**81This is the second appearance of this disciplinary matter before this Court, as this Court previously rejected the special master's first **82report, which recommended accepting the petition for voluntary discipline *2filed by Respondent Gary Lanier Coulter (State Bar No. 190100). See In the Matter of Coulter,
This matter is now before the Court on the report and recommendation of Special Master Sandra S. Cho, who recommends that Coulter receive a four-year suspension with no conditions for reinstatement for his admitted violations of Rules 1.5, 1.7, 1.8 (a), 1.15 (I), and 1.15 (II). The maximum sanction for a violation of Rules 1.5 and 1.8 (a) is a public reprimand, while the maximum sanction for a violation of Rules 1.7, 1.15 (I), and 1.15 (II) (a) and (b) is disbarment. The allegations regarding Coulter's conduct remain the same:
Although Coulter's work for the complaining client began as representation on personal tax matters and a landlord-tenant dispute, it expanded over the years to include a number of matters including personal and business issues. In 2010, Coulter assumed more responsibility over the client's affairs, becoming involved in the receipt, depositing, transfer, and disbursement of the client's funds collected in the course of the client's businesses [and in doing so opened up a number of bank accounts on behalf of the client]. It appears that the client knew of some of the accounts Coulter had opened on behalf of the client but did not know of others, and in some of the accounts Coulter was the sole authorized signer. Coulter concedes these accounts were not approved lawyer-trust accounts and that they held only funds related to the client and his businesses, yet Coulter transferred funds from or through the client's accounts to his operating account as payment of attorney fees. It also appears that in just the final ten months of Coulter's representation of this client, he administered more than $1 million through the client's accounts. In those final months, Coulter paid himself **83$400,000 in fees from the client's bank accounts. ... Coulter did not provide any billing invoices to the client after 2008, but two of the complainants are lawyers who were formerly associates in Coulter's law firm, and they printed a set of invoices from the firm's billing system in 2011 and provided them to the client. The invoices contained substantial discrepancies that Coulter could not explain. Coulter concedes he did not keep and maintain complete and accurate records of this client's funds and did not promptly notify the client of Coulter's receipt of funds in which the client possessed an interest.
Coulter,
In determining the appropriate level of discipline, the special master notes that this Court views trust account violations as exceptionally serious, see In the Matter of Howard,
In addition, the special master points to the American Bar Association's Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions, which are instructive in these types of cases, see In the Matter of Morse,
The special master rejects most of Coulter's other suggested mitigating factors, and concludes that: (1) Coulter's substantial experience in the practice of law is an aggravating factor, see ABA Standard 9.22 (i); (2) his alleged absence of intent to violate the rules of professional conduct is not demonstrated on the record and, even so, is not an aggravating or mitigating factor, although it can be taken into account when considering the level of discipline to impose, see In the Matter of Dansby,
In aggravation, the special master finds: that Coulter has received prior discipline in the form of a formal letter of admonition in 2003 **85and a public reprimand in 2017, see ABA Standard 9.22 (a); In the Matter of Coulter,
Disbarred.
All the Justices concur, except Melton, P. J., Hunstein, Blackwell, and Boggs, JJ., who dissent.
In addition, Coulter obtained from the client over 100 pieces of art, with an estimated value of over $850,000, as security for the substantial sums (often as much as $200,000 to $300,000) that Coulter claimed the client owed to him for professional services, and kept the art in an unsecure location in his personal office at his law firm.
