Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. T.J. Hier

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 17, 2020
Docket19-1320
StatusPublished

This text of Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. T.J. Hier (Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. T.J. Hier) 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. T.J. Hier, (iowa 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 19–1320

Filed January 17, 2019

IOWA SUPREME COURT ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY BOARD,

Complainant,

vs.

T.J. HIER,

Respondent.

On review of the report of the Iowa Supreme Court Grievance

Commission.

Grievance commission recommends public reprimand for violation

of ethical rules. LICENSE SUSPENDED.

Tara van Brederode and Crystal W. Rink, Des Moines, for

complainant.

David L. Brown and Tyler R. Smith of Hansen, McClintock & Riley,

Des Moines, for respondent. 2

WATERMAN, Justice.

The Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board brought a

complaint against attorney T.J. Hier charging her with violating Iowa

disciplinary rules in connection with her handling of a disputed attorney

fee payment in what she aptly describes as a “hotly contested, emotional

family law matter.” A division of the Iowa Supreme Court Grievance

Commission found that Hier violated several rules but that the Board

failed to prove several other rule violations. The commission recommends

a public reprimand. The Board seeks a suspension. Hier requests a

private admonition. We agree with the commission’s findings as to Hier’s

rule violations, but we disagree with the commission’s recommended

sanction. In light of Hier’s prior disciplinary history, we suspend her

license to practice law for thirty days.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Hier obtained her Iowa law license in 1997. She began her career

in private practice in Newton, and she served as an assistant county

attorney in Jasper County. She had an inactive law license from 2001 to

2005. She resumed practicing law solo out of her home in Baxter in 2006.

She now practices in the areas of criminal, juvenile, and family law. Hier

is under contract with the state public defender’s office for criminal and

juvenile court appointments. She represents many clients pro bono and

serves other low-income clients. She volunteers as a mock trial coach and

for domestic violence victim groups, her church, and the Special Olympics.

Hier is legally blind, having lived nearly her entire life with Stargardt

disease, a rare macular degeneration that requires her to use

magnification techniques and devices to read documents.

Our court has previously disciplined Hier five times. We publicly

reprimanded her in 2009. We temporarily suspended her law license in 3

2012 for failure to respond to the Board. We publicly reprimanded her

again later that year and again in 2014. Most recently, in December of

2017, we disciplined Hier for trust account violations after an audit by the

Client Security Commission determined that she failed to maintain written

monthly reconciliations, lacked a journal of receipts and disbursements,

lacked documentation of electronic transfers, and failed to properly

maintain client ledger subaccounts. We publicly reprimanded her for

violating Iowa Rules of Professional Conduct 32:1.15(a) and (f) and Iowa

Court Rule 45.2. Our 2017 public reprimand preceded some of Hier’s

conduct at issue in this opinion.

Hier represented Amanda Rothfus against Edwin Van Dorn, a

former boyfriend with whom Rothfus had two children. In late 2016, Hier,

on behalf of Rothfus, filed an “Application for Rule to Show Cause and an

Application to Modify Custody, Visitation, and Child Support.” The

applications alleged Van Dorn was willfully violating the visitation

schedule in the decree and was in arrears paying child support. Attorney

Jeff Carter represented Van Dorn. Those matters were pending when

Rothfus was deposed on August 11, 2017. The parties halted the

deposition to negotiate a settlement agreement to resolve the pending

litigation and recited the terms into the record transcribed by the court

reporter. Rothfus agreed to dismiss the contempt action against Van Dorn

in return for his payment of $1032.42 in child support and his payment

of $750 towards Hier’s attorney fees. According to Carter, Hier told

Van Dorn to make the $750 check out to her trust account. The same

day, Van Dorn delivered his check for $1032.42 to the Iowa Child Support

Recovery Unit and delivered his $750 check payable to Hier’s client trust

account (CTA). 4

Rather than deposit the check in her CTA, Hier deposited the check

into her firm’s general account and credited the payment against Rothfus’s

outstanding balance. Hier later testified she did not remember telling

Van Dorn to make the check payable to her CTA, but he did so.

Carter agreed to draft the stipulation reflecting the parties’

agreement, but he did not send the draft to Hier until a month later.

During the intervening weeks, Van Dorn failed to remain current on his

child support payments and failed to exercise visitation. Rothfus declined

to sign the stipulation and insisted on proceeding to trial, contending that

Van Dorn had misrepresented his work schedule, which was the basis for

the custody modification. In response, on September 28, Carter filed a

motion to enforce the settlement agreement that requested the stipulation

be signed or the $750 returned. Hier filed a resistance asserting she need

not return the $750 because Van Dorn’s misrepresentations excused

Rothfus from signing the stipulation.

On November 9, the parties appeared before Judge Rickers for a

hearing on the motion to enforce the settlement. The hearing was

continued at the request of the children’s guardian ad litem who had not

received timely notice. Judge Rickers met with Hier and Carter in

chambers and off the record discussed the dispute over Van Dorn’s $750

payment to Hier. Hier offered to place the $750 payment in her CTA. Hier

later testified that

Mr. Carter was highly agitated and so I said, “Jeff, if it will make you feel better I can put it in my trust account.” And Judge Rickers said, “Well, I’m not going to order you to do that.” And I said -- I said, “Well, I will offer to do that.” And then there was nothing further said about it.

Judge Rickers later testified he lacked a specific recollection of that

in-chambers discussion: 5 Q. Judge Rickers, Ms. Hier testified during her testimony that you said, “I’m not going to order you to return the fees.” That was referring to a statement that you supposedly made on November 9, 2017. Do you recall making that statement? A: I do not specifically recall making that statement. . . . I said, “I don’t recall making it.” I’m not saying I didn’t say it either. I just don’t recall it. If I did make that statement, it was in the context of that the $750 had to be placed in Ms. Hier’s trust account.

In any event, Judge Rickers promptly issued a written order continuing

the hearing until January 26, 2018. The order stated,

Petitioner paid the Respondent’s attorney $750.00 in attorney fees in contemplation of consummation of the settlement agreement. Respondent’s attorney has agreed to immediately transfer $750 to her client trust account pending resolution of the motion. Disposition of the attorney fees held in trust shall depend upon final resolution of the pending motion.

Despite this court order, Hier never deposited the $750 into her CTA, nor

did she inform the court that she neglected to do so. Hier testified that

she did not read the order and thus was unaware of its terms.

On January 25, the day before the scheduled hearing, Carter

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Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board v. T.J. Hier, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-attorney-disciplinary-board-v-tj-hier-iowa-2020.