Inquiry Commission v. Hammond

198 S.W.3d 591, 2006 Ky. LEXIS 187, 2006 WL 2455664
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2006
Docket2006-SC-323-KB
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 S.W.3d 591 (Inquiry Commission v. Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inquiry Commission v. Hammond, 198 S.W.3d 591, 2006 Ky. LEXIS 187, 2006 WL 2455664 (Ky. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER OF TEMPORARY SUSPENSION

The Inquiry Commission requests that Respondent Maxwell Hammond, KBA Member No. 85218, whose last known address is P.O. Box 1500, 660 South 7th Street, Grayson, Kentucky 41450, be temporarily suspended from the practice of law in the Commonwealth of Kentucky pursuant to SCR 3.165(l)(a) as there is probable cause to believe that Respondent is or has been misappropriating funds that he holds for others to his own use or has been otherwise improperly dealing with said funds, and pursuant to SCR 3.165(l)(b) as there is probable cause to believe that Respondent poses a substantial threat of harm to his clients or to the public.

Factual Allegations

As of May 2, 2006, Respondent was the subject of fourteen separate complaints, ten of which involved'allegations-that Respondent had mishandled client funds. A short description of the allegations contained in those complaints are as follows:

1. KBA File No. 12354

On October 20, 1999, Cathy White and Walt Justice paid Respondent a retainer in the amount of $892.60 to represent them in selling property from the estate of Bill Justice. Respondent, however, never took any action regarding the sale of the property. Respondent failed to reply to numerous telephone calls and at least one letter from Ms. White.

2. KBA File No. 12389

On August 18, 2003, Rosie Pence hired Respondent to represent her on a contingency fee basis in a sexual harassment lawsuit against American Airlines. Respondent took no action in Ms. Pence’s case, failed to return her repeated phone calls, and failed to provide an explanation of the status of the case.

3. KBA File No. 12752

William L. Skaggs hired Respondent to represent him in a criminal matter involving charges of speeding and possession of a controlled substance. Mr. Skaggs, who is a resident of Arizona, was driving an Avis rental car when he was stopped for speeding and arrested. He was sentenced in September 2004. Following his sentencing, Mr. Skaggs attempted to recover the original rental agreement with Avis from Respondent. He contacted Respondent’s office multiple times between October 2004 and February 2005; his attorney in Arizona, William J. Wolf, contacted Respondent’s office numerous other times. Neither Mr. Skaggs nor Mr. Wolf were ever able to speak with Respondent, and Respondent never returned their calls or the rental agreement.

4. KBA File No. 12763

On July 2, 2004, William Fields retained Respondent, paying him a $1,500.00 retainer. Respondent subsequently missed several appointments with Mr. Fields and several court appearances, and refused to return any of Mr. Fields’s retainer.

5. KBA File No. 13079

On August 20, 2004, Georgia Stone McBratney hired Respondent for a criminal matter. Mrs. McBratney’s husband paid Respondent $2000.00. Thereafter, Respondent failed to make efforts to have Mrs. McBratney’s bond reduced or to consult with her about her case. Respondent also failed to appear in court five times when Mrs. McBratney’s case was called. Eventually, Mrs. McBratney resolved her case with the assistance of a public defend *593 er. Respondent, however, refused to refund any of the retainer, despite Mrs. McBratney’s request that he do so.

6. KBA File No. 13093

On October 8, 2004, Joy Johnson hired Respondent to represent her in obtaining a divorce. She made a partial payment of $250.00 at that time. Respondent agreed to call Ms. Johnson the following week but failed to do so. Ms. Johnson also called Respondent’s office and asked that he appear in court with her to obtain a Domestic Violence Order, but he failed to make the appearance. Ms. Johnson was not able to speak with Respondent directly, and he refused to return her phone calls. Ms. Johnson’s husband served her with a petition for dissolution of marriage on November 4, 2004. She still had not heard from Respondent, so she hired another attorney to represent her. She subsequently called Respondent’s office multiple times to obtain a refund of her fee. She finally spoke with Respondent on March 21, 2005, and Respondent agreed to review her file and get back with her. However, Respondent never called her back and he did not refund her fee.

7. KBA File No. 13264

Brady Sparks hired Respondent to represent him in making a claim for Social Security Disability benefits. On March 10, 2005, Mr. Sparks paid Respondent $1,737.00, which represented 25% of the amount he was awarded for back pay. The Social Security Office later sent Mr. Sparks a letter indicating that Respondent was entitled to $5,300.00 for his representation in the matter and that that amount had been withheld from Mr. Sparks’s check and distributed to Respondent. The Social Security Office sent Mr. Sparks another letter indicating that $5,300.00 was the maximum fee Respondent could charge in the matter and that it would not approve a higher fee based on past-due benefits. Mr. Sparks’s wife contacted Respondent about refunding the $1737.00 that had previously been paid as his fee for recovery of past-due benefits. Respondent failed to return the call and refused to refund any money to Mr. Sparks.

8. KBA File No. 13597

Susan Burns hired Respondent to represent her in a personal injury case in 2000. Respondent failed to take action in the matter and failed to return phone calls from Ms. Burns throughout the representation. Ms. Burns discharged Respondent in 2005 and requested the return of her client file. Respondent failed to return the file.

9. KBA File No. 13633

In 2001, Charles Ingles hired Respondent to challenge his brother’s will. Mr. Ingles paid Respondent $500.00 plus $125.00 for filing fees. Respondent never initiated the will contest proceedings, and later told Mr. Ingles’s other brother, Ralph Ingles, that there was nothing he could do to challenge the will. In 2004, Charles and Ralph Ingles hired Respondent to represent them in a lawsuit against a person they claimed had forged their deceased brother’s signature on several checks. They paid Respondent $500.00 plus a $140.00 filing fee for the representation; they also agreed to pay Respondent a contingency fee of 30% of any damages recovered. Respondent never filed the lawsuit and subsequently failed to return the Ingles brothers’ phone calls or their fee. ,

10. KBA File No. 13750

In August 2004, Maxine Wooten hired Respondent to represent her in a DUI case. She gave Respondent a diamond ring valued at $3,774.80 to cover the fee and any fines she might have to pay. Re *594 spondent failed to represent Ms. Wooten. She eventually pled guilty to the DUI charge and was ordered to pay fines totaling $974.00. Respondent failed to pay the fines as agreed and never * returned the diamond ring or any part of the value of the ring.

11. KBA File No. 13862

On August 16, 2005, Ashley Sexton hired Respondent to recover some property from her estranged mother. Ms. Sexton’s father paid Respondent $750.00 for the representation. However, Respondent did not perform any work on behalf of Ms. Sexton, and has refused to return telephone calls or the fee.

12. KBA File No. 13873

Respondent represented Charles Oppenheimer in an appeal.

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Related

Kentucky Bar Association v. Hammond
241 S.W.3d 310 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2007)
KENTUCKY BAR ASS'N v. Hammond
232 S.W.3d 529 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.3d 591, 2006 Ky. LEXIS 187, 2006 WL 2455664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inquiry-commission-v-hammond-ky-2006.