Showing posts with label Scott A. Meyers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott A. Meyers. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

kanBARoo Court. Interlude 4. Decision of the Hearing Department

This is the State Bar Court's decision, which my Supreme Court Petition for Writ of Review contests. The decision arises from the default judgment taken by the State Bar. The unlawful default, engineered by the Office of the Chief Trial Counsel, allowed Judge Honn to accept all the prosecutrix's alleged facts as proven.

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BEGIN QUOTED MATTER

FILED APRIL 10, 2008





STATE BAR COURT OF CALIFORNIA

HEARING DEPARTMENT - LOS ANGELES

=
In the Matter of

STEPHEN RONALD DIAMOND,

Member No. 183617,

A Member of the State Bar. )

)
)
) Case No.
05-O-04605-RAH
(05-O-04613; 05-O-04808;
05-O-04871; 06-O-10462;
06-O-10680; 06-O-11600)

DECISION AND ORDER OF INVOLUNTARY INACTIVE ENROLLMENT



I. Introduction
In this default disciplinary matter, respondent Stephen Ronald Diamond is charged with 28 counts of professional misconduct, including (1) forming a partnership with a non-attorney to operate a personal injury law practice in which respondent aided the non-attorney in the unauthorized practice of law; (2) failing to notify clients of receipt of settlement funds; (3) failing to maintain client funds in a trust account; (4) failing to communicate; (5) failing to return client files; (6) committing acts of moral turpitude, which involved client funds of at least $182,777; and (7) lending his name to be used by a non-attorney.
Based upon the egregious nature and extent of culpability, as well as the applicable aggravating circumstances, the court recommends that respondent be disbarred from the practice of law.



II. Pertinent Procedural History
The Office of the Chief Trial Counsel of the State Bar of California (State Bar) initiated this proceeding by filing a notice of disciplinary charges (NDC) on July 9, 2007, and properly serving it on respondent at his official membership records address.
Between August and December 2007, respondent filed various unsuccessful motions, including a motion to dismiss and request for immediate stay. But he never filed a response to the NDC.
Deputy Trial Counsel Melanie J. Lawrence of the State Bar requested that respondent's default be entered on three separate occasions but was denied.
On January 2, 2008, respondent failed to appear for the in-person hearing on the order to show cause. As a result, the court issued terminating sanctions pursuant to the order to show cause for respondent's failure to participate in discovery and ordered his default be entered immediately. Respondent was enrolled as an inactive member on January 5, 2008, under Business and Professions Code section 6007, subdivision (e).1 An order of entry of default was sent to respondent's official address.
This matter was submitted for decision on January 15, 2008, after the State Bar filed a brief on culpability and discipline. In its brief, the State Bar moved to strike certain allegations alleged in the NDC, count 25, regarding commingling personal funds with client funds in the CTA. The motion is hereby granted.
III. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
All factual allegations of the NDC are deemed admitted upon entry of respondent's default unless otherwise ordered by the court based on contrary evidence. (Rules Proc. of State Bar, rule 200(d)(1)(A).)

A. Jurisdiction
Respondent was admitted to the practice of law in California on September 24, 1996, and has been a member of the State Bar since that time.
B. General Background
In mid-2004, Jae Bum Kim (Kim), a non-attorney, leased office space at 1200 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 312, Los Angeles, California, 90017 (the Wilshire Blvd. Office). Kim had previously worked as the office manager for an attorney at the same address. The attorney had consolidated his practice in another location, and Kim took over the lease.
Thereafter, Kim hired a staff of at least five case managers, including, but not limited to, Andy Shin (a.k.a. Andy Kim), Dana Chung, Robin Lee, Micky Park, and Evan Chang, and a receptionist, Elsa Villa (hereinafter referred to collectively and individually as "staff"), to form a putative law office. At the time, no attorney worked in the Wilshire Blvd. office.
In September 2004, Kim and respondent entered into an agreement regarding the formation of a personal injury law practice, known as Essence Professional Law Corporation or alternatively, as the Law Offices of Stephen R. Diamond, A Professional Law Corporation. Respondent opened a client trust account (CTA), account No. 046800046, and a business operating account (general account), account No. 500011734, at the Koreatown Galleria Branch of Hanmi Bank in Los Angeles.
Kim and staff, thereafter, through at least September 2005, signed up personal injury clients, performed legal work on their files, entered into settlement negotiations with defendants' insurance carriers, settled cases, endorsed settlement checks, made deposits and withdrawals from respondent's CTA, all pursuant to the September 2004 agreement entered into between Kim and respondent. Kim and staff speak Korean, and respondent does not. Most of respondent's clientele were Korean speaking.
Over the course of their one year association, respondent worked part-time in the Wilshire Blvd. office, and Kim paid respondent approximately $5,000 per month in cash. More than $1.33 million was deposited and withdrawn from respondent's CTA during that period. Activity ceased in the CTA at the end of September 2005; its balance was approximately $583, and remained at that sum through at least in January 2006.
More than 200 client matters were settled by Kim and staff from September 2004 to September 2005. The corresponding settlement checks were endorsed by Kim and staff, and deposited into the CTA. The funds from the settlements were thereafter withdrawn in the form of checks, primarily negotiated in two ways: cashing at a check cashing service located at 3rd Street Liquors in Los Angeles, near the Wilshire Blvd. office; or deposited directly into the general account. In both instances, the checks were routinely negotiated after affixing the purported endorsement of the payee.
C. Findings of Fact (The Yoo, Hong, Chung and Lee Matters)
1. The Yoo Matter (Case No. 05-O-04605)
In January 2005, Nan Young Yoo employed respondent, through Kim and staff at the Wilshire Blvd. office, to represent her in a personal injury matter arising out of a January 1, 2005 injury. Yoo was given and signed a contingency fee employment agreement. Thereafter, and over the period of several months, Yoo made several calls to the Wilshire Blvd. office, and left a message each time requesting a return call regarding the status of her case. No one returned Yoo's calls.
In March 2005, respondent, through Kim and staff, obtained from Yoo's insurer, Infinity Insurance Co., a check for $2,000, which represented payment for medical costs associated with her personal injuries. Yoo was never informed of the receipt of the $2,000 from Infinity, and never saw the check. Yoo's name, however, was signed by Kim and staff to the check and it was deposited into the CTA.
In June 2005, Kim and staff settled Yoo's case for $13,500, without obtaining Yoo's consent. Yoo's name, however, was signed by Kim and staff, without her knowledge or consent, to a settlement agreement provided by Farmers Insurance Co. (Farmers). Respondent performed no work on Yoo's case and was unaware of the settlement negotiations or ultimate settlement.
On June 28, 2005, Farmers sent a settlement check to respondent at the Wilshire Blvd. office, payable to respondent and Yoo, in the amount of $13,500 (the Yoo settlement check). Respondent caused or permitted the Yoo settlement check to be deposited into his CTA on June 29, 2005. Respondent did not inform Yoo of the receipt of funds on her behalf.
Two days before the settlement check was deposited into the CTA on June 27, 2005, a check for $7,000 was issued from that account, made payable to Yoo. Yoo's name was endorsed on the reverse of the $7,000 check, without her knowledge or consent, and it was cashed.
In September 2005, because she had not received any phone calls from respondent or anyone in his office, Yoo employed new counsel to investigate her claim. Yoo learned for the first time that her case had been settled.
Thereafter, Yoo complained through her new counsel, J. S. Kim, to respondent about the settlement of her case without her knowledge and the failure to distribute to her any portion of the Yoo settlement. On September 13, 2005, attorney Kim also requested that respondent forward Yoo's file. Respondent did not do so.
Instead, in his response to attorney Kim, he disavowed any knowledge of Yoo's case, claimed that he was not her attorney, never had been her attorney and owed her no duty, and blamed his office staff for the misconduct. Respondent claimed, further, that he had recently fired Kim and staff upon discovering they had signed medical liens without his permission.
2. The Hong Matter (Case No. 05-O-04613)
In late October 2004, Katie Lee, her parents (Moon Ja Hong and Myong Kook Hong), and daughter (Michelle Myers) (collectively, "the Hong clients") employed respondent, through Kim and staff at the Wilshire Blvd. office, to represent them in a personal injury matter arising out of an October 23, 2004 hit-and-run, automobile accident that resulted in personal injuries to each of them. On behalf of her family and herself, Katie met with Kim and staff. Kim introduced her to respondent immediately following her first and only meeting with him at the Wilshire Blvd. office. Over the period of the next several months, Katie made numerous calls to respondent's Wilshire Blvd. office, and left a message each time requesting a return call regarding the status of her case. No one returned her calls.
On November 1, 2004, Kim and staff sent a letter to State Farm Insurance Company on behalf of the Hong clients to begin the claims process. On November 9, 2004, Kim and staff sent further correspondence to State Farm, again referencing the Hong clients, individually, by name.
On May 9, 2005, Kim and staff submitted medical bills pertaining to the Hong clients' medical treatment. No billings, however, for Michelle were contained in the correspondence, and no demand for payment was made on her behalf.
On June 23, 2005, Kim and staff sent a demand letter to State Farm on behalf of the Hong clients. The settlement demands were, as follows: $11,000 for Katie, whose medical treatments amounted to approximately $4,345; $19,000 for Mrs. Hong, whose medical treatments amounted to approximately $9,715; and $30,000 for Mr. Hong, whose medical treatments amounted to approximately $19,472. No demand was made on behalf of Michelle. Respondent performed no work on the Hong clients' case and was unaware of the settlement negotiations or ultimate settlement.
Between May 11 and August 5, 2005, State Farm sent six settlement checks to respondent at the Wilshire Blvd. office, payable to respondent and the Hong clients, totaling $63,000, as settlement of the claims of Katie, and Mr. and Mrs. Hong. Respondent caused or permitted the settlement checks to be deposited into his CTA. Respondent did not inform the Hong clients of the receipt of funds on their behalf.
However, between May and August 2005, eight CTA checks were made payable to the Hong clients and Dr. Christopher Kim for a medical lien, as follows:

