People v. Podoll

855 P.2d 1389, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1255, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 635, 1993 WL 276171
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 26, 1993
Docket93SA41
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 855 P.2d 1389 (People v. Podoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Podoll, 855 P.2d 1389, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1255, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 635, 1993 WL 276171 (Colo. 1993).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The hearing board in this attorney disciplinary proceeding concluded that- the respondent violated the Code of Professional Responsibility and recommended that he receive a private censure. A hearing panel of the Supreme Court Grievance Committee approved the board’s findings and rec *1390 ommendation. The assistant disciplinary counsel has excepted to the recommended discipline as too lenient, and the respondent contends that the complaint should have been dismissed. We approve the board’s findings, but conclude that a public censure is appropriate given the seriousness of the misconduct.

I

The respondent was admitted to the bar of this court on May 22, 1978, is registered as an attorney upon this court’s official records, and is subject to the jurisdiction of this court and its grievance committee. C.R.C.P. 241.1(b). After listening to the testimony of the complainant’s witnesses and of the respondent, and considering the exhibits introduced into evidence by both sides, the hearing board found that the following facts were established by clear and convincing evidence. 1

The complaining witness, Michael A. Ti-naglia, retained the respondent in July or August of 1987, to represent him in a dispute with Tinaglia’s business partner, Mark T. Clifton. In the previous year, Tinaglia and Clifton, as equal participants, purchased all of the stock of a small advertising corporation, Hesdorfer Associates, Inc., from its founder, Robert S. Hesdorfer. After the sale, Tinaglia, Clifton, and Hesdor-fer served as the three directors of the corporation. During the summer of 1987, a dispute arose between Tinaglia and Clifton, resulting in a meeting between Clifton and Hesdorfer from which Tinaglia was excluded. It was apparently decided at the meeting that Tinaglia would be coaxed or ousted from the business and Tinaglia later found a note on his desk that instructed him to clean out his desk, leave the premises, and not return. While Tinaglia and the respondent did not enter into a written agreement, the board found that the terms of employment “were for Respondent to handle, and to advise Tinaglia concerning, all matters related to the Tinaglia-Clifton dispute.”

In order to purchase Hesdorfer Associates, Tinaglia and Clifton had borrowed $40,000 from Tinaglia’s father-in-law, Gerald Johannes. They had also taken out a $30,000 line of credit from OmniBank, secured in part by the titles to three vehicles owned by Tinaglia. Although Tinaglia was willing to be bought out by Clifton, he wanted Johannes to be repaid in full in addition to the release of his motor vehicles as security for the line of credit.

In September 1987, Johannes called the note given to him by Tinaglia and Clifton, and filed an action against both men to recover the balance due in addition to costs and attorney’s fees. Although the respondent was aware that the action had been filed, he did not consider that he had been employed to represent Tinaglia in the suit and thought that the action was directed more at Clifton than Tinaglia. No answer or cross-claim was filed on Tinaglia’s behalf in the action brought by Johannes to recover on the note.

Clifton was represented by a lawyer during the dispute with Tinaglia, and Clifton’s lawyer and the respondent exchanged correspondence and telephone calls in the fall of 1987 in an effort to reach a settlement. Through his lawyer, Clifton answered the Johannes complaint and filed a cross-claim against Tinaglia, which cross-claim went unanswered. No motions for default were filed, however, and there was no further activity in the Johannes case during the fall and winter of 1987-88. In December 1987, Clifton’s lawyer drafted an agreement designed to settle the Tinaglia-Clifton dispute. The proposed settlement provided for Clifton to pay off the Johannes and OmniBank loans, and for Tinaglia to surrender his interest in Hesdorfer Associates and to return or destroy his American Express card on the firm’s account. The respondent sent a copy of the proposed agreement to Tinaglia by facsimile trans *1391 mission (FAX), discussed it with him over the telephone, and recommended some minor changes. Tinaglia was willing to sign the agreement to conclude the dispute if it incorporated the respondent’s suggested changes.

The hearing board noted that at this point, the testimony of Tinaglia and the respondent diverged. Tinaglia testified that after the conversation above, he had no substantive discussions with the respondent and that he believed that the agreement to settle the dispute with Clifton was concluded. He had destroyed the American Express card and he had no intention of making any ownership claim to Hesdor-fer Associates. Tinaglia further testified that he did not know that stock certificates had been issued in his name and thus did not know that he was required to sign them over to Clifton. Tinaglia was aware that Johannes had been paid and that the Johannes suit had been settled in January 1988. About the same time, Tinaglia received the titles to his vehicles in the mail from OmniBank and he assumed that the line of credit had also been paid off. Ti-naglia testified that he believed that if there were signatures or actions on his part necessary to conclude the agreement, the respondent would either take those actions or notify him of what actions to take. Tinaglia stated that he believed that, as his attorney, the respondent would be authorized to sign Tinaglia’s name to documents if necessary. 2

According to the hearing board, the respondent testified that he tried over the period of the next nine months to reach Tinaglia by telephone and by sending Ti-naglia copies of documents by FAX that Clifton’s lawyer had sent the respondent. The respondent also stated that at one time he managed to reach Tinaglia by telephone but that Tinaglia stated that he was on his way out of town and would call on his return. Tinaglia admitted receiving the call, but stated that he returned the call in a few days. According to the respondent’s testimony, he was attempting to communicate to Tinaglia the urgent necessity of signing the documents which would finalize the settlement.

During this time period, Clifton’s lawyer was trying, persistently and unsuccessfully, through the respondent, to get Tinag-lia’s signature on the final settlement agreement, to get Tinaglia to sign over the Hesdorfer Associates stock to Clifton, and to obtain written assurance that the American Express card had been destroyed. Clifton had already paid off the Johannes note and the line of credit as the settlement agreement provided. Clifton’s lawyer spoke with the respondent on the telephone to urge that the agreement be concluded. The respondent told him that Tinaglia was the problem but that the documents and signatures would be forthcoming. On many occasions, Clifton’s lawyer left telephone messages for the respondent that were not returned. Three separate times, in April, June, and August of 1988, Clifton’s lawyer wrote to the respondent and informed him that the settlement might fall through if Tinaglia did not sign the agreement and comply with his obligations under it. The respondent stated that he transmitted copies of those letters to Tinaglia by FAX, but Tinaglia denied receiving them.

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Bluebook (online)
855 P.2d 1389, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1255, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 635, 1993 WL 276171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-podoll-colo-1993.