Whelan's Case

619 A.2d 571, 136 N.H. 559, 1992 N.H. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 31, 1992
DocketNo. LD-90-027
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 619 A.2d 571 (Whelan's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whelan's Case, 619 A.2d 571, 136 N.H. 559, 1992 N.H. LEXIS 196 (N.H. 1992).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

On November 15,1990, the Supreme Court Committee on Professional Conduct (committee) filed a petition to impose a thirty-day suspension from the practice of law on the respondent, Dennis J. Whelan. The petition and the respondent’s answer were referred to a Judicial Referee (Maher, J.) pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 37(13)(e). The referee held a hearing and filed a report containing findings of fact and rulings of law. While the committee alleged that the respondent violated four Rules of Professional Conduct (Rules), the referee determined that there were only two violations. The committee did not accept the referee’s report, and we heard oral argument.

The facts are not disputed. Attorney K. William Clauson represented Mr. and Mrs. DesRosiers of Greensborough Road in Hanover in 1981. After Mr. DesRosiers’ death, Clauson continued to represent Mrs. DesRosiers until 1983, when he transferred responsibility for her legal affairs to his partner, Daniel G. Smith. Smith handled all of Mrs. DesRosiers’ financial affairs, including balancing her checkbook, and drafted her original will in 1984, a revision in 1986, and a codicil in 1987.

At the time of the events underlying this action, Mrs. DesRosiers was over ninety years old and in poor health. The respondent and his wife, Heide, had lived on Greensborough Road, next door to Mrs. DesRosiers, since 1974. Heide Whelan visited her almost daily and provided emotional support and physical care. When Mrs. Whelan was unable to visit Mrs. DesRosiers, the respondent would do so. In 1983, the respondent was admitted to the New Hampshire bar and became a partner with Smith and Clauson in 1985, practicing under the name of Clauson, Smith & Whelan.

In 1987, Mrs. DesRosiers asked the respondent to draft a codicil to her will because she wanted to leave her real estate to the respond[561]*561ent and his wife. The respondent informed Mrs. DesRosiers that it would be improper for him to draft such a codicil and that she should see her own attorney, Daniel Smith, the respondent’s partner. Attorney Smith drafted the codicil in which Mrs. DesRosiers left her house and property on Greensborough Road to the respondent and his wife. The codicil provided that “Heide has done innumerable kindnesses for me and has cared for me when I have needed care.” Mrs. DesRosiers died in 1989.

This court has held that by drafting the 1987 codicil benefitting his partner, Attorney Smith violated Rule 1.8(c), prohibiting a lawyer from preparing an instrument giving the lawyer or the lawyer’s spouse any substantial gift from a client, and Rule 1.10(a), providing that while lawyers are associated in a firm, none of them shall knowingly represent a client when any one of them practicing alone would be prohibited from doing so. In the Matter of Daniel G. Smith, Esq., LD-90-026 (December 10, 1991).

The committee requested that the respondent be suspended from the practice of law for violating the Rules cited above, and Rules 5.1(c)(2) and 8.4(a), which provide, respectively, that a lawyer shall be responsible for another lawyer’s violation if the lawyer is a partner in the law firm in which the other practices, and that it is professional misconduct for a lawyer to knowingly assist or induce another to violate or attempt to violate the Rules of Professional Conduct, or to do so through the acts of another.

The referee ruled that the respondent violated Rules 1.8(c) and 1.10(a), but determined that there were no violations of Rules 5.1(c)(2) or 8.4(a). The respondent appeals the finding that he violated Rules 1.8(c) and 1.10(a), and the Committee appeals the finding that the respondent did not violate Rules 5.1(c)(2) or 8.4(a). The standard of review for findings made by a judicial referee in attorney discipline proceedings is “whether a reasonable person could reach the same conclusion as the referee based upon the evidence presented at the hearing.” Drucker’s Case, 133 N.H. 326, 329, 577 A.2d 1198, 1199 (1990).

Rule 1.8, which governs conflicts of interest, provides:

“(c) A lawyer shall not prepare an instrument giving the lawyer or person related to the lawyer as parent, child, sibling, or spouse any substantial gift from a client, including a testamentary gift, except where the client is related to the donee.”

[562]*562Rule 1.10, the Rule governing imputed disqualification, provides:

“(a) While lawyers are associated in a firm, none of them shall knowingly represent a client when any one of them practicing alone would be prohibited from doing so by Rule 1.7, 1.8(c), 1.9 or 2.2.”

In finding violations of both Rules 1.8(c) and 1.10(a), the referee noted that the respondent never represented Mrs. DesRosiers and did not prepare any part of her will or codicil, so that

“[o]n it[]s face, therefore, Mr. Whelan does not appear to have violated Rule 1.8(c). It is only when 1.8(c) is read together with 1.10(a) that it becomes evident to this referee that Rule 1.8(c) has been violated. In this Referee’s opinion, both have to be read together and interchangeably to find the conflict which exists.”

We disagree with the referee’s interpretation of Rule 1.10(a), the imputed disqualification rule, as imposing vicarious liability for violations committed by another attorney. The respondent did not violate Rule 1.8(c) because the respondent did not prepare the codicil that made him a gift of property; Attorney Smith prepared the codicil. Under the referee’s analysis, any member of a firm could be found to have violated Rule 1.8(c) when another member represents a client whom no attorney in the firm should represent because of the imputed disqualification rule.

The purpose of the imputed disqualification rule was to disqualify Attorney Smith from representing Mrs. DesRosiers in matters in which the respondent would be prohibited from representing Mrs. DesRosiers. There is no language in Rule 1.10(a) providing that Attorney Smith’s violation of Rule 1.8(c) be imputed to another member of the firm. Rather, the Rule provides that the disqualification of any member of the firm, here, the respondent’s disqualification under Rule 1.8(c), be imputed to Attorney Smith. We hold that the respondent did not violate Rule 1.8(c) or 1.10(a).

The referee determined that there were no violations under Rules 5.1(c)(2) or 8.4(a) because

“[t]he key element that must be present for a violation to occur is knowledge that something was being done improperly .... The knowledge that is necessary is . . . not only knowing an act was being done but also knowing that the act would constitute a violation of the rules. Mr. Whelan knew [563]*563that Attorney Smith would be drafting the codicil but did not have the knowledge that it was a violation of the rule.”

The committee contests the referee’s legal requirement that an attorney have actual knowledge that he or she is violating a Rule in order to be found guilty of misconduct. The respondent contends that he did not violate any Rule and has maintained the position that mere knowledge that a course of conduct has taken place is not enough to support a finding that an attorney violated the Rules; rather, the attorney must know that the course of conduct is prohibited by the Rules.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
619 A.2d 571, 136 N.H. 559, 1992 N.H. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whelans-case-nh-1992.