North Carolina State Bar v. Barrett

724 S.E.2d 126, 219 N.C. App. 481, 2012 WL 924840, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 380
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 20, 2012
DocketCOA11-1274
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 724 S.E.2d 126 (North Carolina State Bar v. Barrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Carolina State Bar v. Barrett, 724 S.E.2d 126, 219 N.C. App. 481, 2012 WL 924840, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 380 (N.C. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Judge.

Procedural History and Factual Background

This case arises from a grievance filed with Plaintiff, the North Carolina State Bar (“the State Bar”), concerning Defendant Sybil H. Barrett’s participation as an attorney in a residential real estate closing in July 2007. On 30 October 2008, the State Bar received a grievance from the seller involved in the closing. The grievance alleged that Defendant had misrepresented the source of the buyer’s down payment on a HUD-1 settlement statement at closing in order to prevent the lender from learning that the seller had loaned the buyer part of the down payment funds. The buyer and seller had entered into an agreement concerning repayment of the loan. However, the buyer had apparently not made payments expected by the seller, who expressed concerns about his ability to collect on the loan. In correspondence sent to Defendant before filing the grievance, the seller had claimed that this misrepresentation had made the buyer appear to be a better credit risk in the eyes of the lender, permitting the buyer to finance purchase of the residence to the seller’s detriment.

The State Bar sent Defendant a notice of grievance, and Defendant responded by letter dated 6 March 2009, asserting that she had received approval of the HUD-1 statement from the lender, Chase Bank, and had not made any misrepresentations in connection with the closing. Defendant further asserted that the buyer and the seller had agreed to a five-year, no interest $7,400 loan of the down payment funds with a balloon payoff, but that the buyer had later (post-closing) told the seller he was planning to refinance the home in order to pay off the loan at an earlier date. Defendant suggested that the refinance had not occurred, angering the seller, who had filed the grievance out of a desire “to punish everyone associated with the [closing].”

On 13 April 2010, the State Bar filed a complaint with the Disciplinary Hearing Commission (“the DHC”) alleging Defendant had knowingly misrepresented the seller’s $7,400 loan to the buyer as a down payment on the HUD-1 statement. After Defendant refused to respond to the State Bar’s October 2010 discovery requests, The State Bar moved to compel her response on 4 January 2011. On 13 January 2011, the DHC entered an order allowing the motion to compel. On *483 the same date, Defendant sent an email response to the chair of the DHC hearing committee stating:

I reviewed your bogus Order to Compel. I will not be producing anything. In fact, I will not be in communication with any of you people ever again.
I will not be at the February hearing.
I am moving on with my life. You have no power over me. You are mistaken to think that you do. You are fully aware that Mrs. [Leanor] Hodge [the attorney handling the matter for the State Bar] is lying. Apparently, this is the status quo.

Defendant did not comply with the order and the State Bar moved for sanctions against her. In her objection to the motion for sanctions, Defendant asserted that the State Bar’s “continued requests for documents . . . are duplicitous and harassing in nature.” The DHC denied the State Bar’s motion for sanctions by order entered 23 February 2011.

At a hearing before a three-member DHC panel on 3 February 2011, the State Bar presented evidence that, in the July 2007 closing, Defendant represented the buyer and his lender. Paul Johnson, the lender’s closing officer handling the loan, first sent Defendant instructions calling for a down payment of $22,700 and prohibiting secondary financing without the lender’s written approval. However, the buyer had received two loans toward the down payment: $14,800 dollars from National Home and $9,400 1 from the seller. On 17 July 2007, the day of the closing, Defendant prepared a draft HUD-1 statement for the closing showing “Down Payment [of] $7,400” as a credit to the buyer, debited $7,400 from the proceeds due to the seller, showed “Commission earned [of] $14,800” from National Home as a contribution from the buyer, and showed a deduction from the proceeds due to the seller of $14,800 as a seller fee to National Home. Defendant testified that Johnson had instructed her via phone call and fax to record the amounts in this manner. Defendant transmitted *484 the draft to Johnson, who stamped it “APPROVED” and initialed it “PJ” with the date “7-17” before returning it to Defendant. 2

Defendant, the buyer and his agent, and the seller’s agent were present in Defendant’s office for the closing, while the seller participated by teleconference, email, and fax. Defendant testified that the HUD statement signed by herself, the buyer, and the seller was the PJ HUD statement, which showed entries regarding the $7,400 and $14,800 amounts as approved by the closing agent. The final PJ HUD statement was three pages instead of the standard two pages because the seller participated by fax. Thus, the first two pages were identical except that the buyer had signed the first and the seller had signed the second, receiving and returning it via fax. Defendant testified that, after the closing was concluded, she sent the signed PJ HUD statement along with other closing documents to the lender via FedEx. At the hearing, Defendant produced a fax from Johnson, dated two days after the closing, requesting that Defendant correct some wording on the title commitment, one of the documents Defendant had sent to the lender in the package of closing documents. Defendant also produced a copy of the PJ HUD statement from her files at the hearing.

The State Bar offered testimony from an employee of the lender 3 that the lender’s file contained a substantially different HUD statement (“the MG HUD statement”) than that produced by Defendant. The MG HUD statement was only two pages long, showed the initials “MG” instead of “PJ,” and had the buyer’s and seller’s signatures together on the first page. The seller’s signature was forged. In addition, the MG HUD statement lacked the $7,400 and $14,800 entries contained on the PJ HUD statement and instead showed a $22,700 down payment by the buyer. The lender’s representative testified that the PJ HUD statement was not part of the lender’s file. Defendant testified that she had never seen the MG HUD statement prior to the hearing, had not prepared it, and knew nothing about the seller’s forged signature.

At the close of the hearing, the DHC panel made oral findings that Defendant had committed fraud and criminal violations, and ordered Defendant’s disbarment. In its written order filed 23 February 2011, *485 the DHC made detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law, again ordering disbarment. Specifically, conclusion of law 2 states that Defendant violated the Rules of Professional Conduct:

a. By falsely representing on the HUD-1 Settlement Statement that she provided to the buyer and seller . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
724 S.E.2d 126, 219 N.C. App. 481, 2012 WL 924840, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-carolina-state-bar-v-barrett-ncctapp-2012.