Hon. Justin L. Vigdor Chairman, IOLA Fund Jonathan G. Blattmachr, Esq. Chairman IOLA Advisory Committee Interest On Lawyer Account Fund of the State of New York
I am writing in response to your letter requesting an Attorney General's opinion as to the constitutionality of the Interest on Lawyer Account Fund of the State of New York (IOLA).
IOLA was established by chapter 659 of the Laws of 1983. Traditionally, New York lawyers have utilized two types of accounts for deposit of client funds held in a fiduciary capacity. If the funds were large enough or held for a long enough period of time to accumulate a significant amount of interest, separate interest bearing accounts were established. Nominal amounts or large amounts held for short periods of time were co-mingled in non-interest bearing accounts. The IOLA legislation allows lawyers, if they choose to participate in the program, to place certain qualified funds (those nominal in amount, or those held for an insignificant period of time) into interest bearing accounts, with the interest generated going into the IOLA fund. The fund will then distribute this income to not-for-profit, tax exempt entities delivering civil legal services to the poor and utilize it for purposes of improving the administration of justice. The fund is administered by a fifteen-member board of trustees, all of whom are appointed by the Governor (see Judiciary Law, §
In your letter, you ask that we address the constitutional issues raised in a report to the Board of Governors of the American Bar Association on these programs, and those raised in the decision upholding the constitutionality of California's Interest on Lawyer Trust Account (IOLTA) program, (Carroll, supra). The principal question that has arisen is whether New York's use of the interest on a client's funds constitutes an uncompensated taking of property, prohibited by the
Carroll involved a constitutional challenge to California's IOLTA program. The program is essentially the same as New York's except that participation by lawyers is mandatory (California Business and Professions Code, §§
The American Bar Association report you ask us to comment on (AmericanBar Association Report to the Board of Governors, Advisory Board and TaskForce, Interest on Lawyer Trust Accounts, July 26, 1982) also addressesseveral
The IOLA program, however, differs significantly from the circumstances in Webb's. In Webb's, the petitioner placed over $1.8 million dollars in an interpleader fund which was held in escrow by the court clerk. State law permitted the clerk to retain all interest earned on the funds held in escrow. The funds were held for over a year and generated over $100,000 in interest income. It was this interest that the petitioner sought to recover. The Supreme Court held that petitioner, as the interpleader, was entitled to the interest:
"We hold that under the narrow circumstances of this case — where there is a separate and distinct state statute authorizing a clerk's fee `for services rendered' based upon the amount of principal deposited; where the deposited fund itself concededly is private; and where the deposit in the court's registry is required by state statute in order for the depositor to avail itself of statutory protection from claims of creditors and others — [the state assumption of] the interest earned on the interpleader fund while it was in the registry of the court was a taking violative of the
Fifth andFourteenth Amendments" (449 US at 164-165 ).
Significantly, in Webb's the fund was large and was held for a long period of time, unlike the funds eligible for use in IOLA programs. Furthermore, other statutory provisions provided for payment of the cost of the circuit court clerk's services out of principal. Thus, the interpleader fund was the property of one party, who had a reasonable expectation to receive the interest from it, unlike any one client's funds used in the IOLA program.
The Bar Association report also addresses
We conclude that the New York IOLA program's proposed use of interest does not constitute a taking of property violative of the
In Carroll, the court also considered whether IOLTA violated the equal protection clause (US Const, Amend
The petitioners in Carroll also challenged the IOLTA program on the ground that it violated the
Accordingly, we conclude that the IOLA program is not violative of the United States Constitution.
