Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Kenneth F. Dolezal

841 N.W.2d 114, 2013 WL 6709952, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 130
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 20, 2013
Docket13–1230
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 841 N.W.2d 114 (Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Kenneth F. Dolezal) 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. Kenneth F. Dolezal, 841 N.W.2d 114, 2013 WL 6709952, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 130 (iowa 2013).

Opinion

MANSFIELD, Justice.

An Iowa attorney neglected a client’s matter, failed to deposit client funds into his trust account, charged a client an unreasonable fee, loaned money to a client without disclosing the terms of the transaction in writing, and failed to turn over client files when ordered to do so. Additionally, the attorney continued to handle two legal matters while suspended, didn’t notify one of the clients of his suspension, and made untrue statements about his suspension to the Social Security Administration.

This attorney discipline proceeding comes before us on the report of a division of the Grievance Commission of the Supreme Court of Iowa. See Iowa Ct. R. 35.11(1). The Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board alleged the respondent, Kenneth Dolezal, violated a number of rules of professional conduct, with the violations extending to four distinct client matters.

Agreeing with many of the Board’s allegations, the commission found that Dolezal violated Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct 32:1.5(a) (prohibiting a lawyer from charging unreasonable fees), 32:1.8(a) (prohibiting a lawyer from entering a business transaction with a client before disclosing the terms in writing), 32:1.8(e) (prohibiting financial assistance to a client in connection with pending or future litigation), 32:1.15 (requiring client funds to be held in a trust account), 32:1.16(d) (requiring a lawyer to turn over client papers and property upon termination of representation), 32:3.3(a)(l) (prohibiting a lawyer from making a false statement to a tribunal), 32:3.4(c) (prohibiting knowing disobedience of an obligation under the rules of a tribunal), 32:5.5(a) (prohibiting the unauthorized practice of law), and 32:8.4(d) (prohibiting conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice), and Iowa Court Rules 35.23(l)(a) (requiring a suspended attorney to notify clients of a suspension within fifteen days), and 45.1 (requiring a lawyer to deposit client funds into a trust account). The commission recommended Dolezal’s license be revoked. Upon our consideration of the commission’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommendations, we concur in most of its findings and conclusions and order the attorney’s license suspended with no possibility of reinstatement for two years.

I. Factual and Procedural Background.

Kenneth Dolezal was admitted to the Iowa bar in 1983. He is sixty-seven years old. He received the Bronze Star in 1970 for heroism in ground combat while serving in the Army in Vietnam.

On April 29, 2011, we suspended Dole-zal’s license for thirty days because of several violations of our ethical rules, primarily relating to neglect of client matters. See Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Dolezal, 796 N.W.2d 910, 922-23 (Iowa 2011). Reinstatement, however, was *118 conditional on Dolezal’s paying the costs of the proceeding. Id. at 923. Dolezal never paid those costs, and thus his license remains suspended to this day. This proceeding concerns, for the most part, events that occurred after Dolezal’s April 2011 suspension.

On December 26, 2012, the Board fíled a complaint against Dolezal alleging he violated Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct 32:1.3, 32:1.5(a), 32:1.8(a), 32:1.8(e), 32:1.16(d), 32:3.2, 32:3.3(a)(l), 32:3.4(e), 32:5.5(a), 32:8.1(b), 32:8.4(c), and 32:8.4(d), as well as Iowa Court Rule 35.13(3) in his handling of four separate client matters. The Board amended its complaint on March 25, 2013, and further alleged Dole-zal violated Iowa Rule of Professional Conduct 32:1.15(1) and Iowa Court Rule 45.1.

A. Steven Carter Estate. Dolezal’s neglect in handling the Carter estate was discussed in our previous disciplinary opinion. Dolezal, 796 N.W.2d at 919-20. Our suspension of Dolezal’s license was due in part to his failure to close the Steven Carter estate in a timely fashion despite several delinquency notices. Id. at 920.

After we suspended Dolezal from the practice of law in April 2011, the probate court granted him permission to withdraw as counsel for the administrator. Gene Carter — Steven Carter’s son and the estate administrator — was ordered to obtain alternative counsel or file the documents necessary to administer the estate within sixty days. When Carter failed to do so, he was ordered to show cause why he should not be held in contempt. Attorney Thomas Viner was appointed at public expense to defend Carter’s interests in that proceeding.

On April 18, 2012, Carter attempted to file a final report, apparently without the assistance of counsel. The court rejected the report as inadequate. It set a further show-cause hearing for June 8, 2012. On that day, Carter and Viner jointly appeared. Viner explained that the finalizing of administration had been complicated by Dolezal’s failure to turn over the estate file. The court therefore issued an order, which it caused to be served on Dolezal, directing him to turn over his file within thirty days.

Dolezal did not hand over his file. Instead, several additional contempt hearings had to occur before Dolezal finally made the relevant documents available in February 2013. Dolezal later admitted at the hearing before the commission that he did not provide the documents within the thirty days ordered by the court.

Additionally, on September 14, 2012, Do-lezal submitted a claim for payment from the estate. His claim was supported by a billing statement which indicated the estate owed him $22,536.10. The statement showed 5.8 hours of work performed after he was suspended. The postsuspension billed activities included, among others: (1) $60.00 for “Suspension letter to Gene [Carter],” (2) $60.00 for “Supreme Court required Notification to Court,” (3) $30.00 for receiving the “clerk Notices regarding delinquent Final report and Interlocutory report,” (4) $210.00 for working on the “Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board — Gene Carter complaint,” and (5) $120.00 for a letter to the “Attorney Disciplinary Board regarding complaint of Gene Carter.”

On the same day Dolezal submitted his claim for fees, he also filed a request to have Carter removed as the estate administrator. Dolezal maintained, and still maintains, that Carter absconded with money, a car, and a motorcycle that belonged to the estate. He urged the court to replace Carter with another administrator.

*119 Included in Dolezal’s request that Carter be removed was an explanation for a payment Dolezal had received from Carter several years back. According to Dolezal, Carter had repaid him for a personal loan he had made to Carter “for the purposes of establishing his own residence rather than living with relatives which he had been doing at the time of and subsequent to his father’s death.” Dolezal later testified at the commission hearing that he received $2000 from Carter on December 14, 2006, in repayment of a no-interest loan. Dolezal admitted he had kept no records concerning the loan. At the commission hearing, Dolezal maintained the loan did not violate any ethical rule because he had not charged any interest.

At the time of Dolezal’s disciplinary hearing, the contempt charge against Carter was still pending, and the estate had not been closed.

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Related

Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Bd. v. Hamer
915 N.W.2d 302 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Kim Marlow West
901 N.W.2d 519 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2017)
Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Karen A. Taylor
887 N.W.2d 369 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
841 N.W.2d 114, 2013 WL 6709952, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-attorney-disciplinary-board-v-kenneth-f-dolezal-iowa-2013.