Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board Vs. James Franklin Hall, Jr.

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 2007
Docket133 / 06-1320
StatusPublished

This text of Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board Vs. James Franklin Hall, Jr. (Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board Vs. James Franklin Hall, Jr.) 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 Vs. James Franklin Hall, Jr., (iowa 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 133 / 06-1320

Filed March 5, 2007

IOWA SUPREME COURT ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY BOARD,

Complainant,

vs.

JAMES FRANKLIN HALL, JR.,

Respondent.

________________________________________________________________________ On review of the report of the Grievance Commission.

Grievance Commission reports that Respondent has committed

ethical misconduct and recommends a suspension from the practice of

law. LICENSE SUSPENDED.

Charles L. Harrington and Laura M. Roan, Des Moines, for

Complainant.

Donna Ruth Beary, Des Moines, for Respondent. 2

CADY, Justice.

The Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board (Board)

charged James F. Hall, Jr. with numerous violations of the Iowa Code of

Professional Responsibility for Lawyers. The Grievance Commission of

the Supreme Court of Iowa (Commission) found Hall violated the Code of

Professional Responsibility. It recommended Hall be suspended from the

practice of law for a minimum period of fifteen months. On our review,

we find Hall violated the Code of Professional Responsibility, and we

suspend his license to practice law indefinitely, with no possibility of

reinstatement for twelve months.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

James F. Hall, Jr. is an Iowa lawyer. He was admitted to the

practice of law in Iowa in 2002. Hall was raised in Des Moines, and

enjoyed a variety of success in his life prior to practicing law. Hall was

an exceptional multi-sport high school athlete and a one-time Olympic

hopeful in track. He served in the United States Navy, and is a veteran

of the Gulf War. He was the first member of his family to attend and

graduate from college.

Hall began his legal career as a sole practitioner in Des Moines.

Within a short period of time, he moved from Des Moines and began

practicing law in Waterloo as a sole practitioner. The demands on his

time were great, and he began, unknowingly at first, to exhibit signs of

what would later be identified as depression and bipolar disorder. He

also had little understanding of the intricacies of an office practice, or the

need to fully train and supervise staff. He had no real mentor within the

profession, and primarily associated with people that provided little

professional guidance. There was evidence that some people he

associated with used illegal drugs in his home. The confluence of these 3

circumstances, as well as others, foretold the disaster that would lie

ahead. This cataclysm eventually unfolded in an eight-count complaint

filed by the Board in 2006, and a hearing before the Commission that set

forth the evidence largely supporting the complaint. Hall currently lives

in Des Moines and practices with another lawyer in an office sharing

arrangement.

Hall’s office practice in Waterloo was marked by disorganization

and, at times, chaos. On one occasion in 2005, Hall signed the names of

two clients to their bankruptcy petitions after he had traveled to the

federal courthouse in Cedar Rapids to file the petitions and discovered

the signatures were missing. He did not obtain permission from the

clients to sign their names, and did not understand he was not permitted

to sign the petitions for his clients. See 11 U.S.C. § 110(e)(1) (2006) (“A

bankruptcy petition preparer shall not execute any document on behalf

of a debtor.”). Hall then told conflicting accounts of the matter to the

bankruptcy judge and later to the Commission.

Hall also neglected client cases on numerous occasions. Between

2003 and 2005, Hall neglected four separate cases after filing notices of

appeal with this court. He repeatedly missed filing deadlines and

received default notices from the clerk of court. On one occasion, his

neglect resulted in the dismissal of the appeal. Hall also neglected a case

involving a claim for wrongful discharge he undertook on behalf of a

client named Marsha Lewis. After agreeing to handle the case, Hall made

little or no effort to advance the client’s claim. He also misrepresented

the status of the case to the client and later failed to promptly turn over

the client file after the client obtained new counsel. Similarly, Hall

neglected a case on behalf of a client named Kristen Campbell after

agreeing to represent the client on an insurance claim involving the 4

death of her husband. He failed to return numerous phone calls from

the client and did little or no legal work in the case. He also failed to

turn over the client file after the client obtained new counsel. The papers

in the file had not been returned to the client as of the date of the

hearing before the Commission. Hall was unable to locate the file or the

papers belonging to the client.

Hall maintained a trust account in his practice, but repeatedly

mismanaged the account and failed to comply with trust account

requirements. He did not maintain a proper ledger of deposits and

withdrawals, and repeatedly used the account to deposit and withdraw

personal funds. He also permitted a paralegal in his office to deposit and

withdraw funds. In 2004, for example, Hall deposited the proceeds from

a personal loan into the trust account, and then periodically used the

account to pay a variety of business and personal obligations. Hall also

deposited other personal funds into the trust account from time to time.

At times, Hall used the trust account more for his personal dealings than

for client matters. Nevertheless, there was no evidence he failed to

maintain an adequate amount of personal funds in the account when he

withdrew funds for personal matters.

Hall handled other financial matters in unorthodox ways. On two

occasions, Hall was paid fees or advances from clients that were never

deposited in the trust account. The Commission, however, found Hall

had earned the fees by the time they were paid by the client. On another

occasion in August 2004, Hall received a settlement check from an

insurance company on behalf of a client in the amount of $3500.

Instead of depositing the check in his trust account, Hall went to the

bank with his client to negotiate the check. The fee arrangement

apparently entitled the client to $2000. Hall deposited the check into his 5

office account at the bank and paid his client $2000 in cash. A few days

later, Hall transferred $3000 from his trust account into his office

account. When Hall’s trust account was later audited by the Client

Security Commission, Hall falsely told the auditor the $3000 that had

been transferred from the trust account represented the settlement

proceeds.

Finally, Hall repeatedly failed to respond to Board inquiries in

response to the various complaints filed against him.

II. Board Complaint.

The Board charged Hall with multiple violations of the rules of

professional responsibility. Count I involved the bankruptcy petitions

and alleged Hall violated six separate provisions of the Code of

Professional Responsibility, including DR 1-102(A)(4) (misrepresentation);

DR 1-102(A)(5) (conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice); DR

1-102(A)(6) (conduct adversely reflects unfitness to practice); and DR 7-

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Iowa Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary Board Vs. James Franklin Hall, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-attorney-disciplinary-board-vs-james-franklin-hall-jr-iowa-2007.