Date Payee Amount
5/17/05 Myong Kook Hong $2,000
5/18/05 Moon Ja Hong $2,0002
8/9/05 Katie Lee $7,000
8/15/05 Myong Kook Hong $9,000
8/15/05 Moon Ja Hong $7,500
8/18/05 Moon Ja Hong $9,0003
8/18/05 Michelle Myers $8,000
8/19/05 Dr. Christopher Kim $8,000
The Hong clients' and Dr. Kim's names were endorsed on the reverse of the checks without their knowledge or consent. The $7,000 check dated August 9 and the $9,000 check dated August 15 were deposited into respondent's general account. The other six checks were negotiated at 3rd Street Liquors.
In September 2005, because she had not received any phone calls from respondent or anyone in his office, Katie employed new counsel to investigate her claim. She then learned for the first time that her claim had been settled, as well as her parents' claims.
Thereafter, the Hong clients complained to respondent directly and through Katie's new counsel, Scott Meyers, about the settlement of their claims without their knowledge, and the failure to distribute any portion of their respective settlement funds to them. On September 28, 2005, Katie requested that respondent forward her file. He did not do so.
Instead, on September 28, 2005, respondent responded to Katie, disavowing any knowledge of her case or her parents' cases, claimed that he was not their attorney, never had been their attorney, and owed them no duty, and blamed his office staff for the misconduct. Respondent claimed further that he had recently fired Kim and staff upon discovering they had signed medical liens without his permission. Finally, respondent attempted to blame Katie for not being more vigilant about contacting him previously about the cases.
3. The Chung Matter (Case Nos. 06-O-10462 and 06-O-11600)
In June 2004, Wan Ki Chung and Jun Lee (husband and wife) were involved in an automobile accident resulting in personal injuries (the Chung matter). Mr. and Mrs. Chung initially employed attorney Frederick Lee to represent them. In November 2004, they employed respondent, through Kim and staff at the Wilshire Blvd. office, to represent them in their personal injury matter. Respondent's office sent attorney Lee a substitution of attorney, which attorney Lee executed in early December 2004, and returned, along with formal notice of his attorney's lien against any settlement, verdict or recovery obtained by respondent.
Also in January 2005, attorney Lee informed 21st Century Insurance, the carrier involved in the Chung matter, of his lien. In March 2005, attorney Lee sent respondent a letter, informing him that he would relinquish any claim for attorney fees in the Chung matter, but continued to assert his lien for costs actually advanced.
In July 2005, Kim and staff settled Mr. Chung's claim for $32,000 and Mrs. Chung's claim for $42,000, without obtaining their consent. Respondent performed no work on the Chung matter and was unaware of the settlement negotiations or ultimate settlement.
On August 2, 2005, 21st Century Insurance sent two settlement checks to respondent at the Wilshire Blvd. office: one made payable to respondent, Frederick Lee, and Wan Ki Chung for $32,000, and another to respondent, Frederick Lee, and Jun Lee for $42,000 (the Chung settlement checks). Respondent caused or permitted the Chung settlement checks to be deposited into his CTA on August 5, 2005. Respondent did not inform Mr. Chung or Mrs. Chung of the receipt of funds on their behalf.
Although their names were endorsed on the settlement checks, Frederick Lee and Mr. and Mrs. Chung were unaware that the case had settled, and did not endorse any of the settlement checks, and did not consent to the endorsement of their names by any other person.
However, six CTA checks were made payable to Mr. and Mrs. Chung and Dr. Chang Woo Ko for a medical lien, as follows:
Date Payee Amount
8/5/05 Wan Ki Chung $ 4,000
8/5/05 Jun Lee $ 7,500
8/8/05 Dr. Chang Woo Ko $ 5,000
8/8/05 Wan Ki Chung $ 7,500
8/18/05 Jun Lee $10,000
8/19/05 Wan Ki Chung $10,000
Mr. and Mrs. Chung's and Dr. Ko's names were endorsed on the reverse of the checks without their knowledge or consent. The August 5 check for $7,500 and the August 8 check for $5,000 were deposited into respondent's general account. The remaining checks were negotiated at 3rd Street Liquors.
In September 2005, Dr. Ko first learned that the Chung matter had settled, and contacted respondent by e-mail to attempt to collect on his medical liens of $6,160 and $7,460, respectively, for Wan Ki Chung and Jun Lee.
Respondent replied to Dr. Ko on September 28, 2005, disclaiming any knowledge of the Chung matter, questioning the veracity of Dr. Ko's assertion of his lien, and disputing the legitimacy of his billings for chiropractic care of Mr. and Mrs. Chung. Respondent claimed that he had been a victim of his employees, Kim and staff, and invited Dr. Ko to file a criminal complaint. Respondent asserted that he would not, however, report his former employees, as he did not possess sufficient evidence of any criminal action, and wished to avoid being named in a possible malicious prosecution claim.
In December 2005, attorney Lee learned from 21st Century Insurance that the Chung matter had settled in August 2005. Attorney Lee then complained to respondent about the settlement without a payment of his attorney's lien. In February 2006, attorney Lee wrote to respondent, informing respondent that his costs incurred during his representation of Mr. and Mrs. Chung totaled $2,754.35.
Respondent responded to attorney Lee, disavowing any knowledge of the Chung matter. He claimed that he was not their attorney, never had been their attorney and owed them no duty, and blamed his office staff for the misconduct. Respondent claimed, further, that he had recently fired Kim and staff.
4. The Lee Matter (Case No. 06-O-10680)
In September 2004, Seung Duk Lee and Sang Won Lee (the Lees) employed respondent, through Kim and staff at the Wilshire Blvd. office, to represent them in a personal injury matter arising out of a September 26, 2004 automobile accident.
Seung Duk Lee was informed by Kim and staff that he and Sang Won Lee would each receive one-third of the settlement funds, that respondent would get one-third, and that the medical provider would get one-third. Mr. Lee agreed that respondent could accept a settlement on his behalf, and purported to agree to the same terms on behalf of Sang Won Lee.
In February 2005, respondent received a $1,000 check for medical payment on behalf of Sang Won Lee and caused it to be deposited into his CTA. Neither Mr. Lee nor Seung Duk Lee were informed of the receipt of the $1,000 medical payment check.
In April 2005, Kim and staff negotiated a settlement of the Lees' claims with the adverse party's insurer, Auto & Home Insurance Plus: $9,000 for Seung Duk Lee and $4,000 for Sang Won Lee. On April 5, 2005, Auto & Home Insurance Plus sent checks in those amounts to the Wilshire Blvd. office. The respective checks were endorsed with the Lees' names, without their knowledge or consent, and deposited into the CTA. Respondent did not inform the Lees of the receipt of the settlement checks from Auto & Home Insurance Plus.
On April 8, 2005, a check for $4,000 was issued from the CTA, made payable to Sang Won Lee. Sang Won Lee's name was endorsed on the reverse of the $4,000 check without her knowledge or consent, and it was thereafter negotiated at 3rd Street Liquors.
In June 2005, Mr. Lee returned to the Wilshire Blvd. office to inquire about his case. He was informed that respondent was away on a business trip. The staff member he spoke to said that he had no information concerning the Lees' case.
In December 2005, because he had not received any communications from respondent or anyone in his office, Mr. Lee returned to the Wilshire Blvd. office, and found that respondent no longer occupied the office suite. He contacted Auto & Home Insurance Plus in January 2006 and learned for the first time that his case and Sang Won Lee's case had been settled.
Thereafter, Mr. Lee complained by letter to respondent about the settlement of the Lees' cases without their knowledge, and the failure to distribute to them any portion of the settlement funds.
Respondent responded to Mr. Lee, disavowing any knowledge of the Lees' case, and claimed that he was not their attorney, never had been their attorney and owed them no duty. He blamed his office staff for the misconduct. Respondent claimed, further, that he had recently fired Kim and staff upon discovering they had signed medical liens without his permission.
D. Conclusions of Law (The Yoo, Hong, Chung and Lee Matters)
1. Aiding the Unauthorized Practice of Law (Rules of Prof. Conduct, Rule 1-300(A))4 (Counts 1, 7, 17 and 21)
Respondent is charged in counts 1, 7, 17 and 21 with a violation of rule 1-300(A) of the Rules of Professional Conduct, which provides that a member must not aid any person or entity in the unauthorized practice of law.
By creating an environment in the Wilshire Blvd. office in which Yoo, the Hong clients, Mr. and Mrs. Chung, and the Lees could employ respondent without respondent's specific knowledge of the clients' identity, case or cause, and in which Kim and staff could negotiate with the insurance company and settle their cases, without any attorney supervision or client consent, respondent aided and abetted Kim and staff in the unauthorized practice of law.
Therefore, respondent, by clear and convincing evidence, willfully violated rule 1-300(A) by aiding Kim and staff in the unauthorized practice of law in counts 1, 7, 17 and 21.
2. Failure to Notify of Receipt of Client's Funds

