Lead Opinion
OPINION
This case concerns the propriety of a Workers' Compensation Appeals Board (Board) order suspending petitioner, George L. Katz, from the practice of law before the Board. The primary issue is *355
the same as that discussed in Hustedt v. Workers' Comp.Appeals Bd., ante, pages 329, 336-346 [
In the fall of 1975, the Board instituted a disciplinary proceeding against Katz, alleging that he had failed properly to notify the Board of his receipt of an advance fee of $200 from one of his clients (hereafter, the Weidner proceeding). At the hearing, the following facts were elicited. Katz was the fifth attorney to undertake representation of Weidner in connection with a claim for compensation which she had filed with the Board. Shortly after her case was heard, Weidner dismissed Katz by filing a notice of his dismissal with the Board. In a letter filed with the notice, Weidner informed the Board of the advance fee she had paid Katz. Katz, who received a copy of the notice of dismissal but not of the letter, thereafter filed with the Board a lien for attorneys fees. In an accompanying letter, Katz informed the Board, for the first time, that he had received advance attorneys fees from Weidner in the amount of $200. The Board eventually approved attorneys fees in the amount of $400 for Katz.
The record suggests that at the time of these events, the Board had never specified a time by which an attorney was to report the receipt of an advance fee.1 Nevertheless, the Board found that Katz had failed "to use scrupulous care" in disclosing the advance fee because he inadvertently failed to notify the Board of the fee at an earlier date, as was his customary practice. *356
The Board also noted that (1) Katz had previously been admonished to cooperate with the Board in divulging fee arrangements; in a prior proceeding the Board had a belief, but insufficient evidence to establish, that he had failed to reveal a fee arrangement (see Koker v. Elk Brass Manufacturing Co. (1971) 36 Cal.Comp.Cases 292); (2) Katz had deposited the Weidner fee in his general firm account rather than in a client trust account;2 and (3) Katz did not keep a centralized record of the advance fees he received, but only noted their receipt in the client's file.
Concluding that these findings constituted "good cause" for disciplining Katz (see Lab. Code, §
It appears that the Board ordinarily requires a suspended attorney to "substitute out" of all of the compensation cases in which he is attorney of record and to refuse to take any new cases or to see any compensation clients during the period of his suspension. As an "accommodation" to Katz, the Board agreed to allow him to "substitute in" another attorney to handle his compensation practice during the period of his suspension. This was to be on condition that he file a sworn affidavit with the Board promising to remove himself completely from the practice of workers' compensation law and to neither see nor communicate with any clients. Katz filed the required affidavit and arranged for another attorney, Pauline Nightingale, to handle his compensation practice.
On September 24, 1976, six days before his suspension was to end, Katz prepared a draft of a petition for reconsideration in a compensation proceeding pending before the Board. In 1978, when the Board learned that Katz had drafted this petition, it instituted a second disciplinary proceeding against him. Separate disciplinary charges were filed against Nightingale as well. *357
At the hearing in the Katz case, both Katz and Nightingale testified that Katz had drafted the petition. Nightingale had reviewed it and with one minor change had signed and verified and filed the petition with the Board. On December 27, 1979, the Board found Katz in violation of the terms of his suspension. The Board ordered him suspended from the practice of law before the Board and its referees for approximately 18 months.3
(1) Thereafter, Katz filed this petition for a writ of certiorari to review the Board's decision. He contends, inter alia, that Labor Code section
Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Richardson, J., Broussard, J., and White, J.,* concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I do not concur. *358
