Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Sheree L. Smith

885 N.W.2d 185, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 85, 2016 WL 4722452
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 9, 2016
Docket16–0111
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 885 N.W.2d 185 (Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. Sheree L. Smith) 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. Sheree L. Smith, 885 N.W.2d 185, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 85, 2016 WL 4722452 (iowa 2016).

Opinion

HECHT, Justice.

The Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board (Board) charged attorney Sheree L. Smith with violating multiple rules of professional conduct. Smith entered a stipulation conceding that her conduct violated several rules. See Iowa Ct. R. 36.16 (permitting stipulations in attorney disciplinary matters); see also Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Haskovec, 869 N.W.2d 554, 562-63 (Iowa 2015) (establishing parameters for stipulations in disciplinary matters but cautioning that stipulations do not bind the court as to whether an ethical violation has occurred). After a hearing, the Iowa Supreme Court Grievance Commission (commission) recommended suspension of Smith’s license for sixty days. We agree with the commission’s recommendation and suspend Smith’s license with no possibility of reinstatement for sixty days.

I. Background Pacts and Proceedings.

Smith became an Iowa lawyer in 1998. She initially worked as a clinician with a behavioral health organization and, with the organization’s approval, utilized her law license to represent defendants in some court-appointed criminal matters. The organization filed for bankruptcy in 2002, and Smith then became a sole practitioner.

This disciplinary proceeding arises out of Smith’s representation of a client in a family law matter and an audit of Smith’s trust account. Smith stipulated to some facts, which we consider established for the purposes of this proceeding. See Has-kovec, 869 N.W.2d at 557 (“Stipulations of facts are ... binding on the parties.”). We supplement the stipulated facts with our own de novo factual findings.

A. Jill Hopkins Matter. In February 2012, the district court entered a decree dissolving Jill Hopkins’s marriage. Smith did not represent Hopkins in the dissolution, but in June, Hopkins hired Smith to represent her in seeking a postdecree injunction and paid Smith a retainer of $1185. Smith deposited the retainer in her client trust account and sent Hopkins a letter establishing billing rates for her work and her assistant’s work.

In July, Smith filed an application for temporary injunction. The court granted a temporary injunction and set a hearing. At that hearing, Smith requested a contin *189 uance of the matter for an indefinite period. Thereafter, Smith withdrew the retainer from her client trust account but did not send Hopkins a bill or itemization of her services.

Hopkins hired new counsel in October. Her new counsel sent Smith a letter asking her to withdraw from the case and requesting that she forward the remainder of Hopkins’s retainer. Smith did not respond to the letter or forward any funds to Hopkins’s new attorney.

Hopkins filed a complaint with the Board. When Smith responded to the Board’s inquiry, she claimed she did not respond to Hopkins’s new counsel or forward any portion of Hopkins’s retainer because she had exhausted the retainer and in fact had billed additional time for which Hopkins had not paid. Smith asserted she “completed all work” Hopkins hired her to perform but Hopkins was frustrated because “the result was not what she expected.” Smith did not respond to subsequent Board inquiries asking her to provide copies of records accounting for funds drawn against Hopkins’s retainer.

B. Trust Account Audits. In 2007, a Client Security Commission auditor performed an audit of Smith’s client trust account. The auditor noted a few minor deficiencies in Smith’s trust account practices but acknowledged Smith had recently adjusted her document retention policies and was maintaining appropriate ledgers.

The same auditor performed another audit in 2012. He did not note any specific deficiencies in Smith’s recordkeeping at that time. He also did not note, however, whether Smith had preserved her client trust account records for the length of time required by our rules. Nonetheless, the auditor concluded Smith’s trust account reconciled with each bank statement he examined and with the check register.

Following the complaint lodged by Hopkins, the same auditor performed another audit in 2014. The auditor wrote to Smith and requested documents evidencing her trust account activity since January 2011, including bank statements, canceled checks, deposit slips, transaction registers, reconciliations, and monthly balance sheets that included individual subaccount balances. Smith responded that the computer on which she kept these records had irretrievably malfunctioned in February 2014, and so had her electronic backup storage. Smith further reported she had not kept a checkbook record since 2008 and did not have copies of canceled checks or deposit tickets because her bank did not return them. Smith eventually produced some documents, but the auditor considered them incomplete and insufficient to demonstrate Smith’s compliance with the court rules governing client trust accounts. Smith asserted she had always kept minimal records and assumed her recordkeep-ing was permissible because neither of her prior audits resulted in referral to the Board or recommended changes in her trust account practices.

After Smith produced more documents in piecemeal fashion — but still not all the documents the auditor had requested — the auditor reviewed them and prepared a memorandum concluding Smith’s trust account practices violated our rules in several particulars.

C. Disciplinary Proceedings. After Hopkins’s complaint to the Board and the Client Security Commission audit, the Board opened an investigation. Eventually it filed a formal complaint with the commission, alleging Smith violated numerous provisions of the Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct and Client Trust Account Rules, including 32:1.15(a) and 45.2(3)(a) (not maintaining trust account *190 records for six years following termination of the representation); 32:1.15(b) and 45.1 (commingling personal funds and trust account funds); 32:1.15(c) and 45.7(3) (not depositing advance fees in a trust account and withdrawing them only when fees are earned or expenses incurred); 32:1.5(d) and 45.2(2) (not promptly delivering funds or other property to which the client is entitled); 32:1.15© (violating the court rules governing trust accounts); 32:1.16(d) (not returning papers, property, and any unearned advance payments that the client is entitled to receive); and 32:8.1(b) (knowingly failing to respond to a lawful demand for information from the Board).

“[A] violation of an attorney’s obligations under chapter 45 [of the Iowa Court Rules] also constitutes a violation of rule 32:1.15©.” Iowa Supreme Ct. Att’y Disciplinary Bd. v. Eslick, 859 N.W.2d 198, 201 (Iowa 2015). The Board also alleged some additional trust account rule violations under chapter 45, as incorporated by rule 32:1.15(f).

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885 N.W.2d 185, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 85, 2016 WL 4722452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-attorney-disciplinary-board-v-sheree-l-smith-iowa-2016.