Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Brien P. O'Brien

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 18, 2022
Docket21-1410
StatusPublished

This text of Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Brien P. O'Brien (Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Brien P. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Brien P. O'Brien, (iowa 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 21–1410

Submitted February 22, 2022—Filed March 18, 2022

IOWA SUPREME COURT ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY BOARD,

Complainant,

vs.

BRIEN P. O’BRIEN,

Respondent.

On review of the report of the Iowa Supreme Court Grievance Commission.

In an attorney disciplinary action, the grievance commission recommends

revocation of the respondent’s license to practice law based on violations of our

attorney ethics rules. LICENSE SUSPENDED.

McDermott, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices

joined.

Tara van Brederode and Lawrence F. Dempsey, IV, Des Moines, for

complainant.

Brien P. O’Brien, Sioux City, pro se. 2

McDERMOTT, Justice.

This attorney disciplinary matter presents the curious, but unfortunately

not unheard of, circumstance of a lawyer who inexplicably “ghosts” his client in

the middle of representation. Clients in these unfortunate situations, often

anxious and always confused by the lawyer’s repeated failures to respond,

eventually figure out that they’ve been abandoned, but sometimes not before

they’ve suffered harm because of the lawyer’s misconduct. This type of behavior,

of course, defies our ethics rules that impose clear-cut duties on lawyers to act

with diligence, to keep clients reasonably informed, and to respond to clients’

reasonable requests for information about their legal matters.

In this case, the Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board charged

the lawyer with neglect and other violations of the Iowa Rules of Professional

Conduct and recommended an eighteen-month suspension. The grievance

commission concluded that the lawyer committed each of the charged violations

and recommended that we revoke the lawyer’s license. On review, we find all the

same violations of our ethics rules and impose a three-year suspension.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Brien O’Brien was admitted to practice law in Nebraska in 1991. He

received his license to practice law in Iowa five years later and set up practice in

Sioux City. The Nebraska Supreme Court disbarred him in 2002 for violating

Nebraska’s trust account rules and for making false statements to its

disciplinary authorities during the investigation into those violations. We

imposed reciprocal discipline in 2003 based on the Nebraska disciplinary action, 3

suspending his license to practice in Iowa for three years. In 2004, O’Brien was

convicted of the crime of fraudulent practices in the third degree (an aggravated

misdemeanor) for failing to file Iowa income tax returns. For this conviction we

again suspended his license, this time for six months, to run concurrently with

his ongoing three-year suspension.

In 2019, Damon Krull met with O’Brien about possible representation in

a child custody case that Krull’s ex-wife filed. O’Brien agreed to represent him.

O’Brien required that Krull pay a $2,750 retainer, which Krull did. O’Brien soon

thereafter filed an answer in the custody case on Krull’s behalf and dismissed a

contempt claim that Krull had filed earlier by himself against his ex-wife.

And then, as to Krull, O’Brien seems to have attempted to put on an

invisibility cloak. O’Brien ceased further communications. In the ensuing

months, Krull called, left messages, and eventually even started dropping in

unannounced at O’Brien’s office in attempts to discuss his case with O’Brien.

Despite promises from O’Brien’s receptionist that O’Brien would call Krull,

O’Brien remained unmoved. He never returned a call, never sent an email or

letter, and indeed never stepped out of his office when Krull appeared in person.

As it turned out, their initial meeting would be the first, last, and only time that

O’Brien would communicate with Krull.

After about four months of O’Brien’s silence, Krull received a call from

O’Brien’s legal secretary informing him that his ex-wife’s lawyer had served

discovery requests. In fact, as Krull would later learn, those discovery requests

had been served fifty-six days earlier, making responses to them already several 4

weeks past due. Krull provided the requested materials to O’Brien’s secretary

within three days, although he noted to the secretary that he didn’t know how to

respond to several of the requests. O’Brien’s secretary said that O’Brien would

call Krull to work through those items. No call came. Krull tried to reach O’Brien

to discuss the discovery responses, but to no avail.

After several more weeks without hearing from O’Brien, Krull, on his own,

accessed the online docket for his case to try to discern the status of things. He

discovered that his ex-wife’s lawyer had filed a motion to compel production of

responses to the discovery requests. The motion noted opposing counsel’s

repeated unsuccessful attempts to contact O’Brien about these items, and

further noted O’Brien’s failure to serve initial disclosures as well. In response to

one of opposing counsel’s calls, O’Brien’s legal secretary apparently had

requested a two-week extension to provide the responses. Opposing counsel had

agreed. Yet O’Brien provided no responses within the two-week extension.

The district court granted the motion to compel and ordered O’Brien to

provide responses within ten days. As that deadline was drawing near without

action by O’Brien, Krull filed a pro se motion requesting additional time to

comply with discovery. The motion stated:

I ask the courts for an extension on providing discovery responses and other information that has been requested. My attorney Brien O’Brien was not representing me to his best ability, and had not been communicating with me at all about my case. My phone calls would not get returned, requests to meet with him would go unanswered. The paralegal I met with in his place has been on vacation [for three months]. When I discovered all the requests for information and deadlines that had been passed, I asked for an explanation and I wasn’t given one. I terminated services with Brien 5

O’Brien and I would like 30 days to find proper legal representation. I apologize for the inconvenience.

The district court granted Krull’s request for additional time to respond to the

discovery requests. The court also ordered a hearing to address potential

sanctions for the failure to respond. The district court in the order noted that

O’Brien had neither filed a response to the motion to compel nor a motion to

withdraw as counsel in the case, and that Krull thus needed to “timely sort out

his attorney issues.”

Krull asked O’Brien’s legal secretary to return the retainer and his client

file. The secretary responded that O’Brien would first need to prepare an invoice

for the services he’d rendered. But no invoice materialized. When Krull again

contacted O’Brien’s secretary for the refund and the file, the secretary turned

over the file but no refund. O’Brien never provided Krull with any invoice or

accounting. He held onto the full retainer.

Meanwhile, Krull retained a new lawyer by taking out a loan from a family

member to pay the new lawyer’s retainer. At the sanctions hearing, the district

court acknowledged the change in counsel but noted that O’Brien had not yet

sought to withdraw from the case. The court observed that “the change in

counsel and proactive approach of [Krull’s] new counsel of getting the issue

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Related

Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Wagner
768 N.W.2d 279 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2009)
Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Carpenter
781 N.W.2d 263 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)
Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. Lett
674 N.W.2d 139 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2004)
Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. Ramey
639 N.W.2d 243 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2002)
Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Templeton
784 N.W.2d 761 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)
Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Bruce A. Willey
889 N.W.2d 647 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2017)

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Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Brien P. O'Brien, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-attorney-disciplinary-board-v-brien-p-obrien-iowa-2022.