In THE MATTER OF DEIRDRE MARIA STEPHENS (Two Cases)

318 Ga. 375
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 20, 2024
DocketS24Y0049, S24Y0050
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 318 Ga. 375 (In THE MATTER OF DEIRDRE MARIA STEPHENS (Two Cases)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In THE MATTER OF DEIRDRE MARIA STEPHENS (Two Cases), 318 Ga. 375 (Ga. 2024).

Opinion

318 Ga. 375 FINAL COPY

S24Y0049, S24Y0050. IN THE MATTER OF DEIRDRE MARIA STEPHENS (two cases).

PER CURIAM.

These disciplinary matters are before the Court on the report

and recommendation of the State Disciplinary Review Board, which

reviewed the report and recommendation of Special Master Patrick

Longan at the request of Deirdre Maria Stephens (State Bar No.

678789), pursuant to Bar Rules 4-214, 4-215, and 4-216. The Special

Master concluded that Stephens, who has been a member of the

State Bar of Georgia since 1997, violated Rules 1.15 (I) (a),1 1.15 (II)

(a),2 3.3 (a) (1),3 and 8.4 (a) (4)4 of the Georgia Rules of Professional

1 Rule 1.15 (I) (a) provides, in relevant part: “A lawyer shall hold funds

or other property of clients or third persons that are in a lawyer’s possession in connection with a representation separate from the lawyer’s own funds or other property.” 2 Rule 1.15 (II) (a) provides, in relevant part: “All funds held by a lawyer

for a client and all funds held by a lawyer in any other fiduciary capacity shall be deposited in and administered from a trust account.” 3 Rule 3.3 (a) (1) provides: “A lawyer shall not knowingly . . . make a false

statement of material fact or law to a tribunal[.]” 4 Rule 8.4 (a) (4) provides: “It shall be a violation of the Georgia Rules of Conduct (“GRPC” or the “Rules”), found in Bar Rule 4-102 (d), and

recommended disbarment, the maximum penalty for a violation of

any of these Rules. The Review Board adopted the Special Master’s

findings of fact and conclusions of law but recommends that

Stephens receive a six-month suspension and public reprimand,

with conditions for reinstatement. Having reviewed the record, and

for the reasons discussed below, we reject the recommendation of the

Review Board and, instead, agree with the Special Master that

disbarment is warranted.

1. Special Master’s Report

(a) Findings of Fact

Regarding State Disciplinary Board Docket (“SDBD”) No.

7488, the Special Master made the following findings of fact. On May

2, 2018, a $700 check was presented on Stephens’s trust account,

but there were insufficient funds available to cover the check. The

reason for the overdraft was that Stephens did not realize that a

Professional Conduct for a lawyer to . . . engage in professional conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation[.]” 2 client, who had been making regular monthly payments into her

trust account, had not made an expected payment. The payment

Stephens expected that would have prevented the overdraft was for

fees that Stephens had already earned. When Stephens learned of

the overdraft, she contacted the client, who paid her the fees owed,

and she then deposited personal funds into her trust account to cover

the overdraft. The Special Master determined that no client was

harmed by the overdraft or the deposit of earned fees into the trust

account, although there was potential injury to clients from allowing

the trust account to go below the minimum required balance.

Next, regarding SDBD No. 7489, the Special Master recounted

the following. In 2015, Stephens represented a client and his

company in connection with the sale of the company’s assets to a

limited liability company (the “LLC”). The parties executed an Asset

Purchase Agreement and a Bill of Sale, with the terms of the

Agreement providing that the LLC was to pay $80,000 upon request

“as a deposit” while the remainder of the $180,000 purchase price

was to be paid no later than December 1, 2015. The LLC owner was

3 not able to pay the $80,000 before he had to leave the United States

on other business, although he did give the client a post-dated check

for $80,000. Nevertheless, the client pressured the LLC owner to pay

him while he was away, and in response, the LLC owner wired

$75,000 into Stephens’s trust account and delivered the remaining

$5,000 to the client in cash after he returned to the United States.

No provision in the parties’ Agreement required the initial $80,000

to be held in escrow or to be paid into, or maintained in, Stephens’s

trust account; rather, it was done as a matter of expediency and

convenience.

Stephens testified that she disbursed the $75,000 to the client

almost immediately after she received the funds into her bank

account and when she paid him there was no indication of any claim

by the LLC owner to the money or the possibility of any return of

funds. The State Bar offered no evidence to the contrary, and the

record did not pinpoint the exact date of the disbursement to the

client. On June 17, 2015, Stephens sent a letter to the LLC owner

on behalf of her client’s company alleging that the LLC had breached

4 the Agreement; the letter purported to terminate the deal and

asserted that the client would be keeping the $80,000 as liquidated

damages. One month later, the LLC owner and the LLC

(collectively, the “plaintiffs”) sued the client and his company for

breach of the Agreement and sought an injunction to enforce the

transaction; the case also included a claim for unjust enrichment

and alleged that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover $80,000 for

fraud. The plaintiffs then filed an emergency motion for

interlocutory injunction, and in August 2015, the trial court held a

hearing on that motion. During the hearing, counsel for the

plaintiffs stated, “we just found out today that the $80,000 is still in

a trust account,” and they confirmed with the court that they wanted

the court to consider ordering as an additional remedy that Stephens

not dispose of the $80,000. The court then asked Stephens, “I don’t

mean to be presumptuous — is it in your trust account,” and she

responded, “Yes, Your Honor.” When Stephens told the court this,

she knew the information was false; in fact, only $75,000 of the

$80,000 had ever been in her trust account, and all of those funds

5 had been disbursed to the client at some point before the hearing.

The trial court entered an injunction that relied upon Stephens’s

false statement, with the August 28, 2015 order stating, “The

$80,000 shall be maintained in defense counsel’s escrow account

until further order of this court or the conclusion of the litigation,

whichever comes first.”

In April 2016, the plaintiffs filed a motion to require the

defendants to deposit funds into the registry of the court, because in

deposition testimony “none of the Defendants were able to confirm

that the $80,000 was still in their attorney’s trust account,” and

after the trial court ordered a response in June 2016, Stephens filed

a response stating, “There has been no change in the money that is

being held in trust.” In context, the Special Master determined that

this statement was intentionally false and meant to deceive the

court, which Stephens succeeded in doing, as the court denied the

plaintiffs’ motion.

Trial was then held in 2017, and the jury found in favor of the

plaintiffs with the judgment providing that the plaintiffs recover the

6 principal sum of $80,000 with interest plus attorney fees. The client

filed a notice of appeal in October 2017, and a trial judge granted

the plaintiffs’ motion for supersedeas bond pending appeal from the

judgment; however, neither Stephens nor her client ever filed a

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