108 A.D.2d 206 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1985
OPINION OF THE COURT
Respondent was admitted to practice by the Appellate Division, First Judicial Department, on June 10, 1953, under the name of Stanley Sherman Hausen. In this proceeding to discipline him for professional misconduct, respondent moves to confirm the report of the Special Referee and to dismiss the petition, while petitioner cross-moves to disaffirm the report and to sustain the charges.
Respondent was charged with two counts of professional misconduct. The first charge alleged that respondent was guilty of overreaching, self-dealing and charging a clearly excessive fee by entering into a contingent fee retainer agreement with one of his clients on November 8, 1979, for the collection of no-fault
Respondent was retained by the client in issue on or about November 8, 1979 to prosecute a personal injury action resulting from an automobile collision which occurred on November 6, 1979. Two separate retainer agreements were entered into at that time, the first authorizing the respondent to institute a personal injury action on his client’s behalf, and the second authorizing him to “prosecute and adjust” the client’s claim for no-fault benefits arising out of the same collision. Both preprinted retainer agreements provided for the sliding-scale of compensation set forth in the rules of this court (22 NYCRR 691.20 [e] [2] [schedule A]),
Under the facts of the instant case, it is our belief that respondent’s procurement of a contingent fee retainer agreement incorporating the terms of compensation set forth in 22 NYCRR 691.20 (e) (2) (schedule A) for the collection of his client’s no-fault benefits constituted an agreement to charge a clearly excessive fee in violation of Code of Professional Responsibility, DR 2-106 (A) (see also, DR 2-106 [B]). Accordingly, the first charge is sustained. While the underlying collection matter may not have been routine, the foregoing in no way excuses the
Turning our attention to the second charge in issue, it is undisputed that the respondent was informed in a letter of admonition dated October 26,1976, that the routine inclusion of an unconditional power of attorney in his retainer agreements in no-fault collection cases “represented over-reaching and created a dangerous possibility of abuse”. Respondent nevertheless persisted and procured the same type of retainer agreement from the client in the case at bar. Notwithstanding the fact that he may (as the Special Referee found) have intended to delete the word “irrevocably” therefrom, there is nothing in the record which would even tend to support his decision to procure an unconditional power of attorney from the client in the first instance. Accordingly, we regard respondent’s procurement of a retainer agreement incorporating an unconditional power of attorney from the client in this case to be an act of overreaching, and sustain charge number two.
Based on the foregoing, respondent’s motion to confirm the Special Referee’s findings and to dismiss the petition is denied, and petitioner’s cross motion to disaffirm the findings and to sustain the charges is granted.
Having thus been found guilty of professional misconduct, the respondent should be, and hereby is, censured.
Mollen, P. J., Lazer, Mangano, Gibbons and Thompson, JJ., concur.
I.e., “50 per cent on the first $1000 of the sum recovered * * * 40 percent on the next $2000 of the sum recovered * * * 35 percent on the next $22,000 of the sum recovered; or * * * 25 per cent on any amount over $25,000 of the sum recovered”.