In the Matter of Ronald Wade Moak

828 S.E.2d 760, 427 S.C. 1
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 2019
DocketAppellate Case 2019-000202; Opinion 27889
StatusPublished

This text of 828 S.E.2d 760 (In the Matter of Ronald Wade Moak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina 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 Ronald Wade Moak, 828 S.E.2d 760, 427 S.C. 1 (S.C. 2019).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In this attorney disciplinary matter, respondent and the Office of Disciplinary Counsel (ODC) have entered into an Agreement for Discipline by Consent (the Agreement) pursuant to Rule 21, RLDE, Rule 413, SCACR. In the Agreement, respondent admits misconduct and consents to the imposition of a definite suspension of not more than one year. We accept the Agreement and suspend respondent from the practice of law in this state for one year from the date of this opinion. The facts, as set forth in the Agreement, are as follows.

Facts

Matter I

Respondent agreed to represent D.D. on seven drug charges and one count of financial identity theft for a flat fee. D.D. was arrested on a bench warrant several months before respondent's representation began and remained in jail throughout the representation, as respondent's efforts to have the bench warrant lifted were unsuccessful. Respondent shared important developments in the case with D.D., but did not write D.D. and did not recall receiving the numerous letters D.D. reports having sent respondent. Frustrated by D.D.'s failure to make payments as promised, respondent eventually stopped visiting D.D. in jail.

When respondent ceased contact, D.D. wrote to the clerk of court and a circuit judge regarding the lack of progress in his case. Over a two-month period, the judge responded to four of D.D.'s letters. Each time, the judge emailed respondent and the solicitor, including D.D.'s letter and the judge's response. D.D.'s first two letters concerned evidence in his case. In the third letter, D.D. complained about respondent and requested the public defender's office be reappointed. The judge responded by asking respondent and the solicitor to have D.D. brought to court so his request could be heard. D.D. was not brought to court and wrote to the judge again two weeks later, advising he had not had any contact with respondent despite writing respondent several letters.

Respondent made no attempt to contact D.D. after learning D.D. was contacting the judge and, instead, moved to be relieved after receiving the judge's fourth response to D.D. By the time of the hearing on respondent's motion to be relieved, it had been at least six months since respondent communicated with D.D. The court relieved respondent and reappointed the public defender.

*761 Matter II

K.F. sought respondent's assistance with enforcing a child support order. Respondent agreed to pursue a contempt action for a $600 fee. He received a down payment and K.F.'s child support order. Respondent showed K.F. a copy of the contempt complaint before he filed it, but did not provide her with a filed copy. Respondent notified K.F. of the hearing date and asked one of his friends to serve K.F.'s ex-husband. However, respondent's friend failed to serve the ex-husband. Respondent could not reach the friend prior to the scheduled hearing and never learned why service did not occur. Respondent told K.F. he would have the hearing rescheduled and the documents served; however, he did not request a new hearing date.

Respondent failed to respond to K.F.'s texts and/or communicate with her family members. 1 In one text, K.F. asked respondent to return her documents and withdraw from the case so she could hire new counsel. Respondent admits he never fully read the text. K.F. also sent respondent a certified letter with the same requests; however, respondent never collected the letter from the post office.

One month after the contempt hearing was scheduled to occur, K.F. filed a complaint with ODC. Approximately six weeks after learning of the investigation and after receiving multiple status inquiries from ODC, respondent returned K.F.'s file and had her execute a consent order relieving him. The clerk of court does not have a copy of the consent order and respondent did not retain a copy; however, K.F. was able to hire new counsel who pursued a contempt action on her behalf.

K.F. filed both a disciplinary complaint and a fee dispute. Believing the fee dispute was part of the disciplinary investigation, respondent did not cooperate with the fee dispute investigator. The Resolution of Fee Disputes Board (the Board) decided K.F. was entitled to a refund of the $200 she paid respondent. Respondent did not appeal the Board's decision and did not refund the money. Respondent claims he offered K.F. a refund, but she declined it.

Matter III

Respondent represented E.M. at a bond revocation hearing in August 2017. Respondent and E.M. had differing recollections about the scope of the representation and there was no written fee agreement between the parties. Respondent maintains he agreed to represent E.M. at the bond revocation hearing for $500, and in the event he was hired to represent E.M. on the underlying criminal charges, the $500 would be applied to the $1,500 fee he quoted E.M. for the entire case. E.M. contends the scope of the representation was never limited to the revocation bond hearing.

Respondent represented E.M. at the bond revocation hearing without receiving any payment. Weeks after the hearing, E.M.'s sister paid respondent $100.

Thereafter, confusion arose about whether respondent or the public defender's office was representing E.M. on his charges and a hearing was held to clarify the matter. At the hearing, respondent asked the court to consider him E.M.'s attorney, explaining he appeared at the bond revocation hearing based on a promise of being hired on E.M.'s pending charges, and he had not "been paid at all on this case." E.M. told the court the public defender was his attorney. The court relieved respondent and clarified the public defender represented E.M. on all pending charges.

In the weeks that followed, E.M. paid respondent an additional $300. In December 2017, based on the additional payments and E.M.'s promise to continue to make monthly payments, respondent filed a notice of appearance on each of E.M.'s pending charges. However, respondent did not file any discovery requests because he believed he could get the discovery from the public defender.

In January 2018, another hearing was held to clarify counsel in response to a letter E.M. sent to the court. At this hearing, the public defender was relieved and respondent was recognized as E.M.'s counsel. E.M. requested *762 discovery during the hearing and the public defender offered to forward the discovery from the State to respondent. Respondent advised the court that, when he received it, he would share the discovery with E.M. Respondent received the discovery at the hearing and maintains he reviewed some of it briefly with E.M. at the courthouse. Thereafter, because E.M. was not making payments, respondent chose not to visit E.M. to review the discovery in more detail and did not provide E.M. with a copy of the discovery.

E.M. filed a motion to relieve respondent. At a March 2019 hearing, respondent stated he was willing to be relieved because E.M. was not paying him. Respondent admitted he had the discovery at his home and did not refute E.M.'s claim that he had not provided E.M. with a copy. The court relieved respondent and reappointed the public defender.

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Bluebook (online)
828 S.E.2d 760, 427 S.C. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-ronald-wade-moak-sc-2019.