The Florida Bar v. Boland
This text of 702 So. 2d 229 (The Florida Bar v. Boland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
THE FLORIDA BAR, Complainant,
v.
Robert A. BOLAND, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
John F. Harkness, Jr., Executive Director and John T. Berry, Staff Counsel, Tallahassee, and Thomas E. DeBerg, Branch Staff Counsel, Tampa, for Complainant.
Robert A. Boland, Tampa, Respondent, pro se.
PER CURIAM.
We have for review the complaint of The Florida Bar and the referee's report regarding alleged ethical breaches by Robert A. Boland. We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 15, Fla. Const.
The Florida Bar filed a two-count complaint against Boland, alleging numerous violations of the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar. Judge Brandt C. Downey III was appointed referee. The referee made the following findings of fact:
COUNT I
Boland was contacted in March 1993 by Albert Farinha on behalf of his daughter Kathleen Rains. Farinha informed Boland that a North Carolina court had ordered Rains to deliver her children to that state within twenty-four hours to allow her estranged husband to have visitation. Boland instructed Farinha to tell his daughter Rains to drive immediately to Florida and that he would handle the matter. When Boland spoke with Rains, he told her that twentyfour hours was unrealistic and that he would get the case transferred to Florida and represent Rains in a Florida action regarding visitation and seeking to set aside the order to return the children to North Carolina.
In April 1993, Rains paid Boland a $500 retainer fee. Boland cashed the check and did not deposit any of it into his trust account. Rains asked Boland to obtain a restraining order against her husband, who had assaulted her in the past, and to have the custody matter transferred to Florida. Rains gave Boland papers relevant to the custody matter and visitation such as the children's school and medical records. Rains relied on Boland's representations and did not take her children to North Carolina within the twenty-four hours ordered by the court. Consequently, an order for her arrest was issued by the District Court of North Carolina.
In May 1993, Boland met with Rains at the Hillsborough County Courthouse to file a *230 dissolution of marriage action and a motion for a restraining order. Boland knew that Rains did not satisfy the six-month residency requirement for the dissolution action but signed and filed the petition nevertheless.
In July 1993, Boland was served with a Motion to Change Custody of the Minor Children, filed by Rains' husband in North Carolina, and a notice of hearing. Boland advised Rains that she would have to hire a North Carolina attorney to handle the hearing and arranged for Sally Scherer, a North Carolina attorney, to appear on Rains' behalf and review the files in the action. Boland advised Rains that Scherer was charging $350 and received a check from Rains in that amount as payment for Scherer's services. Boland should have placed the money in escrow until the amount was transmitted to Scherer but instead cashed the check, converting the money to his own use. Scherer did not receive any of this money. A week later Scherer submitted a bill to Boland for $325 for services rendered, showing that the bill was unpaid. Boland requested another $350 from Rains for Scherer's fees. This check was annotated "NC lawyer and Robert Boland." Boland cashed the check and converted the funds to his own use. He was not authorized to apply any money from either of the checks to his own fees.
In September 1993, Rains' sister-in-law, Jennifer Farinha, was served with documents relating to the North Carolina custody proceedings and intended for Rains, who was not present at the place of service. Boland directed that these papers be brought to him and not be shown to Rains. He drafted an Affidavit in Opposition to Service of Process to be signed by Jennifer Farinha and filed by Rains in North Carolina as part of her claim of inadequate service of process. Jennifer Farinha told Albert Farinha that she did not want to sign the affidavit because it inaccurately stated that she was Rains' sister and did not know Rains' actual residential address. When Albert Farinha suggested that Boland change the two misrepresentations, Boland advised him to tell Jennifer Farinha to sign the affidavit as it was drafted, which she did. Boland submitted the affidavit to the court knowing of the misrepresentations.
Following a hearing in North Carolina in October 1993, Boland informed Mr. Farinha that Rains' husband had been awarded custody and that Rains was ordered to turn the children over to representatives of the sheriff's department. Boland advised Rains through her father, and later directly, to take the children out of the state on a "long vacation," and that he would "take care of the mess." Rains left Florida to avoid execution of the court order and did not return to the state until around Thanksgiving time.
The day after Rains had left the state, Farinha called Boland and told him that representatives of the sheriff's department were at his house looking for the children. When Farinha explained that he had lied and told the officers that Rains might be on her way with the children to North Carolina, Boland responded, "Good thinking." He also told Farinha to deny knowing their whereabouts and direct the sheriff's employees to Boland, who said that he would invoke the attorneyclient privilege.
When Rains returned to Florida, she discharged Boland and requested return of the documents she had given him. Boland did not respond and did not turn over the file until the referee directed him to do so in these proceedings.
COUNT II
Boland admitted the following allegations contained in count II of the Bar's complaint. He was convicted of driving under the influence, which resulted in revocation of his driver's license for six months in 1980. In 1983 his driver's license was revoked for five years following classification as an habitual traffic violator. He was found guilty of operating a motor vehicle without insurance in 1987. He was convicted of first-degree misdemeanor possession of marijuana in 1993. In 1994, Boland's driver's license was suspended for one year for driving with an unlawful blood alcohol level. His driver's license was indefinitely suspended on nine different occasions between 1987 and 1993 for failure to appear in court on traffic summonses. His driver's license was indefinitely suspended thirteen other times between 1987 and 1994 for failure to pay traffic fines.
*231 RECOMMENDATION AS TO GUILT
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702 So. 2d 229, 22 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 747, 1997 Fla. LEXIS 2037, 1997 WL 746286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-florida-bar-v-boland-fla-1997.