Smuckler v. State Bar

38 P.2d 777, 2 Cal. 2d 80, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 467
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1934
DocketL. A. Nos. 14652 and 14891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 P.2d 777 (Smuckler v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smuckler v. State Bar, 38 P.2d 777, 2 Cal. 2d 80, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 467 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

THE COURT.

As indicated by the numbers accompanying the title hereof, two proceedings against the petitioner were presented before two different local administrative committees of The State Bar, the first terminating in a recommendation by" committee number three that petitioner be suspended for a period of one year, which was reduced by the board.of governors to a six months’ period, and the second resulting in a recommendation by committee number nine that he be suspended for a period of two years to run consecutively with any other suspension, which latter recommendation was approved by the board of governors. The charges grow out of similar transactions and the response of petitioner, as well as his version of the attending circumstances is so nearly the same in each case that we have deemed it appropriate to consider the two causes together.

In the first proceeding the charges were that petitioner had violated rule 9 of the Rules of Professional Conduct in two particulars as follows: (1) commingling money belonging to his client with his own funds, and (2) failing to promptly report to his client the receipt of money belonging to him. The second charges the receipt of money by petitioner for his client and a failure to report its collection or to pay it over but instead the use thereof by petitioner.

Before considering the facts relating to the specific charges let us note certain facts common to both. Petitioner was admitted to practice law in March, 1923, but was employed at the time by the Title Insurance and Trust Company in its searching department, where he remained until some time in 1929, handling only a few professional matters during the hours he was not occupied in his regular work. During the year 1929, the title company adopted a policy [82]*82requesting its employees to devote all of their time to its interests- and to decline professional employment, as a result of which petitioner shortly after resigned his position and engaged in the practice of the law exclusively. During the time of his employment with the title company the petitioner won and enjoyed an excellent reputation for honesty and reliability.

Adverting now to the particulars of the first charges, we find that petitioner was employed by the Sanford Holding Corporation of New York City to collect from David Mendoza a claim for rental in the sum of $624.99 upon the understanding that petitioner was to receive as compensation one-half of the amount actually realized. Two hundred and eight dollars was collected on August 13, 1930, and $279:17 on November 5, 1930. Action was commenced in the Los Angeles municipal court, but it does not appear that summons was ever served and no judgment was secured. No further sums were paid by Mendoza. By reason of a contention on the part of Mendoza that he was only liable for two months’ rental instead of three, the first check was held by petitioner until November 6th, at which time both sums were deposited by petitioner’s secretary in a trust account opened by petitioner for such funds on July 9, 1930. By an error of the bank these sums were credited temporarily to Smuckler’s personal account and the deposit slip placed among those belonging to the latter account. The error was corrected so far as credit was concerned on November 12th, but the deposit slip remained among those of the personal account. On April 4, 1931, and again on July 30, 1931, the Sanford Holding Corporation inquired by letter concerning the status of the collection, but apparently the only information they were given was contained in a letter dated August 27, 1931, which petitioner says was written by his secretary without instructions from him, and which, according to the secretary, was signed by her, and in which it was said that action was commenced on October 10, 1930, and should come to trial in November, 1931 Nothing more was done until along in May of 1932, at which time, Judge Paeht first spoke to petitioner, saying that he had had an inquiry concerning it from New York. Petitioner says that he looked for the file but that he could not locate it and did not find it until June 28th, by reason of the [83]*83fact that it had been inadvertently placed among what he termed “dead” files, and because, even there, it had been put under the letter “F” instead of “S”. Furthermore, he did not discover the amount of the first collection until October, at which time he found a carbon copy of a letter between two long (usually termed legal size) papers. In this connection it should be noted that the deposit slip was not made out to carry the name of the client for whom the deposit was made, but only the number of the cheek. During May, 1932, the Sanford Holding Corporation referred the matter to an attorney who made demand upon petitioner for an accounting. On August 1, 1932, after two letters had been received from the attorney, petitioner forwarded him the sum of '$140, or approximately one-half of the collection of $279.17, with the further statement that he recalled another payment the amount of which he had been unable to ascertain, and with the promise that as soon as he was able to determine the amount of the other collection he would remit the remainder. While accepting the sum as a credit, the attorney demanded a full statement of collections and a few days later, according to his testimony, at the suggestion of the Sanford Holding Corporation, wrote petitioner insisting upon payment of one-half the original claim together with $100 to compensate the attorney for his efforts. About November 2, 1932, in response to a telephone call from Raymond Tremaine, an examiner for The State Bar, petitioner called upon the former and related substantially the things testified to by him. At that time he offered Tremaine a check for $172.50, which together with the sum of $140 already paid, would amount to one-half of the original claim without deducting costs for the filing of the action. On November 19th petitioner mailed this amount to the attorney. A copy of petitioner’s account under the heading of Trust Account No. 2 was introduced and disclosed that there were many times after the deposit of the two sums collected when petitioner did not have a sufficient balance to pay the Sanford Holding Corporation $244, or one-half of the money actually collected by him, which fact the petitioner said in his testimony before the board of bar governors was due to a mistake made by his secretary depositing $300 collected for another client in his personal account instead of in the trust account, and [84]*84that he subsequently paid the latter client out of the latter account.

The local administrative committee found that petitioner had commingled his client’s funds with his own and that he had failed to promptly report the receipt by him of the money belonging to his client, and that he “failed and neglected to pay to his said client the said sum so collected, or any part thereof’’. In view of other findings by the committee which set out in detail the payments we have already mentioned made by petitioner in 1932, we must construe the quoted portion of the finding to mean that petitioner did not promptly pay to his client the sums collected or any portion thereof. Thus construed they are not inconsistent and are in keeping with the testimony. The board of governors approved the findings except to disapprove that one which said petitioner had commingled his client’s funds with his own.

We may now turn to an examination of the evidence adduced in support of the charges in the second proceeding. During the latter part of 1929 and in the year 1930, Armino A.

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Bluebook (online)
38 P.2d 777, 2 Cal. 2d 80, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smuckler-v-state-bar-cal-1934.