with respect to the commingling of personal and client funds and Wimmershoff's admissions, we elect not to discipline Wim-mershoff for violating Colo. RPC 1.15(a). Based on the testimony of the parties, we view the $1000 fee Wimmershoff collected as, arguably, a form of a flat fee. As we expressed in In re Sather, such fees must be deposited into a trust account until the attorney earns the fee by performing legal services for the client. See 3 P.3d at 411, 412-418, 2000 WL 655914.

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.3d 417, 2000 WL 655898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wimmershoff-colo-2000.