(Rules Prof. Conduct, Rule 4-100(B)(1)) (Counts 2, 8, 18 and 22)

Respondent failed to notify a client promptly of the receipt of the client's funds, securities, or other properties in violation of rule 4-100(B)(1) in counts 2, 8, 18 and 22, as follows:
o By not informing Yoo of the receipt of the medical payment from Infinity or the Yoo settlement check from Farmers;
o By not informing the Hong clients of the receipt of the medical payments or settlement checks from State Farm;
o By not informing Mr. and Mrs. Chung of the receipt of their settlement checks from 21st Century Insurance; and
o By not informing the Lees of the receipt of the medical payment check for $1,000, and the settlement funds from Auto & Home Insurance Plus.
3. Failing to Maintain Client Funds in Trust Account
(Rules Prof. Conduct, Rule 4-100(A)) (Counts 3, 9, 19 and 23)
Rule 4-100(A) provides that all funds received for the benefit of clients must be deposited in a client trust account and that no funds belonging to the attorney must be deposited therein or otherwise commingled therewith. Respondent violated rule 4-100(A) in counts 3, 9, 19 and 23, as follows:
o By causing or permitting the issuance of a CTA check purporting to be payable to Yoo, in the amount of $7,000, to be negotiated two days prior to the deposit or receipt of the Yoo settlement, at a time when no funds were on deposit in the CTA for Yoo's benefit, respondent misused his CTA and misappropriated funds belonging to another client or clients;
o By causing or permitting CTA checks purporting to be payable to Moon Ja Hong and Myong Kook Hong, to be endorsed by one other than the respective clients and without the client's knowledge or consent, and then deposited into the general account, respondent misused and failed to maintain client funds in his CTA;
o By causing or permitting CTA checks purporting to be payable to Jun Lee and Dr. Ko to be endorsed by one other than the client and medical provider, respectively, and without the client's and medical provider's knowledge or consent, and then deposited into the general account, respondent misused and failed to maintain client funds his CTA; and
o By causing or permitting CTA a check purporting to be payable to Sang Won Lee to be endorsed and negotiated by one other than the client, and without the client's knowledge or consent, respondent misused his CTA.
4. Failure to Communicate (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6068, Subd. (m)) (Counts 4 and 10)
Section 6068, subdivision (m), provides that it is the duty of an attorney to respond promptly to reasonable status inquiries of clients and to keep clients reasonably informed of significant developments in matters with regard to which the attorney has agreed to provide legal services.
Respondent willfully violated section 6068, subdivision (m), in counts 4 and 10, as follows:
o In the Yoo Matter, by not responding to Yoo's repeated, periodic phone messages requesting information regarding her case and by not informing Yoo that her case was settled; and
o In the Hong matter, by not responding to Katie's periodic phone messages requesting information regarding her and her parents' claims and by not informing the Hong clients that their claims had been settled.
5. Failure to Return Client File
(Rules Prof. Conduct, Rule 3-700(D)(1)) (Counts 5 and 11)
Rule 3-700(D)(1) requires an attorney whose employment has terminated to promptly release to a client, at the client's request, all the client's papers and property. Respondent willfully violated rule 3-700(D)(1) by not providing Yoo or her attorney, J. S. Kim, with Yoo's file upon J. S. Kim's request and by not providing Katie or her attorney, Scott Meyers, with Katie's file upon her request in counts 5 and 11.
6. Moral Turpitude (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6106)(Counts 6, 12, 20 and 24)
Section 6106 prohibits an attorney from engaging in conduct involving moral turpitude, dishonesty or corruption.
Respondent willfully violated section 6106 in counts 6, 12, 20 and 24, involving a total of $166,500 in client funds, as follows:
o By causing or permitting the Yoo settlement agreement, the $2,000 medical payment check from Infinity, and the $13,500 check from Farmers to be endorsed and negotiated by one other than Yoo, and by not paying Yoo or anyone on her behalf, including any medical provider, any portion of the $15,500 received on her behalf;
o By causing or permitting the Hong clients' medical payment checks from State Farm, and the settlement checks from State Farm to be endorsed and negotiated by one other than Katie Lee, Moon Ja Hong, or Myong Kook Hong, and by not paying the Hong clients or anyone on their behalf, including any medical provider, any portion of the $63,000 received on their behalf;
o By causing or permitting the Chung settlement checks from 21st Century Insurance to be endorsed and negotiated by one other than Wan Ki Chung and Jun Lee, by not paying Wan Ki Chung or Jun Lee or anyone on their behalf, including any medical provider, any portion of the $74,000 received on their behalf, by not honoring attorney Frederick Lee's lien for advanced costs, and by not honoring Dr. Ko's lien for medical services provided, signed by respondent or on his behalf;
o By causing or permitting the $1,000 medical payment check, the $9,000 settlement check for Seung Duk Lee and the $4,000 check for Sang Won Lee, all from Auto & Home Insurance Plus, to be endorsed and negotiated by one other than the Lees, and by not paying the Lees or anyone on their behalf, including any medical provider, any portion of the $14,000 received on their behalf; and
o By later disavowing any and all responsibility toward his clients and to third parties to whom he had become a fiduciary.
E. Findings of Fact (The Son, Kwon, Kim and Yeum Matters (Case No. 05-O-04808))
This case involved four clients, Sonny Son, David Kwon, Mi Young Kim, and Crystal Sang Sook Yeum. All of whom sought and received treatment from Hyo-Jo Pain Control and Rehabilitation and its proprietor, Richard Kim, D.C. The clients and respondent entered into a medical lien for Dr. Kim's services. After Dr. Kim passed away, attorney Scott Meyers represented Elizabeth Kim, Dr. Kim's widow, in an attempt to obtain payment for the liens. He and respondent agreed to settle those four liens and respondent gave attorney Meyers assurances that he would instruct his staff to pay the liens. To date, respondent has not made any payment to Dr. Kim's estate or to Hyo-Jo Pain Control and Rehabilitation.
1. The Son Matter
In 2004, respondent was employed to represent Sonny Son in a personal injury matter. Son sought and received treatment from Dr. Kim. Respondent and Son entered into a lien for Dr. Kim's services.
Respondent settled Son's case in November 2004, and received a settlement check for $3,442, payable to respondent and Son. On November 30, 2004, respondent caused the check to be deposited into his CTA, and immediately withdrew $2,442 as attorneys fees from the settlement. No sums were disbursed from the settlement to Son or to anyone else on her behalf, including Dr. Kim.
In July 2005, attorney Meyers contacted respondent in an attempt to obtain payment for the Son's lien. Believing that Son's case had settled for only $2,500, attorney Meyers agreed to accept $833.33 as full payment of the lien held for Son's treatment.
2. The Kwon Matter
In 2004, respondent was employed to represent David Kwon in a personal injury matter. Kwon sought and received treatment from Dr. Kim. Respondent and Kwon entered into a lien for Dr. Kim's services.
Respondent settled Kwon's case in November 2004, and received a settlement check for $4,500, payable to respondent and to Kwon. On November 22, 2004, respondent caused the check to be deposited into his CTA. Immediately thereafter, a check was written from the CTA in the amount of $4,500, payable to Kwon. No sums were disbursed from the settlement to anyone else from the Kwon settlement, including Dr. Kim. Respondent ostensibly took no fee for Kwon's representation.
In July 2005, attorney Meyers contacted respondent in an attempt to obtain payment for the Kwon lien. Attorney Meyers agreed to accept $1,500 as full payment of the lien held for Kwon's treatment.
3. The Kim Matter
In 2004, respondent was employed to represent Mi Young Kim in a personal injury matter. Kim sought and received treatment from Dr. Kim. Respondent and Kim entered into a lien for Dr. Kim's services.
Respondent settled Kim's case in January 2005, and received a settlement check for $1,835.15, payable to respondent and to Mi Young Kim. On January 27, 2005, respondent caused the check to be deposited into his CTA. Immediately thereafter, respondent withdrew the entire sum from the CTA as attorney fees. No sums were disbursed from the settlement to anyone else, including Dr. Kim.
In July 2005, attorney Meyers contacted respondent in an attempt to obtain payment for the Mi Young Kim lien. Attorney Meyers agreed to accept $611.71 as full payment of the lien held for Mi Young Kim's treatment.
4. The Yeum Matter
In 2004, respondent was employed to represent Crystal Sang Sook Yeum in a personal injury matter. Yeum sought and received treatment from Dr. Kim. Respondent and Yeum entered into a lien for Dr. Kim's services.
Respondent settled Yeum's case in April 2005, and received a settlement check for $6,500, payable to respondent and to Yeum. On April 12, 2005, respondent caused the check to be deposited into his CTA, and immediately withdrew $1,300 as attorneys fees from the settlement. A check was issued from the CTA in the amount of $4,300, payable to Yeum, as well as a check in the amount of $600 made payable to Dr. Kim. Although the check to Dr. Kim was endorsed and negotiated, Dr. Kim never in fact received it, or any funds from the settlement of Yeum's case. In fact, the check was endorsed and negotiated after Dr. Kim's death.
In July 2005, attorney Meyers contacted respondent in an attempt to obtain information as to whether the Yeum case had settled. Respondent did not respond.
F. Conclusions of Law (Case No.05-O-04808)
Moral Turpitude (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6106) (Counts 13-16)
Respondent willfully violated section 6106 in counts 13 through 16, involving a total of $16,277 in settlement funds, as follows:
In count 13, by not disbursing any funds to Dr. Kim (or his successors in interest) for treatment of Son, despite entering into a lien with him and Son for Son's treatment, by withdrawing $2,442 as fees immediately upon depositing Son's settlement check of $3,442, and by not disbursing any further sums to Son, or to anyone else on her behalf;
o In count 14, by not disbursing any funds to Dr. Kim (or his successors in interest) for treatment of Kwon, despite entering into a lien with him and Kwon for Kwon's treatment;
o In count 15, by not disbursing any funds to Dr. Kim (or his successors in interest) for treatment of Mi Young Kim, despite entering into a lien with him and Mi Young Kim for Mi Young Kim's treatment; and
o In count 16, by not disbursing any funds to Dr. Kim (or his successors in interest) for treatment of Yeum.
G. Findings of Fact (Client Trust Account (Case No. 05-O-04871))
On September 6, 2005, check No. 1412, written on respondent's CTA, in the amount of $2,000, was paid against insufficient funds. The resulting balance in the CTA, after payment of the check was ($807.82).
On September 23, 2005, respondent caused a check to be drawn on his CTA, payable to the general account, in the amount of $6,000 (check No. 1418). Respondent personally drafted the check, and affixed his signature on the reverse as an endorsement for deposit.
On the same day, respondent then deposited check No. 1418 into his general account and issued a check from his general account, payable to "CASH for Cashier's Check," in the amount of $6,000 (check No. 1877). Respondent in fact purchased a cashier's check in the amount of $6,000 with check No. 1877.
Thereafter, respondent deposited the $6,000 cashier's check into his personal bank account.
H. Conclusions of Law (Client Trust Account)
1. Preserving Identity of Client Funds
(Rules Prof. Conduct, Rule 4-100(A)) (Count 25)
By issuing a check from his CTA in an amount exceeding the balance of funds on deposit at the time of the check's issuance, respondent misused his client trust account, in willful violation rule 4-100(A).
2. Moral Turpitude (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6106) (Count 26)
By issuing a $6,000 CTA check, depositing it into his general account, then purchasing a $6,000 cashier's check with a check from the general account, and finally depositing the cashier's check into his personal account, respondent engaged in a scheme to defraud, attempted to and did commit money laundering, and misused his CTA, thereby committing an act or acts involving moral turpitude, dishonesty or corruption in willful violation of section 6106.
I. Conclusions of Law (Partnership with a Non-Lawyer and Misuse of Name)
1. Forming a Partnership with a Non-Lawyer (Rules Prof. Conduct, Rule 1-310) (Count 27)
Rule 1-310 prohibits an attorney from forming a partnership with a person who is not a lawyer if any of the activities of that partnership consist of the practice of law.
By entering into an agreement with Kim and staff that allowed them to enter into employment agreements with clients, negotiate with adverse parties and insurers, make deposits and withdrawals into his CTA, and have ongoing access to funds from the CTA, in exchange for cash payments each month, respondent formed a partnership with a person or persons who are not lawyers in which the principal activities of the partnership was the practice of law, in willful violation of rule 1-310.
2. Permitting Misuse of Name (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6105) (Count 28)
Section 6105 provides that lending his name to be used as attorney by another person who is not an attorney constitutes a cause for disbarment or suspension.
By entering into an agreement with Kim and staff that allowed them to enter into employment agreements with clients, negotiate with adverse parties and insurers, make deposits and withdrawals into his CTA, and have ongoing access to funds from the CTA, all while failing to exercise or require any supervisory control of the activities of the practice of law in Essence Law Corporation and Stephen R. Diamond, A Professional Law Corporation, by himself or another attorney, in exchange for compensation made in the form of cash payments of approximately $5,000, each month, respondent loaned his name to be used as attorney by another person or persons who were not attorneys.
