In re Ramirez ( 2018 )


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  • 370	                          January 19, 2018	                               No. 4
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of
    SAMUEL A. RAMIREZ,
    OSB Bar No. 910883,
    Accused.
    (OSB 14116; SC S064697)
    On review of the decision of a trial panel of the Disciplinary
    Board.
    Argued and submitted on the record on November 13,
    2017.
    Samuel A. Ramirez filed the brief on his own behalf.
    Susan Roedl Cournoyer, Assistant Disciplinary Counsel,
    Tigard, argued the cause and filed the brief on behalf of the
    Oregon State Bar.
    Before Balmer, Chief Justice, and Kistler, Walters,
    Nakamoto, and Flynn, and Duncan, Justices.*
    PER CURIAM
    The accused is suspended from the practice of law for a
    period of one year, commencing 60 days from the date of this
    decision.
    Case Summary: The Oregon State Bar brought a disciplinary action against
    the accused lawyer, alleging several violations of the Rules of Professional
    Conduct. A trial panel of the Disciplinary Board found that the accused had
    committed four of the charged violations and concluded that the accused should
    be suspended from the practice of law for one year. The accused lawyer sought
    review in the Supreme Court, arguing that the trial panel erred in rejecting his
    argument that the disciplinary proceeding was barred by the statute of limita-
    tions set out in ORS 12.110, and in assessing the aggravating and mitigating fac-
    tors and imposing the one-year suspension. Held: Reviewing de novo, the Court
    concluded that the disciplinary proceeding was not barred by the statute of lim-
    itations, the accused violated the disciplinary rules as the trial panel found, and
    the one-year suspension was appropriate.
    The accused is suspended from the practice of law for a period of one year,
    commencing 60 days from the date of this decision.
    ______________
    *  Landau, J., retired December 31, 2017, and did not participate in the deci-
    sion of this case. Nelson, J., did not participate in the consideration or decision of
    this case.
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	371
    PER CURIAM.
    In this lawyer disciplinary proceeding, the Oregon
    State Bar (the Bar) charged Samuel A. Ramirez (the accused)
    with violating several Oregon Rules of Professional Conduct
    (RPC). A trial panel concluded that the accused had failed
    to provide competent representation, neglected a legal mat-
    ter, represented a client when the representation involved a
    personal conflict of interest, and improperly settled a poten-
    tial malpractice claim with an unrepresented party, in vio-
    lation of RPC 1.1 (competence), RPC 1.3 (diligence), RPC 1.7
    (a)(2) and RPC 1.7(b) (current client conflict of interest), and
    RPC 1.8(h) (current client conflict of interest, special rule),
    respectively. Based on those violations and an assessment
    of aggravating and mitigating factors, the trial panel sus-
    pended the accused from the practice of law for one year.
    The accused petitioned this court for review of the trial pan-
    el’s decision. On review, the accused concedes that he com-
    mitted the violations found by the trial panel, but asserts
    that the trial panel erred in (1) rejecting his argument
    that the disciplinary proceeding was barred by the statute
    of limitations set out in ORS 12.110, and (2) assessing the
    aggravating and mitigating factors and imposing the one-
    year suspension. Reviewing de novo, we conclude that the
    disciplinary proceeding was not barred by the statute of
    limitations, the accused violated the disciplinary rules as
    the trial panel found, and the appropriate sanction is a one-
    year suspension.
    I.  HISTORICAL AND PROCEDURAL FACTS
    Although the accused concedes that he violated
    the Rules of Professional Conduct as the trial panel found,
    he disputes the sanction. Because the appropriate sanc-
    tion depends on the nature of the violations, as well as the
    accused’s conduct during the disciplinary proceedings, we
    begin with a statement of the historical and procedural
    facts. We take the facts primarily from the trial panel’s find-
    ings, which the accused does not dispute.
    The accused was admitted to the Oregon State Bar
    in 1991. His primary practice areas have been criminal
    defense and family law. This disciplinary proceeding was
    based on the accused’s representation of a client, Carson
    372	                                           In re Ramirez
    Culp. The accused obtained a money judgment for Culp, but
    then, over a period of years, failed to take the actions nec-
    essary to collect the unsatisfied judgment, and, when Culp
    complained about the accused’s representation, the accused
    entered into an agreement with Culp to settle Culp’s poten-
    tial malpractice claims, without advising Culp of the desir-
    ability of seeking independent counsel.
    A.  The Culp v. Dunn and Dunn Litigation
    In 2006, the accused filed a civil action on behalf of
    Culp against Christine Dunn (Christine) and her mother,
    Elizabeth Dunn (Elizabeth), claiming that Culp had an
    interest in real property owned by the Dunns in Klamath
    County (the “Split Rail property”). The claim was based on
    improvements to the property for which Culp had paid.
