Rеspondent, David G. Dulansey, challenges on appeal the Board on Professional Responsibility’s recommendation that he be disbarred for his intentional misappropriation of client funds, which resulted in violations of DR 9-103(A) (commingling), DR 9-103(A) (misappropriation) and DR 1-102(A)(4) (dishonesty). The Board found that Respondent, while moonlighting as a private practitioner in violation of a policy imposed by his employer’s general counsеl, settled for $25,000 a personal injury claim that he had taken on a one-fourth contingent fee basis. Respondent deposited the settlement check into his personal checking account. Although respondent reimbursed some of the funds to his client in the ensuing months, he knowingly allowed his bank account balance to drop below the amount he owed to his client. In addition, respondent postdated one of the checks he provided to his client, which was dishonored for insufficient funds. Respondent took approximately four months to comply with his client’s subsequent request for full payment, using borrowed funds to do so.
Respondent concedes that his disbarment would be consistent with
In re Addams,
Respondent contends that thе weighty presumption of disbarment 3 for attorneys who intentionally misappropriate client funds is not rationally related to this jurisdiction’s interests in рrotecting client funds and promoting public confidence in the integrity of the legal profession because attorneys who commit othеr disciplinary violations involving dishonesty (violations that respondent views as more serious than intentional misappropriation) result in less serious sanctions. In rejecting this disparate treatment argument in Addams (albeit without respondent’s constitutional overlay), we stated that:
While we recognize that the sanction for intentional misappropriation of client funds will be harsh in comparison to sanctions for other disciplinary violations involving conduct some may view as roughly equivalent misconduct, our concern is that there not be an erosion of public confidence in the integrity of the bar. Simply put, where client funds are involved, a more stringent rule is appropriate.
Addams, supra,
A clear rational basis exists for this conclusion that attorneys who knowingly misappropriate client funds stand in a different position than attorneys who commit other acts involving dishonesty. As we also stated in Addams, the intentional misappropriation of client funds “strike[s] at the core of the attorney-client relationship” by undermining the public’s faith that attorneys will fulfill their duties as fiduciaries with regard to the host of financial transactions that require a client to entrust funds to his аttorney. Id. at 198-99. 4 For *191 this reason, “[t]he appearance of a tolerant attitude toward known embezzlers would give the public grave cause fоr concern and undermine public confidence in the integrity of the profession and of the legal system whose functioning depends on lawyers.” 5 Id. at 193.
As the Supreme Court stated in rejecting an Equal Protection challenge to a Georgia statute that enhanced the misdemeanor оffense of child abandonment to a felony if the parent left the state after committing the offense, “[g]eneral rules that apply evеnhandedly
6
to all persons within the jurisdiction unquestionably comply with th[e] principle” of equal protection.
Jones v. Helms,
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that David G. Dulansey shall be disbarred from the practice of law effective thirty days from the date оf this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. In addition to his constitutional argument, respondent asserts that he should not be disbarred in accordance with Addams because Addams was wrongly decided on policy grounds. We are, of course, bound in this regard by our en banc decision in Addams.
.
The Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection is not applicable to the District of Columbia. However, concepts of equal protection are inherent in the due prоcess of law guaranteed to citizens of the District by the Fifth Amendment.
Bolling v. Sharpe,
. The
Addams
court specifically refused to adopt a per se rule of disbarment for intentional misappropriation of client funds, indicating instead that “especially strong” mitigating factors would overcome the prеsumption favoring disbarment.
Addams, supra,
. Indeed, so important is the protection of clients’ funds that the District has established a Clients’ Security Trust Fund, whose purpose it is to "maintain the integrity and protect the good name of the legal profession by reimbursing ... losses caused by dishonest conduct of members *191 of the District of Columbia Bar." D.C. Bar R. XII.
. As we also noted in
Addams,
other state courts have concluded that disbarment generally is the most appropriate sanction for attorneys who misappropriate client funds.
See, e.g., People v. Radosevich,
. Respondent has not alleged discriminatory application of the sanction of disbarment for misappropriation of client funds.