IV. Mitigating and Aggravating Circumstances
A. Mitigation
No mitigating factor was offered or received into evidence. (Rules Proc. of State Bar, tit. IV, Stds. for Atty. Sanctions for Prof. Misconduct, std. 1.2(e).)5
Although respondent had no record of prior discipline in his eight years of practice when the misconduct began in 2004, his lack of record is only given minimal credit as mitigation because his present misconduct is very serious. (Std. 1.2(e)(i).)
B. Aggravation
There are several aggravating factors. (Std. 1.2(b).)
Respondent committed multiple acts of wrongdoing and some of the misconduct demonstrate a pattern of misconduct involving at least 13 clients, including forming a law partnership with a non-attorney; aiding the unauthorized practice of law; committing acts of moral turpitude; failing to notify clients of receipt of settlement funds; failing to maintain client funds in a trust account; failing to communicate; failing to return client files; and lending his name to be used by a non-attorney. (Std. 1.2(b)(ii).)
Respondent's misconduct harmed significantly his clients, the public or the administration of justice. (Std. 1.2(b)(iv).) The clients did not receive their full portion of settlement proceeds. The medical providers were not paid for their services, despite the liens. The public is indeed harmed by Kim and staff's fraudulent law practice.
Respondent demonstrated indifference toward rectification of or atonement for the consequences of his misconduct. (Std. 1.2(b)(v).) Respondent has not shown remorse or apologized to his clients, nor took any remedial action on behalf of his clients. He has yet to pay his clients or the medical providers. Respondent failed to come to grips with his culpability in asserting that he was never the attorney for the complaining clients and that he owed them no duty and blaming Kim and staff for defrauding them. He also blamed his clients for not being more vigilant about contacting him earlier. In fact, these clients left him numerous phone messages but all to no avail. Instead of contrition, respondent went to great lengths in his pretrial motions to blame the State Bar for unfounded misdeeds. "Respondent's use of specious and unsupported arguments in an attempt to evade culpability in this matter reveals a lack of appreciation both for his misconduct and for his obligations as an attorney." (In the Matter of Bach (Review Dept. 1991) 1 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 631, 647.) "The law does not require false penitence. [Citation.] But it does require that the respondent accept responsibility for his acts and come to grips with his culpability. [Citation.]" (In the Matter of Katz (Review Dept. 1991) 1 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 502, 511.) Here, respondent has accepted no responsibility.
Respondent's failure to cooperate with the State Bar before the entry of his default is also a serious aggravating factor. (Std. 1.2(b)(vi).) He failed to file an answer to the NDC despite the multiple opportunities afforded him to do so. He failed to appear at his deposition despite the order compelling his compliance with discovery. Finally, he failed to appear for the OSC hearing re sanctions.
V. Discussion
The purpose of State Bar disciplinary proceedings is not to punish the attorney, but to protect the public, to preserve public confidence in the profession and to maintain the highest possible professional standards for attorneys. (Chadwick v. State Bar (1989) 49 Cal.3d 103, 111; Cooper v. State Bar (1987) 43 Cal.3d 1016, 1025; std. 1.3.)
In determining the appropriate level of discipline, the court looks first to the standards for guidance. (Drociak v. State Bar (1991) 52 Cal.3d 1095, 1090; In the Matter of Koehler (Review Dept. 1991) 1 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 615, 628.)
The Supreme Court gives the standards "great weight" and will reject a recommendation consistent with the standards only where the court entertains "grave doubts" as to its propriety. (In re Silverton (2005) 36 Cal.4th 81, 91, 92; In re Naney (1990) 51 Cal.3d 186, 190.) Although the standards are not mandatory, they may be deviated from when there is a compelling, well-defined reason to do so. (Bates v. State Bar (1990) 51 Cal.3d 1056, 1061, fn. 2; Aronin v. State Bar (1990) 52 Cal.3d 276, 291.)
Standard 1.6(a) provides that, when two or more acts of misconduct are found in a single disciplinary proceeding and different sanctions are prescribed for those acts, the recommended sanction is to be the most severe of the different sanctions.
Standards 2.2(b), 2.3, 2.4(b), 2.6 and 2.10 apply in this matter.
Standard 2.2(b) provides that the commission of a violation of rule 4-100 must result in at least a three-month actual suspension, irrespective of mitigating circumstances.
Standard 2.3 provides: "Culpability of a member of an act of moral turpitude, fraud, or intentional dishonesty toward a court, client or another person or of concealment of a material fact to a court, client or another person shall result in actual suspension or disbarment depending upon the extent to which the victim of the misconduct is harmed or misled and depending upon the magnitude of the act of misconduct and the degree to which it relates to the member's acts within the practice of law."
Standard 2.4(b) provides that culpability of failing to communicate with a client must result in reproval or suspension depending upon the extent of the misconduct and the degree of harm to the client.
Standard 2.6(a) provides for discipline ranging from suspension to disbarment for violations of section 6068, subdivision (m), depending on the gravity of the offense or the harm, if any, to the victim, with due regard to the purposes of imposing discipline set forth in standard 1.3.
Finally, standard 2.10 provides that culpability of other provisions of the Business and Professions Code or Rules of Professional Conduct not specified in these standards must result in reproval or suspension depending upon the extent of the misconduct and the degree of harm to the client.
Respondent has been found culpable of serious misconduct involving at least 13 clients in this proceeding.
The State Bar urges disbarment, citing In the Matter of Jones (Review Dept. 1993) 2 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 411 (two years of actual suspension), In the Matter of Malek-Yonan (Review Dept. 2003) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 627 (18 months of actual suspension), and In the Matter of Bragg (Review Dept. 1997) 3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 615 (one year of actual suspension) in support of its recommended discipline. The State Bar argues that because respondent's misconduct and the aggravating factors are more serious than those found in Jones, Malek-Yonan and Bragg, respondent should be disbarred.
Jones involved an attorney who allowed a non-attorney to operate a large scale personal injury practice involving capping, forgery and other fraudulent practices in the attorney's name for more than two years. The non-attorney handled all aspects of the personal injury practice without any supervision from Jones. Nearly $60,000 withheld from client settlements was misused. In mitigation, the attorney turned the non-attorney in to the police and cooperated with the authorities which resulted in a felony conviction for forgery and also turned himself in to the State Bar, established his good character and community activities and paid nearly $57,000 of his own money to medical providers to remedy the non-attorney's misconduct. In aggravation, the attorney committed multiple acts of misconduct and caused considerable harm to medical providers. The attorney was actually suspended for two years with a three-year stayed suspension and a three-year probation.
Unlike Jones, there is no mitigating evidence, such as turning Kim and staff in to the police or cooperated with the authorities, establishing good character witnesses or community services, or paying the medical providers to make amends. Other than claiming that he fired Kim and staff, there is no evidence on whether he stopped the mishandling of his client trust account so to protect his client funds from further theft. Furthermore, respondent's aggravating evidence is more serious than that of Jones. Respondent lacked any understanding of his wrongdoing and insisted on blaming his staff for the fraudulent practices. He also committed additional acts of dishonesty, such as money laundering and causing a negative balance in his client trust account.
The court also finds guidance in In the Matter of Steele (Review Dept. 1997) 3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 708. There, the attorney for more than two years allowed his office manager, a non-lawyer, to run his practice, sign client trust account checks and handle all financial transactions without supervision. Despite evidence that the non-attorney was telling clients that he was Steele's partner and evidence that the non-attorney was embezzling funds, Steele did nothing to prevent further theft of client funds. Steele also personally committed other acts of dishonesty. In aggravation, Steele lacked candor during the disciplinary proceeding and committed multiple acts of misconduct. Very little mitigation was found. The attorney was disbarred.
Like Steele, respondent formed a reprehensible partnership with Kim. He completely abdicated his basic professional responsibilities as an attorney to properly supervise his client trust account and his law practice. In exchange for collecting $5,000 a month from Kim, respondent allowed Kim and staff almost free rein to perform such professional responsibilities in his name. As a result, more than 200 client matters were settled by Kim and staff; more than $1.33 million was deposited and withdrawn from respondent's client trust account; settlement funds involving $182,777 were withheld for payment to clients and medical providers; and forgery and fraudulent practices were order of the day. By the end of September 2005, the client trust account balance was only $583.
Respondent's misconduct reflects a blatant disregard of professional duties. He had flagrantly breached his fiduciary duties to his clients and abused their trust as their attorney.
It is settled that an attorney-client relationship is of the highest fiduciary character and always requires utmost fidelity and fair dealing on the part of the attorney. (Beery v. State Bar (1987) 43 Cal.3d 802, 813.) The Supreme Court noted that "[t]he essence of a fiduciary or confidential relationship is that the parties do not deal on equal terms, because the person in whom trust and confidence is reposed and who accepts that trust and confidence is in a superior position to exert unique influence over the dependent party." (Id.)
In this matter, respondent had abused his clients' trust and allowed Kim and staff to abscond thousands of dollars from settlement funds. Their taking of the funds is tantamount to misappropriation and respondent is responsible for their acts. The misappropriation of client funds is a grievous breach of an attorney's ethical responsibilities, violates basic notions of honesty and endangers public confidence in the legal profession. In all but the most exceptional cases, it requires the imposition of the harshest discipline - disbarment. (Grim v. State Bar (1991) 53 Cal.3d 21.)
Moreover, respondent's misuse of his CTA involving client funds of $182,777 and act of money laundering when he issued the $6,000 for himself were acts of dishonesty which "manifest an abiding disregard of the fundamental rule of ethics - that of common honesty - without which the profession is worse than valueless in the place it holds in the administration of justice." (Levin v. State Bar (1989) 47 Cal.3d 1140, 1147.) In recommending discipline, the "paramount concern is protection of the public, the courts and the integrity of the legal profession." (Snyder v. State Bar (1990) 49 Cal.3d 1302.) "It is clear that disbarment is not reserved just for attorneys with prior disciplinary records. [Citations.] A most significant factor . . . is respondent's complete lack of insight, recognition, or remorse for any of his wrongdoing." (In the Matter of Wyshak (Review Dept. 1999) 4 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 70, 83.) An attorney's failure to accept responsibility for actions which are wrong or to understand that wrongfulness is considered an aggravating factor. (Carter v. State Bar (1988) 44 Cal.3d 1091, 1100-1101.) Instead of cooperating with the State Bar or rectifying his misconduct, respondent defaulted in this disciplinary proceeding.
Respondent "is not entitled to be recommended to the public as a person worthy of trust, and accordingly not entitled to continue to practice law." (Resner v. State Bar (1960) 53 Cal.2d 605, 615.) Respondent's failure to participate in this hearing leaves the court without information about the underlying cause of respondent's offense or of any mitigating circumstances surrounding his misconduct. Therefore, based on the severity of the offense, the serious aggravating circumstances, the standards and the case law, the court concludes that the appropriate level of discipline is disbarment. "We believe that the public is therefore at risk unless respondent is required to successfully complete a reinstatement proceeding before again being allowed to practice law in this state." (In the Matter of Priamos (Review Dept. 1998) 3 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 824, 830)
VI. Recommended Discipline
Accordingly, the court recommends that respondent Stephen Ronald Diamond be disbarred from the practice of law in the State of California and that his name be stricken from the roll of attorneys in this state.
The court recommends that respondent be ordered to comply with California Rules of Court, rule 9.20, and to perform the acts specified in subdivisions (a) and (c) of that rule within 30 and 40 calendar days, respectively, after the effective date of the Supreme Court order in this matter.
Finally, the court recommends that costs be awarded to the State Bar in accordance with Business and Professions Code section 6086.10 and are enforceable both as provided in Business and Professions Code section 6140.7 and as a money judgment.
VII. Order of Inactive Enrollment
In accordance with Business and Professions Code section 6007, subdivision (c)(4), it is ordered that respondent be involuntarily enrolled as an inactive member of the State Bar of California effective three days after service of this decision and order (Rules Proc. of State Bar, rule 220(c)).

