State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Allder

2002 OK 33, 48 P.3d 794, 73 O.B.A.J. 1253, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 32, 2002 WL 655692
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 23, 2002
DocketSCBD 4636
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2002 OK 33 (State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Allder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Allder, 2002 OK 33, 48 P.3d 794, 73 O.B.A.J. 1253, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 32, 2002 WL 655692 (Okla. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

WATT, V.C.J.

{1 On July 80, 2001, the Oklahoma Bar Association filed a complaint alleging professional misconduct by Respondent, Thomas L. Allder. Allder filed his answer on August 18, 2001. The parties entered into a stipulation, *795 which was filed on October 15, 2001. Allder and the Bar stipulated that Allder had violated the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct as a result of his conduct before the United States Bankruptey Court and further stipulated that appropriate discipline would be public censure and the assessment of costs.

2 A hearing was held before a trial panel of the Professional Responsibility Tribunal on October 25, 2001. On January 80, 2002, the trial panel filed its recommendation and recommended the discipline stipulated to by the parties: public censure and the payment of costs. On March 18, 2002, the Bar filed its application to assess costs in the amount of $1,127.74.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

T3 The Oklahoma Bar Association filed its complaint based on findings by the United States Bankruptey Court and a subsequent settlement agreement between Allder and the U.S. Bankruptey Trustee, which the Bankruptey Court and the United States District Court approved. Allder, a member of the Oklahoma Bar Association, had a practice that was largely limited to the Bankrupt-ey Court in Oklahoma City, in which he filed more than two-hundred cases a year. The agreement between Allder and the Bank-ruptey Trustee resulted in Allder's being suspended from practicing in the Bankruptcy Court for a period of five years. and further agreeing to refund attorney's fees to any of his clients who demanded such refunds.

4 Alider had been a practicing lawyer for fourteen years. He has not been the subject of any other Bar disciplinary proceedings.

T5 Most of Allder's clients were low income individuals with few assets. Many of these clients lacked the cash to pay Alider's fee and Bankruptey Court filing fees. Consequently, Allder frequently referred his clients to loan companies and arranged for them to borrow $650.00, the amount necessary to allow them to pay Allder's attorney's fee plus the Bankruptcy Court's filing fees. The clients would repay the loans at the rate of $90.00 per month for ten months. The parties stipulated that the effective interest rate on these loans varied from 28.28% per annum to 88.5% per annum but that the loans were made in the ordinary course of the finance companies' business and that Allder had no control over the terms of the loans. The parties also stipulated that Allder had no financial interest in any of the finance companies who made the loans to his clients and did not benefit financially in any way from the interest or fees that the finance companies collected on those loans. Further, the trial panel found that the loans were not usurious and their terms complied with Oklahoma law.

I 6 The Bankruptey Code, 11 U.S.C. § 829, requires that an "attorney representing a debtor in a case under this title ... shall file with the court a statement of the compensation paid or agreed to be paid ... for the services rendered or to be rendered in contemplation or in connection with the case by such attorney,. and the source of such compensation." Section 329 is implemented by Rule 2016(b) of the Federal Rules of Bank-ruptey Procedure, which provides, "Every attorney for a debtor, whether or not the attorney applies for compensation, shall file and transmit to the United States trustee within 15 days after the order for relief, or at another time as the court may direct, the statement required by § 829 of the Code...." In fifteen cases, Allder failed to reveal in his disclosure statement both that loans had been made by finance companies to his clients immediately before bankruptcy and that part of the proceeds from such loans had been used to pay his attorney's fee. Further, Allder failed to disclose any of the loans obtained by his clients in any Schedule F (Creditors Holding Unsecured Nonpriority Claims) he filed in the Bankruptey Court on behalf of his clients.

T 7 Only one of Allder's debtor clients filed a grievance with the Bar and that client later withdraw the grievance and the matter was dismissed by the Professional Responsibility Commission.

18 The Bankruptey Trustee alleged that Allder's failure to disclose the loans and that their proceeds had been used to pay attorney's fees and filing fees was misleading and *796 violated Bankruptcy Court Rules. After a hotly contested trial in the Bankruptcy Court, the court indicated that it was prepared to sanction Allder. Before the Bank-ruptey Court formally sanctioned Allder, however he entered into the settlement agreement with the Trustee.

T9 The Bar contended in its complaint that Alider had violated Rules 1.7(b), 1 3.3(a)(1), 2 and 8.4(c), 3 Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct. The parties stipulated before the trial panel that Allder's statements in the Bankruptey Court disclosure statements were improper, misleading and ambiguous.

{ 10 The Bankruptcy Court issued an opinion in which it concluded that Allder had a conflict of interest with respect to the loars for attorney's fees because he had a duty to advise the debtor that the loan was dis-chargeable but if he did so, he risked losing his attorney's fee. The trial panel, however, found that there was no indication that such conduct was a conflict of interest, although it also observed that the evidence presented to the Bankruptcy Court might have differed from that presented to the trial panel.

T11 The trial panel found that Allder's conduct had been misleading because it failed to reveal the debtors' true financial situation and understated the ratio their expenses bore to their income. Nevertheless, the trial panel also noted that Allder no only did not profit from the loans but also refunded more than $9,000.00 in fees to former clients. In the cases in which Allder made the refunds his clients received his services free of charge. We note, too, that Alider clearly believed that he was acting in the best interests of his clients. Because of his belief that his actions were in his clients' best interests, Allder displayed some bitterness toward the Bankruptcy Court. He has, however, since apologized.

RECOMMENDED DISCIPLINE

112 Based on their stipulated facts the parties agreed that appropriate discipline would be public censure. The trial panel recommended to this Court that Allder's discipline be public censure.

DISCUSSION

T 13 There is no dispute here as to either the facts or the law. Allder and the Bar stipulated both to the facts and that Allder had violated the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct. The trial panel accepted those stipulated findings and recommended the same discipline as that stipulated to by the parties, public censure and the payment of costs. As is our duty, we have considered this matter de novo, that is we have examined the record independently and non-deferentially. State ex rel. Oklahoma Bar Association v. Evans, 1994 OK 45 112, 880 P.2d 333, 3837.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

STATE ex rel. OKLAHOMA BAR ASSOCIATION v. HYDE
2017 OK 59 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2017)
State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Bar Ass'n v. Stewart
2003 OK 13 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 OK 33, 48 P.3d 794, 73 O.B.A.J. 1253, 2002 Okla. LEXIS 32, 2002 WL 655692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-oklahoma-bar-assn-v-allder-okla-2002.