    In April 2008, the accused obtained a general judg-
    ment in favor of Culp against Christine, which included a
    money award of $97,552.92 and created a judgment lien.
    Pursuant to ORS 18.150(2)(a), the lien attached to all real
    property the Dunns owned in Klamath County, including
    the Split Rail property and a second property, the “Ranger
    Court property.” Culp instructed the accused to collect the
    money award as soon as possible.
    Christine appealed the judgment, and the accused
    represented Culp in an appellate settlement conference in
    August 2008. At the conference, Culp agreed to a settle-
    ment, the terms of which required Christine and Elizabeth
    to sign a promissory note to Culp for $80,000, payable on
    September 1, 2009, and to secure the note with a trust deed
    on the Ranger Court property.
    Notably, the Ranger Court property was already
    encumbered. In 2006, while Culp’s action concerning the Split
    Rail property was pending, the Dunns borrowed $65,000
    from Washington Mutual Bank and secured the loan with
    a trust deed on the Ranger Court property. Christine exe-
    cuted the promissory note for the loan on behalf of herself
    and Elizabeth, using a power of attorney.
    B.  Collection Attempts
    In April 2009, eight months after the appellate
    settlement conference, Christine’s lawyer, David Brown
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	373
    (Brown), sent the accused a proposed form of mutual release
    and settlement agreement, a proposed note, and a proposed
    trust deed on the Ranger Court property for the accused and
    Culp to review. The accused did not respond to Brown or
    forward the documents to Culp. When Culp inquired about
    the documents, the accused told him that Brown had not
    provided them yet.
    Christine did not pay the $80,000 due on September 1,
    2009. Prompted by Culp, the accused wrote to Brown, ask-
    ing why Christine had not executed the trust deed on the
    Ranger Court property. Brown replied that he was waiting
    for the accused to have Culp complete and return the settle-
    ment documents.
    Thereafter, the accused returned the settlement
    documents to Brown, and Christine signed the promissory
    note and executed the trust deed on the Ranger Court prop-
    erty. Elizabeth did not sign the trust deed, and Christine
    did not sign it on Elizabeth’s behalf. The accused recorded
    the trust deed in June 2010.
    The accused did not inform Culp of the problems
    with a foreclosure that could arise because of Washington
    Mutual’s superior interest in the Ranger Court property or
    because of Christine’s failure to obtain Elizabeth’s signature
    on the trust deed. Nor did he explore any other options for
    collecting Culp’s money award.
    In August 2010, the accused initiated a nonjudicial
    foreclosure on Culp’s trust deed on the Ranger Court prop-
    erty; he recorded a notice of default and scheduled a sale for
    January 2011. Although the accused had never successfully
    completed a nonjudicial foreclosure, he did not review any
    Continuing Legal Education (CLE) materials or take any
    other steps to familiarize himself with the requirements
    for a foreclosure. He did not review the title history of the
    Ranger Court property or calculate the amount owed on the
    property. The accused failed to take the steps required by
    statute to complete the foreclosure; among other things, he
    failed to publish notice of the sale. When Culp contacted the
    accused to learn the outcome of the sale, the accused told
    him that he had forgotten to file required paperwork and the
    sale had not occurred. Although Culp had already paid the
    374	                                          In re Ramirez
    accused $1,500 to conduct the sale, the accused offered to
    conduct another sale for an additional $1,600. Culp agreed
    and paid the accused.
    The accused initiated the second nonjudicial fore-
    closure in January 2011 and scheduled a sale for May 2011.
    He believed he had taken the steps required by statute, but
    when no one appeared for the sale, he realized that, once
    again, he had failed to publish notice of the sale.
    Although the accused’s attempts to foreclose on the
    Ranger Court property were unsuccessful, he wrote a letter
    to Christine in June 2011 asserting that Culp owned the
    property and requiring that Christine surrender the prop-
    erty and that she and Elizabeth sign quitclaim deeds to
    Culp. At the disciplinary trial, one of the Bar’s witnesses
    testified that the accused’s demands of the Dunns exposed
    Culp to potential civil liability for making improper threats
    in connection with a foreclosure.