Dated: April ___, 2008. __________________________________________


RICHARD A. HONN
Judge of the State Bar Court

END QUOTED MATTER


Sunday, May 4, 2008

kanBARoo Court. 36th Installment. Securing Client Funds

If the California Supreme Court tolerates the State Bar Court, the practical importance of client-fund security is one of its reasons. While strict ethical liability is legally indefensible, it seems to enhance fund security by simplifying proof, supposedly creating a greater incentive to avoid impropriety. We can ask two questions. Does the measure accomplish this purpose? Does it accomplish it better than alternatives?

Strict ethical liability neither prevents misappropriation by staff nor yields rapid reimbursement. Katie Lee is the only defrauded person to get restitution, and she got it directly from J.B. Kim, the criminal mastermind, not by any action of the State Bar. The State Bar lacks the instrumentalities to hasten recovery of embezzled funds; the coercive powers of the criminal justice system are more powerful, the comprehensive powers of the civil law system more adaptable. A smoothly functioning legal system, however, should afford clients complete security against theft. Even the criminal justice system and civil law do not provide immediate recovery, which would require insuring funds held for clients. Laws barring insurance and indemnification for intentional torts, an archaic limitation rooted in moralism, block this alternative.

Even so, the mere threat of civil action induced Kim to pay part of his damages to defrauded person Katie Lee, and its effect dims when compared to what she might have recovered with an able attorney. While Lee's attorney, Scott A. Meyers, Esq., threatened me with a lawsuit on behalf of his other client, the chiropractor, he never sued me or even threatened a lawsuit on Lee's behalf. Meyers's sheer ignorance of the law likely caused his reluctance to litigate, as Meyers is the kind of attorney who neither knows nor knows how to find out that a business is liable for the intentional torts of its employees, including punitive damages.

