Matter of Miller

677 N.E.2d 505, 1997 Ind. LEXIS 19, 1997 WL 100881
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1997
Docket53S00-9203-DI-164
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 677 N.E.2d 505 (Matter of Miller) 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 Miller, 677 N.E.2d 505, 1997 Ind. LEXIS 19, 1997 WL 100881 (Ind. 1997).

Opinion

DISCIPLINARY ACTION

PER CURIAM.

The Disciplinary Commission has charged the respondent, who was during relevant times a county prosecuting attorney, with assisting the cause of a civil plaintiff by investigating and prosecuting a concurrent criminal action against the civil defendant. Pursuant to Ind.Admission and Discipline Rule 28, Section 11(c), the parties have tendered to this Court an agreed resolution of the charges. That agreement is now before us for final approval.

The respondent was admitted to the bar of this state in 1980. The parties agree that in February 1987, a group of unit owners (the “plaintiff”) at a Monroe County planned residential community (the “community”) brought a civil action for damages and other relief in Monroe County against certain individuals and entities. One of the several defendants in the civil action was a director (the “director”) of the community’s service association (the “association”), an incorporated entity. The civil pleadings alleged that the director and other co-directors of the service association had engaged in a number of irregularities in management of the community. Specifically, the plaintiff alleged, inter alia, that the director and others upgraded the community’s television reception system, enhanced the system with satellite service, and sold the equipment to an independent cable company along with a covenant not to compete. The cable company paid the director $120,000 pursuant to that transaction. Neither plaintiff’s counsel nor plaintiff ever alleged in pleadings or during pre-trial or trial proceedings that the director committed theft or other criminal acts in connection with the sale of the television equipment. However, payment of the $120,-000 was not disclosed until the later stages of the civil trial.

On March 31,1989, following a bench trial, the trial court issued a 40-page judgment, therein deciding a number of issues in favor of the director and his co-defendants. However, the court also found that the director had breached a fiduciary duty to the association by appropriating a corporate opportunity by establishing television service and later selling it, along with the covenant not to compete, to an independent cable company. The judgment ordered the director to pay the association $117,210 out of a total judgment against all defendants of approximately $278,000. The Indiana Court of Appeals later reduced the judgment to approximately $30,000. Kirtley v. McClelland, 562 N.E.2d 27 (Ind.Ct.App.1990). In addition, the trial court awarded plaintiff’s counsel attorney fees against the association in excess of $60,-000.

On April 26, 1989, the plaintiff filed a motion to correct errors and therein, for the first time in the case, requested treble damages. Essentially, the motion alleged that the director committed theft by his transaction with the cable company. At about the same time, the plaintiffs unsuccessfully sought settlement with the defendants of payment of the judgment prior to appeal. In April or May of 1989, plaintiff’s counsel met with the respondent and presented to him a copy of the judgment in the civil action, and posited that the evidence in the civil action supported a criminal case of theft, conspiracy to commit theft, and perhaps perjury against the director and others. Plaintiffs counsel also provided the respondent with portions of depositions of the director and his wife. Before his meeting with plaintiff’s counsel, the respondent had conducted no criminal investigation into the matter.

In June 1989, plaintiffs counsel again met with the respondent, this time with two Indiana State Police officers present. Plaintiff’s counsel again advised the respondent and the state police of his opinion that the director had committed criminal acts by his transaction with the cable company. Plaintiffs counsel suggested tactics to obtain evidence to establish the director’s criminal intent. During the course of the meeting, the *507 police officers indicated they believed no crime had been committed. In support of the plaintiffs motion to correct errors, on June 19 and 20, 1989, plaintiffs counsel argued in open court that the plaintiff was entitled to treble damages because the director had committed theft in connection with the cable television sale. On June 19, 1989, the respondent announced publicly that a complaint had been filed with his office by some of the community’s unit owners and that he was investigating whether criminal charges should be filed. A member of the law firm representing the director in the civil case contacted the respondent to learn the status of the criminal investigation. The respondent told the attorney that he was investigating certain allegations and promised to meet with the director’s civil counsel before filing criminal charges. The respondent later made the same statements to a member of the law firm on June 25, 1989. Thereafter, without informing or meeting with the director’s civil counsel, the respondent told plaintiffs counsel that he was going to prosecute the director.

On June 28, 1989, the respondent charged the director with theft, a Class D felony, by information filed in Monroe Circuit Court. Shortly thereafter, a summons was issued to the director. In light of the summons, no probable cause hearing was held and no probable cause affidavit filed. The respondent alleged that probable cause that the director committed theft or criminal conversion of corporate assets was established by several assertions, including, inter alia, the following: (1) that corporate documents supported a conclusion that the association owned all present and future cable television distribution rights for units at the community; (2) that the director purchased a satellite television system for use by the community without the consent of the members or the association’s board of directors; (3) that the director began providing cable service without revealing his financial interest in the enterprise; (4) that the director grossed approximately $10,000 during the first six months of the service; (5) that on July 1, 1984, the director sold the cable distribution rights to an independent cable company and that the contract memorializing the sale specified that the association owned all present and future television distribution rights for the community and that the stated consideration for the conveyance of the rights was the purchaser’s promise to provide television service at specified monthly service rates; (6) that on the same day, the director privately agreed with the cable company to accept $120,000 from it for the cable equipment the respondent had purchased for about $18,000, along with a covenant not to compete. The director kept the funds for his own use and failed to reveal the payment to the association, until, over his objection, the late stages of the civil trial; 1 and (7) that the trial court judge ruled that the profits derived from the sale of the television distribution rights belonged to the association.

The director secured separate defense counsel after the criminal action was filed. Thereafter, the respondent informed the director’s defense counsel that he was willing to move to dismiss the criminal charges if the director would settle the civil action through agreement with the plaintiffs counsel and his clients.

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Bluebook (online)
677 N.E.2d 505, 1997 Ind. LEXIS 19, 1997 WL 100881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-miller-ind-1997.