Matter of Discipline of Hoffman

379 N.W.2d 514, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 705
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 3, 1986
DocketC4-84-463
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 379 N.W.2d 514 (Matter of Discipline of Hoffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Discipline of Hoffman, 379 N.W.2d 514, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 705 (Mich. 1986).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Lawyers Professional Responsibility Board (LPRB) filed a petition and supplementary petition for disciplinary action against respondent, William Charles Hoffman, a lawyer admitted to the practice of law in this state since October 4, 1960. The petitions alleged three principal grounds for discipline: charging and collecting illegal fees from a client (Counts One through Four); failure to cooperate with the LPRB’s investigation of Counts One through Four; and conviction of the gross misdemeanor of fleeing from a police office in a motor vehicle. Supreme Court Referee Hyam Segell heard evidence regarding the petitions and made findings of fact and conclusions of law. He found facts supporting the allegations and concluded that respondent had violated disciplinary rules as charged. The referee recommended that respondent be suspended for at least one year.

Respondent ordered a transcript of the hearing before the referee. The referee’s findings and conclusions, therefore, are not conclusive under Rule 14(d), Rules on Lawyers Professional Responsibility (RLPR). Respondent does not, however, specifically indicate which, if any, of those findings and conclusions he disputes, as Rule 14(d) requires. It appears, rather, from respondent’s answer to the petitions and from his hearing testimony that he does not materially dispute the referee’s findings of fact. We uphold the referee’s findings of fact. We conclude that Hoffman’s conduct in charging and collecting illegal fees and in putting his own interests before those of his client in the professional relationship warrants professional discipline.

1. Charging and collecting illegal fees.

The most serious charge of professional misconduct against Hoffman alleges that he charged and collected illegal attorney fees for representing his client, David S. Henderson, in an Alaska workers’ compensation claim. Henderson, a Minnesota resident, suffered a permanently disabling injury while working on the Alaska pipeline. He returned to Minnesota and retained Hoffman, a Minnesota attorney, to challenge the termination of workers’ compensation benefits he had been receiving for his injury. At Hoffman’s request, Henderson signed two written fee agreements to pay Hoffman 25% of any compensation recovered, excluding amounts voluntarily paid by the employer and insurer. Hoffman and Henderson traveled to Alaska, where Hoffman appeared on Henderson’s behalf in an uncontested hearing before the Alaska Worker’s Compensation Board. The Compensation Board, by decision and order dated November 28, 1979, awarded Henderson a lump sum of $20,618.39 and *516 weekly payments of $243.92. The order further provided that the employer’s insurer would pay Hoffman attorney fees of 25% of the first $1,000 of the award and 10% of the remainder. This amount was the minimum fee provided by Alaska Stat. § 23.30.145(a). Under the order, these fees were to be paid directly by the insurer and were not to be deducted from the injured worker’s award.

Respondent did not submit his retainer agreements for the Compensation Board’s approval, nor did he appeal the order or the portion of the order relating to his fees. Rather, he informed Henderson that their fee agreement was binding and that the order did not apply to it. He charged Henderson and Henderson paid to respondent, 25% of the $20,618.39 lump sum payment and 25% of all monthly payments as Henderson received them, until July 1980. At that time Henderson received a copy of the decision and order and contacted the Alaska Compensation Board about the conflict between their order’s provision for attorney fees and his 25% agreement with Hoffman. The Compensation Board notified Henderson and, by letter dated August 1, 1980, Hoffman, that under Alaska law any attorney fee arrangement for a workers’ compensation claim must be approved by the Compensation Board to be valid. 1 Because the retainer agreement purported “to set a fee of xk payable from compensation awarded,” the Compensation Board disapproved the contract. Henderson told Hoffman he had received this advice and refused to pay further fees under the retainer agreements.

Hoffman sued his client in Ramsey County District Court to collect fees he claimed he was owed under the 25% contract and sought damages in excess of $10,000. Henderson counterclaimed for the $6,862.03 in fees he had already paid. Henderson was awarded the amount of his counterclaim on summary judgment and Hoffman’s complaint was dismissed, with the trial court declaring the 25% contract void under Alaska law and Minnesota public policy. Henderson incurred attorney fees and costs in excess of $2,997.52 in connection with this Ramsey County fee litigation. At the same time Hoffman was contending in Ramsey County District Court that the November 28,1979, order of the Alaska Worker’s Compensation Board did not apply to his attorney fees, he accepted the attorney fees from the employer’s insurer under the order and received a sum “in accordance with the 25 percent and 10 percent formula.”

The trial court decision was upheld on appeal by the Minnesota Court of Appeals. Hoffman v. Henderson, 355 N.W.2d 322 (Minn.Ct.App.1984). This court and the United States Supreme Court denied further review. After exhausting those appeals, Hoffman paid the judgment he owed his former client.

The referee concluded that Hoffman’s conduct regarding fees in Henderson’s case violated several disciplinary rules. His failure to comply with Alaska law and his statement to Henderson that the Alaska decision and order, which set fees and directed they be paid directly by the insurer, did not affect their fee agreement was false and dishonest conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice in violation of DR 1-102(A)(4) and (5) and DR 7-102(A) (5), Model Code of Professional Responsibility (MCPR). In not advising his client that fee agreements in workers’ compensation claim cases were regulated by Alaska law, Hoffman did not disclose to Henderson how his financial interests affected his professional judgment of the validity or applicability of these laws, in violation of DR 5-101(A), MCPR. Charging Henderson il *517 legal fees and suing his client for those fees violated DR 2-106(A), DR 7-101(A)(l) and (3), DR 7-102(A)(8), DR 7-106(A) and DR 9-102(B)(4), MCPR.

Hoffman contends he was pursuing a rightful claim to fees through lawful means. He argues that neither Alaska law nor the order of the Alaska Worker’s Compensation Board governs his fee arrangements with Henderson. He characterizes the retainer agreements as contracts executed in Minnesota between Minnesota parties. Before this court, however, Hoffman argued that he does not believe Minnesota law, containing similar regulation of workers’ compensation attorney fees, governs fee contracts because Henderson’s was an Alaska claim, not a Minnesota claim. Thus, Hoffman concludes, his fees were not illegal under any law and his conduct in advising and, later, suing his client was appropriate and does not warrant professional discipline.

The Court of Appeals analyzed Hoffman’s reasoning according to choice of law doctrine. The Court concluded that Alaska law governed the fee agreements between Hoffman and Henderson. We concur with this analysis and result.

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Bluebook (online)
379 N.W.2d 514, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-discipline-of-hoffman-minn-1986.