Readers, if not the State Bar Court, are bound to have noticed that "strict ethical liability" is self-contradictory. Ethics concern the propriety of conduct, ethical strictures necessarily apply to the conduct of the person charged, and the State Bar Court's jurisdiction is inherently ethical. Concerned with assessing danger to the public, the Bar necessarily must focus only on the conduct of the Member, whereas civil law concerns a broader range of priorities and is free to fix penalties pragmatically. The courts distinguish between ethical and pragmatic rules, as they hold punitive damages assessable despite the absence of owner culpability. The laws concerning corollary matters are construed accordingly, for example, the owner can insure against punitive damages due to the misdeeds of staff. As the 9th Circuit held, interpreting California law:

"Indemnity for [damages because of the wrong-doing of insured's agent] is not contrary to public policy because the insured in such a case is guilty of no wrong-doing, but simply has the misfortune to be legally responsible for the wrong-doing of another." (Dart Industries, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. (9th Cir. 1973) 484 F.2d 1295, 1298.)

Even without insurance-law reform, civil action provides a more practical vehicle for deterring embezzlement. Kim targeted his Korean victims because he knew they couldn't get able counsel. Otherwise, why would they accept Kim as effectively their attorney, without even so much as a retainer agreement bearing a lawyer's signature? Provided a client is well represented, the threat of punitive damages — which cannot be discharged in bankruptcy — is a powerful deterrent, and one that would be applied within a year of filing under California "fast track" rules. Yet the State Bar is oblivious of the problems of service delivery to recent immigrants. Worse, it enforces anti-partnership provisions, construing them overbroadly, to bar immigrant litigants from getting better lawyers than Scott A. Meyers, Esq.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

kanBARoo Court. 34th Installment. disHONNest Judge

Judge Honn's awaited disbarment recommendation arrived Monday, relieving me of the chore of compelling the State Bar Court’s issuing this precondition to California Supreme Court review. The 24-page recommendation was a cut-and-paste job from fragments our prosecutrix composed. In response, I extend a warm invitation to both the prosecutrix and the Good Judge to consult my other blog, Disputed Issues, where they can extract advice about finding a much needed legal ghostwriter.

Judges are less intellectually honest than most of us might prefer to believe. Judicial tactics in a close case, for example, include omitting important facts supporting the other side. (See for example, Odom v. South Carolina Department of Corrections (4th Cir. Dissent 2003) 349 F.3d 756 ["Finally, in addition to its selective recitation of facts and mischaracterization, the majority omits entirely to recite perhaps the most critical facts from Odom's allegations that ultimately prove the reasonableness of the actions taken by all of the defendants, and Taylor in particular."])That judges are not possessed of greater intellectual honesty disappoints, but while omitting discordant facts in court opinions isn't exceptional, intentionally misstating a party's position is. A court may misunderstand a legal theory, and as I discuss in my other blog, incomprehension is a frequent unwanted result of common litigation tactics. (See for example, "Emotionalization.") The magnitude and direction of the misrepresentation, when compared to the information available and the depth of review claimed, proves intentional deception outside judicial norms. Judge Honn's comparable performance in the Richard Fine case also supports this criticism of the court's integrity. There, the court failed to present Fine's contentions, despite Fine's unmistakeable clarity. In the Richard Fine series (see 30th Installment to 30C Installment), I summarized:

Judge Honn's 72-page opinion differs from similar documents in other courts by the absence of respondent Fine's legal and factual contentions. Judge Honn presents the findings in full comprehensiveness, dwelling on the smallest details of what the court claims transpired, while he provides scant indication of the issues and none of Fine's contentions. The omissions are giveaway that justice is not being done. (30th Installment. The Richard Fine Matter and the Moral Turpitude Travesty.)
In Judge Honn's Fine recommendation, the court held it had no duty to respond to Fine's contentions, an evasion that still doesn't explain the distortions in the court's opinions. The court misleads about my position by misstating explanations I provided to defrauded persons and the court, as when Judge Honn states:
Instead, in his response to attorney Kim, he [respondent] disavowed any knowledge of Yoo's case, claimed that he was not her attorney, never had been her attorney and owed her no duty, and blamed his office staff for the misconduct. Respondent claimed, further, that he had recently fired Kim and staff upon discovery they had signed medical liens without his permission." (Judge Honn, Decision, p. 5.)
By out-of-context paraphrase, Judge Honn dissembles my disavowal of duty to supervise staff. Rather, I contended consistently to defrauded persons and to the court, a small subset of the public served at my office comprised defrauded persons distinct from clients, with whom I had an attorney-client relationship. Staff handled defrauded persons' cases conspiratorially, including communicating about those cases only in Korean. As I wrote on penalty of perjury in my original motion to dismiss the Notice of Disciplinary Charges:
Kim, Shin, and colleagues plotted undetected by respondent by using their native language for office communication. Respondent—relying on his clients to report any complaints, problems, or anomalies—thought the absence of client complaints verified the operation’s correctitude and did not entertain the possibility that each and every employee would cooperate in keeping Kim’s operation secret. Kim had only recently hired most of the staff, whom Kim and respondent instructed on respondent’s ultimate authority. When respondent finally received a complaint from Scott Meyers, Esq., despite the fraudulent and extortionate character of Meyers’s demands, respondent immediately investigated. Finding he could not rely on his staff, respondent promptly closed his office. (17th Installment, Original Motion to Dismiss.)

Saturday, January 12, 2008

kanBARoo Court. 23rd Installment. The Symbiosis between the State Bar and Inept Lawyers

The best legal theory for ostensibly defrauded persons conflicts with the State Bar’s approach to my case, but the State Bar’s infectious routinism infiltrates the general practice of law, depositing a vast gangrenous layer of ineptitude. Accordingly, the incompetent State Bar agrees with some inept lawyers in accepting the settlement agreement's lawfulness, despite Kim’s transgressions. Such incompetent lawyers work in symbiosis with the State Bar to obfuscate their failure to represent their clients.

Properly serving these defrauded persons’ interests requires a slightly creative application of the law of agency. The legal theory is that the insurer’s right and duty to send payments to my office depends on the existence of an attorney-client relationship between me and the insured, and the lack of such relationship gives defrauded persons the right to rescind their settlement agreement. Since no lawyer represented defrauded persons, one of the conditions precedent implied by law into the settlement agreement fails. It fails because an unlawful contract is void, as is the underpinning legal services contract between office manager Kim and defrauded persons. Because of extrinsic fraud, defrauded persons didn’t get a fair shot at negotiating their damages. Defrauded-persons’ attorneys could have placed the burden of financial loss on the insurance company.

In the case of a defrauded persons’ attorney, Scott A. Meyers, Esq., both self-interest and incompetence drove his failure to advance his clients’ interests. Meyers represents two distinct ostensibly defrauded persons, the first, personal injury claimants, and the second, a chiropractor claiming a lien on a defrauded person’s settlement. If Meyers had proceeded on the voided-settlement legal theory, his chiropractor could state no present claim, since a contingent-payment agreement governed the chiropractor's remuneration. This conflict between the clients is not the end of Meyers's misconduct. Lawyers lack patience for delaying recovery until some subsequent attorney of record can reap the reward, occasioning a second conflict of interest, this time between the personal injury claimants and Meyers personally.

How often do lawyers of Meyers’s ilk sabotage their clients’ interests, even without Meyers’s conflict of interest? The State Bar doctrinal line, in which accused lawyers must couch their mitigating remorse, is strict ethical liability for the acts of one’s staff, implying formation of an attorney-client contract despite subterfuge. Many lawyers without Meyers's corrupt tendencies will embrace this line, by osmosis and from wariness to undermine their own remorseful expressions, should their error or the State Bar’s caprice require.
Best to understand this blog:
  • Read the 1st, 2nd, 7th, 8th, and 14th Installments, first; or
  • Make liberal use of hyperlinks; and then
  • Follow your interests; or
  • Follow the case.

Sunday, January 6, 2008

kanBARoo Court. 22nd Installment. Can you tell victory from defeat?

Notice of entry of default was served on me yesterday, a result almost all correspondents, including some sympathetic and smart lawyers, consider a legal disaster. In similar vein, sympathetic readers criticize this blog as self-defeatingly defiant. They attribute entry of default to this defiance — correctly, now that I know the harsh result's antecedents. For the first time, prosecutrix Melanie J. Lawrence — the evening before the OSC hearing — downloaded my blog. Lawrence read the installments systematically from first to last, spending three to five minutes per installment. Adding to the data tracking the prosecutrix, her chief witness, Scott A. Meyers, Esq., read my blog the next day for more than an hour.

These events accomplish my tactical purpose, ignored by critics, their analytic blind spots my expository shortcomings. I may be partly forgiven because enemy anticipation allows some tactics less effect. The hidden tactic plays to an adversary's irrationalities, a well-known principle of warfare originating with Sun Tzu, who said if the enemy is quick to anger, provoke him. I learned the State Bar was quick to anger after I responded to State Bar Investigator Thomas Layton's advice to resign by informing him he had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. The State Bar is accustomed to malleable respondents expressing actual guilt or feigned remorse, and frustrating the State Bar's expectations provokes its wrath. Sun Tzu's insight inspired me to shower the State Bar with provocative writings.

