Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. McKittrick

683 N.W.2d 554, 2004 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 175, 2004 WL 1344997
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 16, 2004
Docket03-2094
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 683 N.W.2d 554 (Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. McKittrick) 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 Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. McKittrick, 683 N.W.2d 554, 2004 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 175, 2004 WL 1344997 (iowa 2004).

Opinion

CADY, Justice.

The Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics and Conduct charged Deborah K. McKittrick with several violations of the Iowa Code of Professional Responsibility for Lawyers based on her conduct in representing a client in a dissolution action and her subsequent conduct in collecting fees for her services from the client. The Grievance Commission of the Supreme Court of Iowa found McKittrick violated the Code of Professional Responsibility. It recommended McKittrick receive a public reprimand. On our review, we find McKittrick violated the Code and impose an indefinite suspension of not less than three months.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Deborah K. McKittrick is a lawyer in Ankeny, Iowa. She was admitted to the practice of law in 1989. She primarily practices in the area of family law, and also works as a mediator. She is a former member of the Family Law Committee of the Iowa State Bar Association and served as a member of a division of the Grievance Commission.

In July 1995, McKittrick agreed to represent Mary Jo Walker in a domestic abuse proceeding and a subsequent dissolution action. A written attorney fee contract was executed, providing for compensation based on an hourly fee, billed on a monthly basis. Among other provisions, the contract imposed a service charge of “1.5% per month on all unpaid balances.”

The paramount dispute in the dissolution action concerned the designation of the primary caretaker of the parties’ daughter. Following a temporary custody hearing, Walker was awarded temporary primary care of the child. A trial was then set for March 26, 1996.

In September 1995, opposing counsel sent written interrogatories to McKittrick. McKittrick forwarded the interrogatories to Walker for her to answer, but did not inform her of a deadline to respond. On December 27, 1995, opposing counsel filed a motion to compel answers to the inter *557 rogatories, after he had written McKittrick on December 1, requesting the answers be served. The district court ordered the answers to be served within thirty days.

McKittrick served the answers to the interrogatories on January 31, 1996. Opposing counsel claimed some of the answers to questions requesting information about the witnesses Walker intended to call at trial were incomplete. After the two lawyers were unable to resolve the dispute, opposing counsel filed a motion for sanctions.

On March 12, the district court ordered that McKittrick serve complete answers to the disputed interrogatories within seven days. The court also informed the attorneys that sanctions would be considered immediately prior to trial.

McKittrick transmitted a witness list to opposing counsel by fax on March 18 but did not serve answers to the disputed interrogatories as ordered by the district court. On March 20, opposing counsel filed a motion to exclude witnesses and exhibits at trial.

On March 26, prior to the commencement of the trial, the district court considered sanctions and ordered most of Walker’s witnesses excluded for the failure to comply with the order of March 12. The case then proceeded to trial. McKittrick did not call any witnesses other than Walker. In the dissolution decree that followed, the district court designated Walker’s husband as the primary caretaker of the parties’ daughter.

Walker discharged McKittrick after the decree was entered and employed another attorney, who unsuccessfully sought to overturn the decree by post-trial motions and, eventually, an appeal. McKittrick promptly transferred the client file to Walker’s new attorney. McKittrick also waived her fee for services she performed after January 30, 1996. The unpaid amount of the fee prior to this date was $3,610.72. Walker declined to pay the bill.

McKittrick took no action to collect the bill until July 13, 1998, when she filed a notice of attorney lien. By this time, the accumulating interest on the unpaid bill, as computed by McKittrick, had increased the amount due to $6,304.04. McKittrick charged compound interest and at times during the course of the representation, charged interest on services performed before Walker was obligated to pay for the services. McKittrick filed the lien against real estate awarded to Walker in the dissolution action. She pursued no further action to collect the fee and did not notify Walker of her actions.

Walker learned of the attorney lien against her real estate in 1999, after she sought to refinance the mortgage on the property. Walker had filed a modification action in an effort to obtain custody of her daughter and sought to refinance to obtain funds to pay the required retainer of her new attorney. Walker then contacted McKittrick, who agreed to release the lien if Walker paid her $2000 from the refinancing proceeds, and further paid her $50 a month until the remaining debt was paid. Walker agreed to the arrangement and further agreed to sign a written confession of judgment permitting McKittrick to file the judgment in the event she failed to make a monthly payment. The agreement provided that the monthly payments were to be paid on the tenth day of each month, starting July 10,1999.

Walker made the first payment in early July as agreed and then received an invoice from McKittrick indicating payment was due July 23. Walker believed this meant the $50 payments were not due until the twenty-third of each month and waited until August 16 to make the next monthly payment. However, McKittrick *558 filed the confession of judgment on August 11 after she did not receive the August payment by August 10. McKittrick did not contact Walker before taking this action. McKittrick later obtained a general execution and began garnishing Walker’s wages.

Walker ultimately succeeded in obtaining primary care of her daughter in the modification action. However, the accumulating financial burdens, including the wage garnishment, forced Walker to file for bankruptcy shortly after that time. Walker discharged the remainder of the debt to McKittrick in the bankruptcy action.

McKittrick testified at the commission hearing that she was responsible for the imposition of the discovery sanctions in the dissolution action, but explained that the underlying failure to timely provide the discovery was largely attributable to problems with her office staff and the lack of cooperation by Walker. She also pointed out that her conduct did not harm the client because the district judge who entered the dissolution decree indicated in the decree that the custody award was not influenced by the exclusion of witnesses. McKittrick also testified that the attorney fee contract she used, providing for the 1.5% monthly interest, was virtually identical to the form attorney fee contract contained in the 1999 family law manual published by the Iowa State Bar Association.

McKittrick has been privately 'admonished on four occasions in the past for ethical violations. In 1993, she was admonished for requiring a client to pay a fee in a dissolution action before requesting the court to enter a stipulated decree. In 1994, she was admonished for ■ representing a client in a dissolution action when the opposing counsel was an attorney with whom she shared office space.

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683 N.W.2d 554, 2004 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 175, 2004 WL 1344997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-supreme-court-board-of-professional-ethics-conduct-v-mckittrick-iowa-2004.