The Florida Bar v. Zana Holley Dupee

160 So. 3d 838, 40 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 171, 2015 Fla. LEXIS 581, 2015 WL 1343119
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 26, 2015
DocketSC13-921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 So. 3d 838 (The Florida Bar v. Zana Holley Dupee) 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.

Bluebook
The Florida Bar v. Zana Holley Dupee, 160 So. 3d 838, 40 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 171, 2015 Fla. LEXIS 581, 2015 WL 1343119 (Fla. 2015).

Opinion

*841 PER CURIAM.

We have for review a referee’s report recommending that Respondent Zana Holley Dupee be found guilty of professional misconduct and be suspended from the practice of law for ninety days followed by two years’ probation. We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 15, Fla. Const. Due to the serious nature of the misconduct, we find that more severe discipline is required and suspend Respondent from the practice of law for one year.

FACTS

The Florida Bar filed a complaint against Respondent alleging multiple counts of professional misconduct. The Court referred the complaint to a referee, who conducted disciplinary proceedings including an evidentiary hearing and submitted a report including findings of fact, recommendations as to guilt, and recommendations as to discipline.

The Referee’s Findings of Fact

The referee made the following findings of fact. Respondent represented the wife in a dissolution of marriage action filed by the client’s husband in July 2010. Respondent’s client had a credit union account in her name only with over $480,000 in it. After the dissolution action was filed and after meeting with Respondent to discuss representation, the client withdrew the money in the account, closed the account, and had the credit union issue a cashier’s check in the amount of $482,980.46, payable to “Parenting Education Charitable Trust.” Respondent had suggested the name to use on the check, became aware of the existence of the check shortly after its issuance, and knew that no charitable trust by that name existed. This check was never negotiated and remained in the client’s possession for the next eleven months, until she redeposited it into a new account at the same credit union and then moved it to an already existing account at a bank. Because the named payee was fictitious and the check was never negotiated, the money represented by the cashier’s check remained the property of Respondent’s client. See § 673.4041(2), Fla. Stat. (2014).

In late August and early September 2010, respectively, the husband’s attorney served on Respondent a request for production and standard family law interrogatories. Respondent did not provide timely responses to these discovery requests. The husband’s counsel filed a motion to compel, which the trial court granted. In December 2010, Respondent served answers to the standard family law interrogatories and a written response to the husband’s request for production. She also filed a family law financial affidavit signed by the wife. The only cash asset listed in the financial affidavit as being in the wife’s name only was a checking account containing $16,285.40. The affidavit did not mention the cashier’s check then in the wife’s possession. The affidavit was therefore false and Respondent submitted it to the court knowing that it was false.

In the wife’s answers to the standard family law interrogatories, under the category “assets,” subcategory “intangible personal property” (item 4c), the answer stated, “No items other than the financial account listed in the Wife’s Financial Affidavit.” By stating that the wife’s only intangible personal property was the account listed in the affidavit, the answer Respondent served on behalf of the wife was false and Respondent knew it was false. Item 4e called for disclosure of “financial accounts,” and the answer read, “These are listed in the Wife’s Financial Affidavit. Copies of statements are also included in the documents being produced in response to Husband’s Request to Produce.” Item 4f called for “closed financial *842 accounts.” The answer read, “Copies of statements are included in the documents being produced in response to Husband’s Request to Produce.” The answers to items 4e and 4f were incomplete and misleading. Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.340, Interrogatories to Parties, provides that interrogatory answers that refer to other records must be “in sufficient detail to permit the interrogating party to locate and to identify, as readily as can the party interrogated, the records from which the answer may be derived or ascertained.” Respondent knowingly faded to provide truthful and complete disclosure of material information sought in discovery.

The request to produce, in item 6, asked for banking information for the previous four years in three categories, “accounts,” “records,” and “checks and money orders.” The request specified the husband’s attorney’s office as the place of production. The response served by Respondent on behalf of the wife stated, “The following disclosures and documents as set out below are available for inspection and copying at the office of the undersigned.” The responses to items 6a and 6b, which requested bank account information and records, stated that bank account records, including those for the previously mentioned credit union account, were “available for inspection and copying at the office of the undersigned.” No response was provided for item 6c, which requested “all cashier’s checks, money orders, or certified checks, in your possession or under your control.”

Although the husband’s request to produce specified the husband’s counsel’s office as the place of production and the husband’s motion to compel compliance had been granted in December 2010, Respondent did not produce the requested items until September and October of 2011. Respondent did not object to the specified place of production or seek a protective order. Under Florida Family Law Rule of Procedure 12.285, Mandatory Disclosure, Respondent was required to produce the requested documents, including the cashier’s check. She knowingly failed or refused to produce documents in response to the request for production.

While the dissolution proceeding was pending, Respondent submitted to counsel for the husband a proposed settlement agreement. The proposal included dispositions of various items and categories of the parties’ assets and provided that the wife wpuld receive all funds in accounts held solely in her name. This proposal was delivered at a time when Respondent’s client still held the undisclosed cashier’s check in an amount exceeding $480,000.

On September 9, 2011, the husband’s attorney took the wife’s deposition. Respondent was present. Knowing that some years earlier, the husband had transferred $100,000 to the wife as a conciliation following some marital discord, the husband’s attorney asked her if she still had that money. The questioning brought out testimony that the wife had withdrawn the money from the account where she had it, along with other money in the account, and had a check issued “for charity,” after which she changed her mind about donating the money to charity and redeposited it in a new account. When the husband’s attorney asked her how much money she had in the account, she said she could not recall. When he asked her whether it was less than $200,000, she said she could not recall. This' was about one month after she had redeposited the proceeds of the cashier’s check to an account at the credit union, shortly after which she moved it to an existing account at a bank.

When her client testified in deposition, in Respondent’s presence, that she did not know whether the cashier’s check was *843 written for an amount that was less than $200,000, tfye testimony was false, and Respondent knew it was false.

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160 So. 3d 838, 40 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 171, 2015 Fla. LEXIS 581, 2015 WL 1343119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-florida-bar-v-zana-holley-dupee-fla-2015.