Another undermentioned strategic premise concerns probable source of relief, unlikely from any quarter below the California Supreme Court, destination of my notice of the NDC's insufficiency. Prevailing on that issue wouldn't end the case, as might the review portending, since the leading issue has changed to wrongful entry of default, a favorable change this sequence shows:

1. I move for an immediate stay and reconsideration of the Order to Show Case (OSC).
 

2. The State Bar moves for sanctions, entry of default; it opposes my motion for reconsideration and request for a stay.

In its papers, the State Bar complains about my "waging a campaign against DTC Lawrence," but it admits that Lawrence received an unsigned proof of service. Lawrence fails to state that she can produce it, proving my allegations by the omissions rule.

3. I don't file oppositions to the State Bar's motions.
 
I contend the judge violated my federal and state due process rights by not acting against fraud and that I can't rely on the clerk's office while disputing its reliability. On the facts presented, moreover, the court is unjustified in concluding that I failed to file the motions, because it is as likely that oppositions were subjected to tampering after their actual reception by the State Bar Court clerk. The judge ignored this obvious likelihood.

4. The Review Department denies my petition for review in formulaic terms, while first granting my motion for relief for late filing.
 
Entitled to apply for a stay, I was denied this opportunity because the Review Department didn't inform me it was considering the papers, and instead of mailing a notice of filing, the court clerk mailed a rejection for filing, informing my secretary of the papers' disposal.

5. The judge orders the clerk to enter my default for not answering the notice of disciplinary charges, putting me out of court in the Hearing Department and Review Department.
 
The judge denies my motion for reconsideration of the OSC and request for a stay — at the OSC itself, weeks after I made them. While the main basis for the stay and the reconsideration concerned the criminal misconduct of Deputy Trial Counsel Lawrence, the Court doesn't mention these allegations in its orders and announces no findings of fact. The Hearing Department doesn't want me to take these facts to the Supreme Court. These oppressive, irascible bureaucrats were provoked by my blog — newly discovered on the eve of the OSC —allowing me to build a petition for review on denial of due process of 5th-and-14th-Amendment proportion, Supervising Judge Honn participating in the coverup.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

kanBARoo Court. 17th Installment. Original Motion to Dismiss

This is a copy of my Motion to Dismiss based on pleading insufficiencies. Potential customers can consider it a work sample. [Firefox, Opera, and Safari show formatting better than Internet Explorer.]

____________________________________

Stephen R. Diamond (State Bar No: 183617)

Legal Research & Writing Service

Supplier of Legal Theories

61967A Begonia PL

Joshua Tree, California 92252-2106

Telephone: (760) 366-7920
Facsimile: (866) 392-4866
In Pro Per

The State Bar Court

Hearing Department - Los Angeles


Table of Contents

1. Charges predicated on aiding and abetting wrongful conduct uniformly fail to allege that respondent knew his staff’s specific unlawful purpose. [Pertains to Counts 1-26, 28.] ...........................................................................6

A. To charge aiding and abetting the unlawful practice of law, the State Bar must allege that respondent knew Kim and Shin's specific wrongful purpose. [Pertains to Count 1.] ........................................................................................ 6

(1) A person aids and abets only when he acts with
knowledge of
the wronful purpose of the perpetrator.
[Pertains to Count
1].......................................................................6

(2) The NDC fails to satisfy
the Bar Court’s Rules of Procedure, rule 101 (b)(2), pleading “facts
constituting the alleged violations,” which means pleading ultimate facts.
[Pertains to Count
1.].....................................................................7

B. Where the NDC states or implies that respondent willfully acted through J. B. Kim or his colleagues, the predicate that respondent aided or abetted Kim remains unpleaded. [Pertains to Count 1-26, 28.]........................................................................... 8

2. Count 27, formation of a partnership with a non-lawyer, employs an invalid definition of “partnership.”
[Pertains to Count 27.]......................................................................................9

3. All charges predicated on an attorney's duty to clients fail to demonstrate the formation of an attorney-client relationship with Defrauded Persons.
[Pertains to Counts 1 - 26.]...............................................................................9


Table of Authorities

Cases

B.L.M. v. Sabo & Deitsch (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 823........................................................ 7

Chambers v. Kay (2002) 29 Cal.4th 142............................................................................. 9

Committee on Children's Television Inc. v. General Foods Corp.(1983) 35 Cal.3d 197. 7

Fox v. Pollack (1986) 181 Cal.App.3d 954....................................................................... 10

Parsons v. Bristol Development Co. (1965) 62 Cal. 2d 861............................................ 10

People v. Beeman (1984) 35 Cal.3d 547............................................................................ 6

People v. Coria (1999) 21 Cal.4th 868............................................................................. 11

People v. Tillotson (2007) __Cal.App.4th__........................................................................ 6

Statutes

Code Civ. Proc., § 425.10, subd. (a)(1)............................................................................... 7

Rules

Rules of Procedure, rule 101 (b)(2)...................................................................................... 7

Rules of Professional Conduct, rule 1-310......................................................................... 4


Statement of the Case

Respondent hoped to test in practice his theoretical ideas concerning the effective delivery of legal services to non-mainstream cultures. If necessary, the enterprise would also test respondent's interpretation of rule 1-310 of the Rules of Professional Conduct, because of the contractual terms on which respondent ventured. J.B. Kim agreed to fund and staff the office operations and provide a skilled negotiator. Kim would report directly to respondent, and respondent would have ultimate control of the office and complete control of the practice of law within it. Respondent, viscerally averse to the mechanics of financial management and effectively incompetent in their execution, sought to delegate the operational responsibility for keeping the books, while maintaining a robust system to monitor Kim’s compliance.

Respondent’s favorable bargaining position allowed respondent to negotiate these terms. Kim wanted to remain in the business of law-office support, where Kim had 15 years of experience and public service awards in helping deliver legal services to the Korean community. Kim’s crisis arose when the attorney who had employed him, James Chu, Esq., decided to exit the practice of law.[1] Respondent’s willingness to accept minimal remuneration also enhanced his bargaining position. Respondent received $5,000 per month.

Kim’s acts of frank criminality undermined any pristine test of the legal services delivery system, as Kim ensnared some eight Korean immigrants and one non-Korean (“Defrauded Persons,” hereafter), who allowed or suffered the unlawful prosecution of their lawsuits by non-attorneys, who received no supervision on these secret cases. Kim conspired with respondent’s staff to keep Kim’s criminal conduct secret. Having stolen their right to representation by a lawyer, Kim then proceeded to rob these Defrauded Persons’ money.

Kim, Shin, and colleagues plotted undetected by respondent by using their native language for office communication. Respondent--relying on his clients to report any complaints, problems, or anomalies--thought the absence of client complaints verified the operation’s correctitude [2] and did not entertain the possibility that each and every employee would cooperate in keeping Kim’s operation secret. Kim had only recently hired most of the staff, whom Kim and respondent instructed on respondent’s ultimate authority. When respondent finally received a complaint from Scott Meyers, Esq., despite the fraudulent and extortionate character of Meyers’s demands, respondent immediately investigated. Finding he could not rely on his staff, respondent promptly closed his office.

Argument

The dispositive questions in this case are questions of fact about respondent’s knowledge of wrongdoing and questions of law about respondent’s duties. The faults in pleading the Notice of Disciplinary Charges (NDC) obstruct direct attack, because the State Bar creates a form of strict ethical liability for all transgressions conducted out of the attorney's office or involving the use of his trust account. The NDC shows no regard for the state of the attorney’s actual knowledge of the unlawful conduct, except to assert that respondent’s violations were "willful." The Bar’s theory and logic are that the events happened, therefore respondent allowed them to happen; therefore he aided and abetted Kim and Shin’s thievery.

1. Charges predicated on aiding and abetting wrongful conduct uniformly fail to allege that respondent knew his staff’s specific unlawful purpose.
[Pertains to Counts 1-26, 28.]

The complaint consists of 26 counts involving approximately nine Defrauded Persons and two general counts. Count 1, aiding and abetting the unauthorized practice of law in the Nan Young Yoo case, is the most explicit and provides a model for the others, whose assumptions are not clearly stated. The pleading of aiding and abetting the unlawful practice of law suffers from the same defect of the others containing an aiding and abetting predicate, as most do, although in form suppressed, perhaps disguised.

A. To charge aiding and abetting the unlawful practice of law, the State Bar must allege that respondent knew Kim and Shin's specific wrongful purpose.
[Pertains to Count 1.]

(1) A person aids and abets only when he acts with knowledge of the wrongful purpose of the perpetrator.

A common defect in California pleading involves substituting a combination of legal conclusions combined with evidentiary facts for the ultimate facts required under California procedural law. Partly because of this unartful pleading, the complaint fails to allege directly all the necessary components for disciplinable offenses involving aiding and abetting.

