Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Kathryn S. Barnhill

885 N.W.2d 408, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 90, 2016 WL 4945206
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 16, 2016
Docket16–0731
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 885 N.W.2d 408 (Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Kathryn S. Barnhill) 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.

Bluebook
Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Kathryn S. Barnhill, 885 N.W.2d 408, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 90, 2016 WL 4945206 (iowa 2016).

Opinion

HECHT, Justice.

The Iowa Supreme Court Disciplinary Board (the Board) charged attorney Kathryn Barnhill with violating multiple rules of professional conduct following two matters in which trial court judges imposed sanctions against Barnhill for her actions in those cases. The Iowa Supreme Court Grievance Commission (the commission) concluded Barnhill committed ethical violations and recommended suspension of Barnhill’s license for six months. We now review the commission’s recommendation. See Iowa Ct. R. 36.21.

*413 I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

“We admitted Barnhill to practice law in Iowa in 1989.” Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Barnhill (Barnhill IT), 847 N.W.2d 466, 471 (Iowa 2014). This disciplinary proceeding arises out of a fee dispute Barnhill had with a former client and out of her representation of a client in a property damage claim litigated in federal court.

A. Fee Dispute. Don Jayne hired Barnhill to represent him in a dispute with a contractor that filed a mechanic’s lien on Jayne’s property. The amount in controversy was under $20,000. Jayne signed a fee agreement with Barnhill in which he agreed to pay $200 per hour for Barnhill's services.

By the time the matter ended, Barnhill had billed Jayne over $60,000 for her work. Jayne paid the bill but believed it was unreasonable given the breadth of his legal problem. He retained new counsel and filed a complaint with the Polk County Bar Association Attorney Fee Arbitration Committee. In April 2014, the committee determined the fee Barnhill charged was “unreasonable given the amount of work performed ... in relation to the scope of the problem.” It ordered Barnhill to refund Jayne twenty-five percent of the fees collected. The committee did not place any conditions on Jayne’s entitlement to the refund.

Barnhill tendered Jayne a check for $1000 (check # 1). However, she did not immediately pay the remainder (over $14,000) of the fee arbitration award. On May 30, 2014, we suspended her license for sixty days for unrelated ethical misconduct, with automatic reinstatement after the sixty days passed. Id. at 488. Obeying this court’s order and the Iowa Court Rules, Barnhill notified Jayne’s counsel, Kenneth Munro, that her license had been suspended. See id.

In August, after Barnhill’s suspension ended, Munro wrote to Barnhill requesting that she pay the remainder of Jayne’s refund. Barnhill did not respond. A month later, Munro sent another letter requesting payment. Barnhill responded by email in mid-September, explaining that she had not fully repaid Jayne because she was concerned doing so might constitute practicing law while her license was suspended. Because her license was now reinstated, she promised to “finalize th[e] payment” when she returned from an international trip.

In early October, Jayne informed Barn-hill he had ended his attorney-client relationship with Munro and requested that Barnhill direct all further communications regarding the fee matter to him. On October 10, Barnhill sent a responsive letter to Jayne, signaling her intent to pay Jayne “by the end of this month if not sooner.”

Barnhill missed her intended payment deadline and did not repay Jayne by the end of October. Jayne subsequently filed a complaint with the Board and retained attorney Kevin Abbott to collect the amount owed. Abbott sent Barnhill a letter dated November 24, 2014, in which he requested payment from Barnhill within ten days. Two weeks later, Barnhill responded by email that Abbott “should have [a] check for full payment.” Barnhill further requested that upon receiving the check (check #2), Jayne execute “a full release and satisfaction,” including a “release” of Jayne’s complaint to the Board. 1 Barnhill indicated she was “prepared to take all actions available,” including *414 “claims against Don Jayne resulting from his continuing conduct,” unless she received “a global release within 48 hours.” She also sent a fax to Abbott’s office warning Abbott that she did not consent to him disbursing any proceeds of check #2 to Jayne until she received an acceptable release.

Despite Barnhill’s statement to Abbott that she sent check # 2 paying in full the balance of the fee arbitration award and her assertion that the funds were “presently being held” in Abbott’s client trust account, Abbott never received the check. Accordingly, in January 2015, • he filed a petition on Jayne’s behalf in district court to, enforce the fee arbitration committee’s ruling. Barnhill answered the petition, asserting “[n]o amount remains unpaid.” Barnhill also brought counterclaims against Jayne and cross-claims against Abbott (individually) and Abbott’s law firm. The counterclaims and cross-claims contended Jayne, Abbott, and Abbott’s firm were committing abuse of process and had conspired to do so. In answering the counterclaims arid cross-claims, Abbott wrote Barnhill “has not made payment ... and she is making a false statement to the Court by claiming she has made said payment.”

In April, Barnhill sent Abbott a letter enclosing a photocopy of yet another instrument (check # 3) payable to Abbott’s trust aecourit for the balance of the fee arbitration award. In this letter, Barnhill promised she would deliver check # 3 once she received a release. Notably, check # 3 was dated March 16, 2015 — after Barnhill’s assertion of claims against Jayne, Abbott, and Abbott’s firm. Abbott did not forward the requested release, and he never received check # 3.

Jayne requested summary judgment in the district court litigation for the balance of the fee arbitration award, including “attorney fees for defending [Barnhillj’s bad faith [counter and cross] claims.” Around the same time, Barnhill sent Abbott a letter enclosing another instrument (check # 4) payable to Jayne in the amount of the balance owed on the fee arbitration award. The letter and check were dated May 4, 2015, but did not arrive at Abbott’s office until May 20 — after Abbott had already filed the motion for summary judgment. At the commission hearing, Abbott opined that Barnhill backdated the letter and check because she received notice of his motion for summary judgment “and then sent the check that da[y] or the day after,” but wanted it to appear as though the check preceded the filing of the motion for summary judgment.

The memo line on check #4 stated “payment in full for all claims.” Abbott received the check but did not tender it to Jayne because, he explained, accepting “payment in full” might compromise any chance of recovering court costs and attorney fees incurred in defending Barnhill’s counterclaims and cross-claims. He asked Barnhill to send another check for court costs and attorney fees. Barnhill refused, stating the “costs were incurred ... needlessly rather than cash[ing] the checks I have been sending.” Abbott responded that “checks,” plural, was a misstatement:

I received one check from you. It was after I filed this lawsuit and after you filed your baseless claims against Mr. Jayne, myself and my firm.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
885 N.W.2d 408, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 90, 2016 WL 4945206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-attorney-disciplinary-board-v-kathryn-s-barnhill-iowa-2016.