The Mississippi Bar v. Hall

612 So. 2d 1075, 1992 Miss. LEXIS 674, 1992 WL 311397
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1992
Docket91-BA-0206
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 612 So. 2d 1075 (The Mississippi Bar v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Mississippi Bar v. Hall, 612 So. 2d 1075, 1992 Miss. LEXIS 674, 1992 WL 311397 (Mich. 1992).

Opinion

612 So.2d 1075 (1992)

THE MISSISSIPPI BAR
v.
James M. HALL.

No. 91-BA-0206.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

October 29, 1992.
Rehearing and Modification Denied January 28, 1993.

Charles J. Mikhail, Jackson, for appellant.

No Brief Filed for appellee.

En banc.

ROY NOBLE LEE, Chief Justice, for the court:

The Mississippi State Bar (the Bar) filed a complaint to begin this action on June 26, 1989, alleging that attorney James M. Hall had violated Rules 1.1, 1.3, 1.4 and 1.16 of the Mississippi Rules of Professional Conduct and the attorney's oath under Miss. Code Ann. § 73-3-35 (1972) in his representation of a client in a personal injury case. Although served with a copy of the complaint, Hall did not answer it, resulting in the Bar's application to the Clerk of this Court for an entry of default against him on November 8, 1989. The Clerk entered the default on that day. A hearing was set for April 3, 1990, on the Bar's motion for default judgment in accordance with Rule 55(b) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure.

Hall appeared before the Tribunal on April 3 and filed a motion to set aside the entry of default and for permission to allow him to answer the Bar's complaint. The Tribunal denied Hall's motion and entered a default judgment against him, then heard Hall on the question of punishment. On January 26, 1991, the Tribunal filed its final judgment, finding that Hall had violated the rules alleged by the Bar and issuing a private reprimand to Hall. From that judgment, the Bar appeals and presents the following issue for discussion by this Court:

DID THE COMPLAINT TRIBUNAL IMPOSE UPON APPELLEE, JAMES M. HALL (MR. HALL), THE APPROPRIATE DISCIPLINE (i.e., A PRIVATE REPRIMAND) UNDER THE FACTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES OF THIS CASE, PARTICULARLY IN VIEW OF MR. HALL'S RECORD OF PRIOR DISCIPLINE FOR SIMILAR CONDUCT?

FACTS

Hall undertook the representation of Mrs. Effie Mae Rankin in the latter part of 1984. Mrs. Rankin had been involved in an automobile accident and received serious injuries while on a sight-seeing tour through Arkansas with her friend, Mary *1076 Lou Lott, who was driving the car. Mrs. Lott and the driver of the other car involved in the accident were both killed. The other driver had a $25,000 liability policy with State Farm, which Hall successfully recovered through settlement in December of 1985.

Hall also began negotiating with Mrs. Lott's insurer, USF & G. Mrs. Lott's policy had a liability limit of $100,000 and uninsured motorists' coverage of $25,000. Her family also owned two other cars with the same amount of uninsured motorists' coverage. Within a month of the accident, Hall obtained a payment of $5,000 from USF & G for Mrs. Rankin's medical expenses. Hall continued settlement negotiations with USF & G to no avail and on April 30, 1985, USF & G interpled $75,000 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, naming as defendants Mrs. Lott's estate and heirs and Mrs. Rankin.

A settlement agreement was negotiated and incorporated into a court order dated October 21, 1987. Under the agreement, USF & G agreed to pay Mrs. Rankin $8,000 of the funds interpled to the court and an additional $20,000.

However, the payments were conditioned upon Mrs. Rankin and Hall first executing total releases in favor of USF & G, Mrs. Lott's estate and heirs, opposing attorneys, Medicaid and Medicare. Medicare had paid $24,081.28 in medical benefits to Mrs. Rankin for treatment of injuries resulting from the accident through May 6, 1988, and Medicaid paid approximately $1,500.

The Bar complaint stated that Mrs. Rankin found it increasingly difficult to contact or communicate with Hall after the settlement was reached. Hall did not prepare the releases required to obtain the funds from the settlement. After months spent trying to contact Hall, Mrs. Rankin finally wrote him on January 28, 1988, stating that she had retained another attorney, Briley Richmond, to represent her in the matter and that Hall was discharged. Richmond then attempted to contact Hall and was also unable to do so for some time. As a result of the delay in executing the releases, Mrs. Rankin received a notice from the Medical Group of Hattiesburg on March 24, 1988, that they would not see her until her bill had been paid and, later, notice from Medicaid that it would no longer cover her.

The docket sheet from federal district court indicates that on April 14, 1988, an order was entered allowing the law firm of Franke, Rainey & Salloum to interplead the $28,000 to the clerk of the court. The money would then be paid to Mrs. Rankin when she and her attorney had complied with the terms of the court's October 21, 1987, order. Mrs. Rankin finally received her share of the proceeds from the settlement, $7,568.43, on August 21, 1989, almost two years after the settlement agreement.

In his defense, Hall stated that around the same time as Mrs. Rankin's case came to trial, he became involved in four election contests in Stone County as a lawyer or witness, resulting from his position as attorney for the board of supervisors. These matters caused him to be out of his office a great deal for three to four months and unavailable for walk-in consultations. However, he claimed that, if Mrs. Rankin had made an appointment, he would have seen her. He did not prepare the releases, he claimed, because he thought that the parties to be released were to prepare them. However, the federal court's order expressly stated that he should prepare them.

Hall also testified that he underwent a great deal of difficulties related to his marriage about this same time. His home burned in October of 1986. He and his two sons moved to his parents' home and his wife and daughter moved to her parents' home. His marriage deteriorated and he and his wife divorced in December of 1986, with his wife receiving custody of the children. He sought counselling as a result of his broken marriage. In November of 1987, his wife illegally took possession of their renovated house. She sought modification of the original divorce decree in October of 1988, at which time he gained custody of the young children. She again *1077 sought modification of the custody decree in March of 1989, unsuccessfully.

Hall introduced a list of activities in mitigation of his discipline. He was active in his church, past Master of the Wiggins Masonic Lodge, legal advisor to the Little Red Schoolhouse Committee of the Board of the Eastern Star, acting family master for Stone County for two to three years preceding the hearing and the attorney for the board of supervisors.

The Bar offered a prior judgment against Hall as an aggravating factor. The Bar filed the complaint resulting in that judgment on February 13, 1989. Judgment was entered against Hall in cause number 89-B-750 on May 17, 1990, after a hearing held on April 3, 1989, the same day as the first hearing in the case sub judice. That case involved Hall's representation of Major Parks during late 1986 and early 1987. The Tribunal found Hall guilty of neglect in handling the case, by allowing a default judgment and garnishment to be entered against Parks in his child custody case while Parks was serving in the military in Korea. The Tribunal issued a private reprimand against Hall and ordered him to refund the $500 fee charged to Parks, from which he did not appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
612 So. 2d 1075, 1992 Miss. LEXIS 674, 1992 WL 311397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-mississippi-bar-v-hall-miss-1992.