Kaplan v. State Bar

804 P.2d 720, 52 Cal. 3d 1067, 278 Cal. Rptr. 95, 91 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1348, 91 Daily Journal DAR 2166, 1991 Cal. LEXIS 561
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1991
DocketNo. S014190
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 804 P.2d 720 (Kaplan v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaplan v. State Bar, 804 P.2d 720, 52 Cal. 3d 1067, 278 Cal. Rptr. 95, 91 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1348, 91 Daily Journal DAR 2166, 1991 Cal. LEXIS 561 (Cal. 1991).

Opinion

[1069]*1069Opinion

THE COURT.

We review the recommendation of the Review Department of the State Bar Court (Review Department) that petitioner, Andrew B. Kaplan, be disbarred from the practice of law. After considering the record and the arguments of Kaplan and the State Bar, we conclude that the recommended discipline is appropriate.

I. Facts

Kaplan was admitted to the practice of law in California on December 20, 1973. On January 1, 1978, he joined the law firm of Pettit & Martin as an associate. He became a partner in 1981. Among his duties as partner, Kaplan monitored billing of and receipts from clients’ accounts.

During the period between February and September 1985, Kaplan deposited 24 checks payable to Pettit & Martin into his personal bank account. The total value of these checks was approximately $29,000. Of the twenty-four, all but one were sent to Pettit & Martin directly; one check was drawn on a trust account for a client whose assets were being held in bankruptcy.

In September 1985, Kaplan was confronted by the managing partner of Pettit & Martin, and after repeatedly denying knowledge of the missing checks, Kaplan admitted that he had taken four checks. He claimed that they were needed to help pay for necessary medical treatment for his father. On October 5, 1985, Kaplan confessed to all the misappropriations and resigned from the firm. He later reimbursed Pettit & Martin, primarily through an offset to his capital account. Pettit & Martin decided not to press criminal charges and, apparently on the urging of Pettit & Martin, Kaplan reported his conduct to the State Bar.

Kaplan explained to an official with the State Bar that he had deposited approximately $10,000 of Pettit & Martin’s funds into his personal account. He claimed he needed the funds to finance medical treatment for his mother-in-law. After telling the investigator that he had spent roughly $100,000 of his own funds on her treatment, Kaplan failed to produce records of these expenditures and finally confessed that he had made no such expenditures. A hearing panel of the State Bar Court found that Kaplan used the money not for his mother-in-law but to purchase gifts for his wife and “to maintain a standard of living beyond his means.”

Kaplan joined the firm of Silver & Freedman shortly after he left Pettit & Martin. He did not explain the circumstances surrounding his resignation from Pettit & Martin. Representatives from Silver & Freedman wrote to the [1070]*1070State Bar on behalf of Kaplan, asserting that his conduct has been exemplary since he joined the firm.

Kaplan does not materially dispute the facts that were before the Review Department. Instead he focuses upon the factors that tend to mitigate his culpability. Kaplan notes that “he was suffering from severe emotional instability.” The causes of this instability included his mother-in-law’s terminal cancer, marital problems, certain problematic character traits arising from his father’s long-standing and chronic illness, and the absence of a “support system.” Kaplan was seeing a psychotherapist throughout this period. He testified to Kaplan’s fragile mental and emotional state at the time of the misappropriations. Kaplan claims that these problems have been overcome, and his psychotherapist concurs, though the hearing panel found that Kaplan had not produced clear and convincing evidence that he no longer suffers from his emotional difficulties.

Kaplan also produced 16 character witnesses, most of whom were surprised to learn of Kaplan’s misappropriations and considered the behavior anomalous. Kaplan also cites his cooperation with the State Bar once the investigation was under way as a mitigating circumstance.1

The hearing panel found that Kaplan had violated Business and Professions Code sections 6068, subdivision (a), 6103, and 6106, and found that his acts came within the scope of standard 2.3 of the Standards for Attorney Sanctions for Professional Misconduct (div. V of the Rules Proc. of State Bar; hereinafter referred to as the standards). The hearing panel also found the misappropriation of the check from the client trust fund a violation of former rule 8-101(A) of the Rules of Professional Conduct,2 but found that it did not constitute an act of moral turpitude.3 It recommended that Kaplan be suspended from the practice of law for four years with two years’ actual suspension. The Review Department rejected the hearing panel’s recommended discipline and recommended by a vote of 13 to 1 that Kaplan be disbarred: its reasons were “the numerous separate misappropriations, [1071]*1071violations of fiduciary duty to former partners and attempts to mislead the State Bar.”

II. Discussion

Standard 2.3 provides guidance to us in this case.4 The hearing panel found repeated “acts of intentional dishonesty and concealment, violating his oath as an attorney and constituting acts of moral turpitude.” Kaplan does not contest the State Bar’s findings of multiple violations and its characterization of these violations as acts of moral turpitude.

Though we reserve the final determination of whether the facts and circumstances of a particular case justify the recommended discipline, we accord the findings of the Review Department great weight. (In re Basinger (1988) 45 Cal.3d 1348, 1358 [249 Cal.Rptr. 110, 756 P.2d 833].) We have recognized that it is the petitioner’s burden to show that the Review Department’s recommendations are erroneous. (In re Ford (1988) 44 Cal.3d 810, 816 [244 Cal.Rptr. 476, 749 P.2d 1331]; In re Vaughn (1985) 38 Cal.3d 614, 618-619 [213 Cal.Rptr. 583, 698 P.2d 651].) Thus, with the Review Department’s recommendation of disbarment in mind, we turn to Kaplan’s argument.

Kaplan urges that his situation is “aberrational” and, in accordance with certain of our other decisions,5 that we should reject the State Bar’s disciplinary recommendation. We have acknowledged that the absence of a disciplinary record is in itself an important mitigating circumstance for a member of the bar who has been in practice for a substantial period of time (Bradpiece v. State Bar (1974) 10 Cal.3d 742, 747 [111 Cal.Rptr. 905, 518 P.2d 337]), and we have recognized the existence of marital stress as a mitigating circumstance (Friedman v. State Bar, supra, 50 Cal.3d 235, 245). However, Kaplan’s conduct was distinguishable from those cases in which we found conduct sufficiently aberrational to reject the Review Department’s disciplinary recommendations: it was part of a purposeful design to defraud his partners. Thus, it was unlike the cases Kaplan cites in which a few isolated incidents, generally involving client neglect, formed the basis of [1072]*1072the State Bar’s charges. Further, there is no indication that, absent the action of Pettit & Martin’s partners, Kaplan would have ceased his conduct at all.

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804 P.2d 720, 52 Cal. 3d 1067, 278 Cal. Rptr. 95, 91 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1348, 91 Daily Journal DAR 2166, 1991 Cal. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaplan-v-state-bar-cal-1991.