In the Matter of Dionne Larrel Wade (085931)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 7, 2022
DocketD-132-20
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of Dionne Larrel Wade (085931) (In the Matter of Dionne Larrel Wade (085931)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey 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 Dionne Larrel Wade (085931), (N.J. 2022).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.

In the Matter of Dionne Larrel Wade (D-132-20) (085931)

Argued September 27, 2021 -- Decided June 7, 2022

RABNER, C.J., writing for a unanimous Court.

In this disciplinary matter, the Court is asked to revisit the rule imposed in In re Wilson, which calls for automatic disbarment of attorneys who knowingly misappropriate client funds. 81 N.J. 451, 453, 461 (1979).

Respondent Dionne Larrel Wade has been a solo practitioner since she was admitted to the New Jersey bar in 2002. Her remarkable personal and professional accomplishments are clear from the record. She overcame obstacles early in life and persevered with her studies. Throughout her legal career, she volunteered her time and skill and provided pro bono legal services to underserved clients. She also conducted free legal clinics at her church. She has no prior disciplinary history.

In June 2017, the Office of Attorney Ethics (OAE) conducted a random audit of her financial records. The audit identified multiple problems, including commingling and extensive shortages in client trust funds. Ultimately, the allegations against Respondent involved three clients. She conceded she used client funds without permission to pay various expenses but claimed she did not know it was wrong to borrow the money until the OAE investigator told her so.

In one matter, Respondent repeatedly transferred client funds from her attorney trust account to her business account, which created a shortfall of more than $11,000. Respondent later deposited $12,000 borrowed from a friend to cover the shortfall. In the second matter, Respondent admitted borrowing $5,000 without permission but stated that she withdrew $3,000 to hire a detective for the case and returned that money when she decided not to proceed, while $2,000 was for her fee. In the third matter, Respondent made a number of withdrawals from $4,000 she held in escrow for a client, and the balance dropped to $3,750 at one point. Respondent asserted the shortfalls resulted from failure to pay attention to the books. She replenished the money in time for the closing. In the end, none of Respondent’s clients lost money.

1 Respondent explained that she was aware of the danger in borrowing from clients, noting she had not touched another $123,000 in client funds because she knew she could not “pay that back.” Respondent drew the line at $12,000 -- a self- imposed limit. Respondent admitted that she considered client funds as a “line of credit” she could use, without permission, as long as she made the client whole. She further admitted to using funds from one client to pay for another client’s needs but claimed she did not know that was improper. At various times, Respondent explained that she never intended to steal from clients and intended to pay the money back at all times.

The OAE charged Respondent with multiple instances of knowingly misappropriating client and escrow funds, with violating several Rules of Professional Conduct (RPCs), and with various recordkeeping violations. After a hearing, a Special Ethics Master found that “sloppy bookkeeping did not cause [Respondent] to unknowingly borrow client funds. She knowingly did so, and she paid back what she borrowed.” Because he found clear and convincing evidence that Respondent knowingly misappropriated funds entrusted to her, the Special Master recommended that Respondent be disbarred under Wilson and RPC 1:15(a). After a de novo review of the record, the Disciplinary Review Board (DRB) unanimously upheld the Special Master’s findings and recommendation in a comprehensive decision. The Court entered an order to show cause.

HELD: *In the four decades since Wilson, the Court has consistently disbarred attorneys who knowingly misappropriated client funds regardless of their motives or other mitigating factors. The rule has remained inviolate because of the critical aims it seeks to serve: to protect the public and maintain confidence in the legal profession and the Judiciary. 81 N.J. at 461. If a lawyer knowingly misappropriates client funds, both the attorney and the public should know that the person will be disbarred.

*Because the record in this case -- including Respondent’s admissions -- clearly and convincingly demonstrates that she knowingly misappropriated client and escrow funds, the Court will enter an order of disbarment. Under New Jersey’s longstanding disciplinary rules, disbarment is permanent and marks the end of a person’s ability to practice law. In that respect, New Jersey’s approach differs from most jurisdictions.

*Although it declines to revisit the Wilson rule, the Court finds it is time to reevaluate the current approach to permanent disbarment. The question -- and the challenge -- is whether and how to create a rigorous system that can determine if a lawyer disbarred for those reasons deserves a second chance years later. The Court will establish a broad-based committee to analyze whether disbarment for knowing misappropriation should continue to be permanent, or 2 whether New Jersey should join the majority of jurisdictions that allow for reinstatement. If the Court revises the current approach to permanent disbarment, Respondent and others would be able to reapply for admission in accordance with a new court rule.

1. Prior to 1979, the Court condemned the taking of client funds but did not disbar lawyers in all cases. The Court’s pronouncement in Wilson in 1979 outlined a clearer path: “that disbarment is the only appropriate discipline” when an attorney “knowingly use[s] his clients’ money as if it were his own.” 81 N.J. at 453. As the Court explained, most “misappropriation cases involve[] lawyers who undoubtedly intended to return the funds.” Id. at 458. The Court nonetheless observed that “[t]he policy described in this opinion, leading to disbarment in these cases, would be ill served if ‘borrowing’ regularly resulted in lesser discipline.” Id. at 458 n.2. In essence, although the Court sharply criticized “stealing a client’s money,” id. at 457, it did not require proof that an attorney intended to steal or defraud a client to establish knowing misappropriation. The Court went on to consider -- and reject -- mitigating circumstances that had previously led to discipline short of disbarment, including restitution and recordkeeping. Id. at 457-59. The Court noted that “the pressures on the attorney that forced him to steal, and the very real possibility of reformation” are deeply troubling in ordering disbarment, but it found those factors to be outweighed by the “most compelling reasons” -- “the continued confidence of the public in the integrity of the bar and the judiciary.” Id. at 460. As a result, the Court announced a bright-line rule that “all . . . cases” of knowing misappropriation of client funds “generally . . . shall result in disbarment. We foresee no exceptions to this rule and expect the result to be almost invariable.” Id. at 453. “[M]itigating factors will rarely override the requirement of disbarment.” Id. at 461. That rule has been described in even stronger language in decisions since Wilson. (pp. 17-22)

2. After Wilson, the Court extended the disbarment rule to lawyers who knowingly misuse escrow funds. In re Hollendonner, 102 N.J. 21, 28 (1985). Knowing misappropriation of law firm funds can lead to disbarment, but disbarment has not been an absolute requirement in those instances. In re Sigman, 220 N.J. 141, 158 (2014). In all of those areas, the Court imposes disbarment only if the OAE can satisfy a high standard and demonstrate clear and convincing proof of knowing misappropriation.

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