Matter of Barefoot

533 N.E.2d 128, 1989 Ind. LEXIS 23, 1989 WL 5738
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1989
Docket82S00-8603-DI-271
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 533 N.E.2d 128 (Matter of Barefoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Barefoot, 533 N.E.2d 128, 1989 Ind. LEXIS 23, 1989 WL 5738 (Ind. 1989).

Opinion

DISCIPLINARY ACTION

PER CURIAM.

This matter is before the Court on a Second Amended Verified Complaint for Disciplinary Action charging the Respondent with three counts of professional misconduct. The Hearing Officer appointed by this Court has conducted a hearing on the complaint and on an accompanying Verified Motion For Suspension Pending Prosecution and tendered his report and recommendation. Upon review of the Hearing Officer’s report, this Court, on June 30, 1987, entered an order suspending the Respondent pending final determination of this cause.

The Respondent has petitioned for review of the Hearing Officer’s report contending that the findings and conclusions are not supported by sufficient evidence. Subsequently to the filing of the findings of fact and the petition for review, the Respondent also tendered a petition for leave to resign from the bar. On October 31, 1988, the Respondent’s Petition to Resign was denied as untimely and inadequate.

Accordingly, we will proceed with the review process, whereby we examine all matters presented, including the Hearing Officer’s findings and conclusions. Although such findings are not binding on this Court, they do receive emphasis due to the Hearing Officer’s unique opportunity for direct observation of the witnesses. In re Stanton, (1986), Ind., 492 N.E.2d 1056; In re McDaniel (1984), Ind., 470 N.E.2d 1327; In re Welke (1984), Ind., 459 N.E.2d 725.

Having so reviewed all matters, we find, under Count I of the Complaint, that in May of 1982, the Respondent began representing U.S. Life Credit Corp. in collection matters. Respondent’s dealings with U.S. Life were done exclusively through their office in Henderson, Kentucky, although U.S. Life had numerous other offices and was headquartered in Schaumburg, Illinois.

The Respondent and U.S. Life had agreed orally that Respondent’s attorney fee for such representation would be one-third (V3) of all sums collected from accounts assigned to him, whether the collections were actually received by the Respondent or by U.S. Life. In October, 1982, U.S. Life employed Respondent to pursue two additional collection matters, one against Edward and Joann Terrell, and one against Natasha Gulley.

On April 5, 1983, the Respondent obtained default judgments in both matters, in the Gulley suit for the principal sum of $884.22 plus attorney fees of $200 and court costs and, in the Terrell suit, for the principal sum of $1,274.00 plus attorney fees of $300.00 and court costs. The Respondent had been advised by the Henderson Branch Office that the Terrell judgment appeared uncollectible and likely would be “written off” at the Home Office, but there is no evidence that he was ever advised to cease efforts to collect the judgment. In September of 1983, the Henderson Branch Office of U.S. Life advised the Respondent that said branch would be closed on September 30,1983, and that all current U.S. Life accounts had been purchased by another company. The Respondent was advised that his future dealings with U.S. Life would be handled by the home office.

The Respondent had previously obtained a garnishment order in the Gulley matter, *130 and, eventually, Gulley’s wages were garnished and payments to the Respondent were made through the office of the clerk of the court.

By August 11, 1984, the Respondent had received checks amounting to $811.29. Of that sum, $526.29 was not deposited in a segregated account and $285 was deposited into an escrow account on August 21, 1984. Between September, 1984, and June, 1985, the Respondent received four additional checks, totaling $343.88, which he also deposited in the escrow account. The Respondent received a total of $1,155.17 from the Gulley garnishment. Respondent’s escrow account was overdrawn on more than thirty occasions between September 18, 1984, and June 14, 1985.

Commencing September 10, 1984, the home office of U.S. Life began what became a series of failed attempts to contact the Respondent about the status of the Gulley suit. Between October 3, 1984, and May 8, 1985, U.S. Life made approximately 24 telephone calls to Respondent’s office and wrote two letters to the Respondent requesting a written status report. In December, 1984, and again in February, 1985, U.S. Life was informed that it would be paid its due from the Gulley judgment, but no payment was made. On June 20, 1985, U.S. Life wrote the Respondent and informed him that the matter would be referred to the Disciplinary Commission if they did not receive what was owed. By July, 1985, a grievance filed with the Disciplinary Commission was referred to the Evansville Bar Association for investigation. The Respondent produced for the Evansville Bar Association a copy of a cashier’s check in the amount of $632.48, showing the Respondent as remitter and U.S. Life as the payee. In fact, the Respondent never sent the aforesaid check to U.S. Life.

On July 21,1986, the Respondent wrote a letter to the General Counsel for U.S. Life attempting to explain his dealings with the company and giving a purported accounting which showed a net of $298.78 due U.S. Life from the Gulley garnishment. The Respondent remitted the latter amount to U.S. Life but the amount was disputed.

In his petition for review, the Respondent makes several assertions, without reference to the record, wherein he attempts to explain and justify his conduct as set out above. He claims that U.S. Life had agreed that his fee would be one-third of all sums collected in addition to any attorney fees which might be awarded by the court. As to the Terrell judgment, the Respondent claims that he abandoned his collection efforts and closed out his file, subject only to later payment of his $300 attorney fee out of the Gulley judgment, because he was advised by U.S. Life that the Terrell judgment would be written off.

The Respondent applied the first three checks collected from the Gulley action, which totaled $811.29, toward his attorney fees and expenses. He further contends that he first received an inquiry from U.S. Life as to the Gulley judgment on September 12, 1984. Without any supporting documentation, the Respondent claims that he set aside $300 cash, which he had determined to be the most owed to U.S. Life, and he kept the same in a locked metal box in his office for eventual distribution to U.S. Life. The remaining four checks, which totaled $343.88, the Respondent deposited in his business account, also as payment and reimbursement of the balance of his attorney fees. The Respondent makes, a further unsubstantiated assertion that, during the time he was collecting these payments, he or his secretary advised U.S. Life of the status of the garnishment collections. The Respondent attributes any additional delay in submitting the promised final accounting and refunding the requested payment to the relocation of his law office.

After an opportunity to hear the testimony and review the evidence, the Hearing Officer concluded that Respondent’s assertions were simply incredulous. Neither the record nor Respondent’s self-serving statements present any credible evidence which would lead us to a contrary conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
533 N.E.2d 128, 1989 Ind. LEXIS 23, 1989 WL 5738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-barefoot-ind-1989.