A person aids and abets when he or she, (1) acting with knowledge of the unlawful purpose of the perpetrator; and (2) the intent or purpose of committing, encouraging, or facilitating the commission of the offense, (3) by act or advice aids, promotes, encourages or instigates the commission of the crime. (People v. Tillotson (2007) __Cal.App.4th__; People v. Beeman (1984) 35 Cal.3d 547, 561.)

Aiding and abetting requires knowledge of the unlawful purpose of the perpetrator. The knowledge required is knowledge of the specific unlawful purpose, not knowledge of the mere intent to engage in some unlawful conduct. (People v. Beeman, supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 560.) The NDC alleges neither.

(2) The NDC fails to satisfy the Bar Court Rules of Procedure, rule 101 (b)(2), pleading “facts constituting the alleged violations,” which means pleading ultimate facts.
[Pertains to all Counts.]

The pleading of ultimate facts derives from Code of Civil Procedure, which calls for "[a] statement of the facts constituting the cause of action in ordinary and concise language." (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.10, subd. (a)(1). [emphasis added]; Committee on Children's Television Inc. v. General Foods Corp.(1983) 35 Cal.3d 197, 212.)]” The facts pleaded are ultimate in the sense that they constitute the cause of action.

The Bar Court’s Rules of Procedure, rule 101 (b)(2), requires that the NDC “Contain a statement of facts constituting the alleged violations.” (Ibid. [emphasis added].) The use of the term “constituting,” identical to the term appearing in Code of Civil Procedure section 425.10, subdivision (a)(1), proves that the drafters intended that the NDC plead ultimate facts. This is the language in the Rules themselves, linking that code section to the practice of ultimate pleading. (See Committee on Children’s Television, Inc. v. General Foods Corp. , supra, 35 Cal.3d at p. 212.)

B.L.M. v. Sabo & Deitsch (1997) 55 Cal.App.4th 823 illustrates the requirement for pleading ultimate facts. B.L.M filed for negligent misrepresentation, among other claims, against the law firm Sabo & Deitsch. The complaint alleged that Sabo & Deitsch, charged with responsibility for the legal work to implement a city building project, negligently represented that the project could go ahead because particular favorable regulatory conditions prevailed. Yet despite the clear evidentiary link between the conduct alleged and the cause of action pleaded, the court sustained Sabo & Deitsch’s demurrer that the complaint failed to allege that BLM reasonably relied on Sabo & Deitsch. The complaint did not directly allege reasonable reliance as an ultimate fact.

Evidentiary facts, by contrast, are facts that the plaintiff would use to prove the charge. Paragraph 9 states the legal conclusion that respondent aided and abetted the unauthorized practice of law. Paragraphs 10 to 18 of the NDC allege various illegal acts of respondent’s staff, acts constituting the illegal practice of law by staff members. No doubt the Bar intends to use these facts to prove respondent engaged in the illegal practice of law. The Bar may even believe that such evidence proves clearly and convincingly that respondent had engaged in aiding and abetting the illegal practice of law. Regardless, the paragraphs contain only the chaff recitations of evidentiary facts bereft of the wheat, ultimate fact. The State Bar nowhere alleges that respondent knew of the occurrence of the illegal acts charged or the existence of Defrauded Persons’ cases.

B. Where the NDC states or implies that respondent willfully acted through J. B. Kim or his colleagues, the predicate that respondent aided or abetted Kim remains unpleaded.
[Pertains to Count 1-26, 28.]

Each case’s remaining charges imply an aiding and abetting predicate. In their present form, moreover, these other counts contradict the charge for aiding and abetting the unauthorized practice of law, as the allegations supporting the unauthorized practice charge admit that Kim handled the checks. Respondent could not have willfully failed to notify client of the receipt of the funds, since he lacked knowledge of their receipt. The unstated predicate is that respondent aided Kim’s evading the immediate disclosure requirement. An aider and abettor shares equal guilt with the principal, and in substance this charge attempts to allege that respondent aided and abetted Kim in this purpose. To allege aiding and abetting, the Bar must allege that respondent knew Kim’s intent to withhold information about receipt of funds.

The same argument applies to the counts Failure to Maintain Client Funds in Trust Account, Failure to Respond to Client Inquiries, Failure to Inform Client of Significant Development, and Failure to Release File. The State Bar alleges willful violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct, and as such, the charges must involve at least a level of culpability equal to the principal. Particularly since the NDC as a whole admits that respondent was not the principal in these transgressions, the NDC must support charges of willful violation with allegations that respondent knew Kim intended to commit these specific transgressions.

Since these willful acts bottom charges of moral turpitude, the facts pleaded fail in sufficiency to state a charge for moral turpitude.

2. Count 27, formation of a partnership with a non-lawyer, employs an invalid definition of “partnership.” [Pertains to Count 27.]

Only Count twenty-seven breaks the pattern of alleging aiding and abetting offenses without alleging ultimate facts in support. [3] The Bar has not properly alleged the formation of a partnership.

Defining “partnership” in the context of another provision of the Rules of Professional Conduct, the Supreme Court stated, "Generally, a partnership connotes co-ownership in partnership property, with a sharing in the profits and losses of a continuing business. [Citation.] (Chambers v. Kay (2002) 29 Cal.4th 142, 151.) None of the alleged facts in Count twenty-seven indicates sharing of profits and losses or co-ownership. The facts alleged, if supported by substantial evidence, would undoubtedly constitute an alleged wrongdoing of such magnitude that if proven should warrant summary disbarment, but the offense is not the formation of a partnership!

3. All counts predicated on an attorney’s duty to clients fail to demonstrate the formation of an attorney-client relationship with Defrauded Persons. [Pertains to Counts 1-26.]

Characterizing a Defrauded Person receiving bogus legal services from Kim as a “client” is not a fact but a legal conclusion, because a person’s status as a client depends completely upon the formation of an attorney-client relationship. (Fox v. Pollack (1986) 181 Cal.App.3d 954, 959 [“To state the obvious, an attorney's duty to his or her client depends on the existence of an attorney-client relationship. If that relationship does not exist, the fiduciary duty to a client does not arise.”]) Contract creates this relationship (id. at p. 960) [4], and contract interpretation poses questions of law. (Parsons v. Bristol Development Co. (1965) 62 Cal. 2d 861, 865.) The NDC avers the legal conclusion that the Defrauded Persons had formed an attorney-client relationship, but pleads no ultimate facts so demonstrating. The NDC, for example, alleges that Defrauded Persons retained respondent through Kim, but pleads no facts showing that respondent ratified any of the unlawful contracts for pseudo-legal services that Kim offered and Defrauded Persons accepted.

Paragraph 10, for example, states, “Nan Young Yoo employed Respondent, through Kim and staff at the Wilshire Blvd. office, to represent her in a personal injury matter arising out of a January 1, 2005 injury.” While it adequately appears that Yoo met with Kim, who represented that he had authority to accept the case, the NDC pleads no facts to demonstrate Kim actually enjoyed this authority. [5]


Conclusion

The failure to plead facts demonstrating that respondent aided and abetted Kim and Shin’s fraud and the failure to plead facts demonstrating that respondent formed an attorney-client relationship with Defrauded Persons reflect the unwillingness of the State Bar even to contemplate the mens rea of the alleged offenses or their application to this case. (See People v. Coria (1999) 21 Cal.4th 868, 876 [“So basic is this requirement that it is an invariable element of every crime unless excluded expressly or by necessary implication.”] The court should require the State Bar to:

  • State the ultimate facts the State Bar must prove;
  • Tailor the counts to the facts the State Bar thinks it has probable cause
    to assert: OR
  • Dismiss this action.

Dated: ______


By:

Legal Research & Writing Service
Supplier of Legal Theories

Stephen R. Diamond


Declaration Supporting Motion to Dismiss

  1. I, Stephen R. Diamond, am the respondent in these actions and a Member of the California State Bar.
  2. All statements contained in the Statement of the Case are true, as based either on respondent’s personal knowledge or sources of information and belief that respondent knows are reliable.
  3. I declare on penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that the foregoing declaration is true and correct.

Executed in Los Angeles, California on August 5, 2007.

__________________________________

Stephen R. Diamond, Declarant



[1]Kim and staff did not work for respondent full time, as they continued to contract with Chu to wind down his office and help him close his case. Respondent's investigation of Kim's misconduct in respondent's office triggered Chu's concern. Chu discovered embezzlement of funds totaling some $30,000.

[2]Most clients lacked knowledge of English, but they knew a translator was readily available for their communication with respondent.

[3]The final Count twenty-eight returns to the pattern by alleging “permitting misuse.” The Bar appears often to use the word “permitting” to achieve the force of aiding and abetting without pleading respondent’s knowledge of the specific wrongful intent.

[4]“Except for those situations where an attorney is appointed by the court, the attorney-client relationship is created by some form of contract, express or implied, formal or informal. [Citation.]”

[5The face of the pleading further reveals that Yoo was put on notice that no contract with an attorney had actually been formed since the NDC admits that Yoo did not receive a retainer agreement signed by respondent, and Yoo knew that Kim was not a lawyer. She never communicated with respondent about her case until after non-lawyers settled the case. Could she have been ignorant that Kim was running a fraud?