    C.  Settlement between the Accused and Culp; Continued
    Representation
    In November 2011, Culp complained to the accused
    about his failure to collect on the $80,000 promissory note,
    demanded a refund, and asserted that he had a legal mal-
    practice claim against the accused. After reviewing a CLE
    publication on torts to evaluate whether Culp had a claim
    against him, the accused prepared a “Termination and
    Settlement Agreement” and attached an “Acknowledgement
    of Payment,” which he presented to Culp. The agreement
    states that the accused earned the $3,100 Culp had paid
    him, but that the accused agreed to pay Culp $3,100 “to
    settle any and all disputes arising from his representa-
    tion.” The accused did not explain what Culp’s potential
    malpractice claims might be or that Culp might be entitled
    to more than a $3,100 refund, and he did not advise Culp
    of the desirability of seeking independent legal counsel to
    review the settlement agreement. Culp did not sign the
    “Termination and Settlement Agreement,” but he did sign
    the attached “Acknowledgement of Payment,” which states
    that he received $3,100 as “payment in full pursuant to the
    settlement agreement.”
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	375
    After Culp signed the Acknowledgement of Pay-
    ment, the accused continued to represent Culp in the col-
    lection matter, on a contingent fee basis. In January 2012,
    the accused made a third attempt to foreclose on the Ranger
    Court property, with a sale scheduled approximately five
    months later. Before the sale, the accused received notice
    that Washington Mutual was foreclosing on its trust deed on
    the Ranger Court property because the Dunns had defaulted
    on their loan. The accused gave the notice to Culp, but took
    no actions to protect Culp’s interest; he told Culp that Culp
    would not receive anything and his interest in the property
    would be extinguished.
    Before Washington Mutual’s foreclosure sale of the
    Ranger Court property occurred, Christine filed a Chapter
    7 bankruptcy petition and exercised her homestead exemp-
    tion on the Split Rail property. The accused received notice
    of the petition, and he informed Culp that he did not practice
    bankruptcy law and that Culp would need to retain another
    lawyer to represent him in the bankruptcy. Culp did not
    consult another lawyer.
    In November 2012, Christine received a “no asset”
    discharge, which extinguished the $80,000 promissory note.
    At the disciplinary trial, a witness for the Bar testified that,
    although the promissory note was extinguished, Culp’s
    judgment lien against Ranger Court remained for two more
    years, until Washington Mutual completed its nonjudicial
    foreclosure and sale in 2014.
    D.  Disciplinary Proceedings
    In April 2013, Culp complained to the Bar about
    the accused’s representation. After an investigation, the Bar
    filed a formal complaint in January 2015. The case was tried
    in October 2016.
    During the trial, the accused offered into evidence
    a letter he wrote to Culp in November 2015, attempting to
    settle the disciplinary proceeding. The letter states, “As
    you know, the bar is looking into my representation of you
    regarding the Split Rail property and the Ranger Court
    foreclosure. I would like to attempt to resolve this matter.
    Please give me a call.” After sending the letter, the accused
    376	                                                          In re Ramirez
    called Culp and offered him $1,000, and later $1,500, in the
    hope that Culp would withdraw his complaint and the Bar
    would dismiss the disciplinary proceeding.
    In a decision issued in December 2016, the trial
    panel found that the accused failed to provide competent
    representation, neglected a legal matter, represented a cli-
    ent when that representation involved a personal conflict
    of interest, and improperly settled a potential malpractice
    claim with an unrepresented party, in violation of RPC 1.1
    (competence), RPC 1.3 (diligence), RPC 1.7(a)(2) and RPC
    1.7(b) (current client conflict of interest), and RPC 1.8(h)
    (current client conflict of interest, special rule), respectively.
    Specifically, the trial panel found that the accused violated
    •	    RPC 1.1, “by representing Culp in a collection mat-
    ter without the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness
    and preparation reasonably necessary for the repre-
    sentation,” including by making “the same mistake
    three times in attempting to foreclose on the prop-
    erty at issue[;]”
    •	    RPC 1.3, by engaging in “a course of neglectful con-
    duct” and demonstrating an “on-going pattern of
    ignorance as to the most basic laws relating to col-
    lection of a debt[;]”
    •	    RPC 1.7(a)(2) and RCP 1.17(b), by failing to advise
    Culp that he had a potential malpractice claim
    and continuing to represent Culp, without written
    informed consent, after the potential claim arose;
    and
    •	    RCP 1.8(h), by entering into the settlement agree-
    ment with Culp without advising Culp to seek inde-
    pendent counsel.1
    The trial panel found seven aggravating factors:
    (1) a prior history of discipline, specifically, a 1998 reprimand
    1
    The Bar had also alleged that the accused had failed to communicate with
    a client, improperly entered into a business transaction with a client, terminated
    representation without protecting a client’s interest, and engaged in conduct
    involving dishonesty or misrepresentation, in violation of RPC 1.4(b), RPC 1.8
    (a)(1) to (3), RPC 1.16(d), and RPC 8.4(a)(3), respectively. The trial panel found
    that the Bar failed to prove those violations by clear and convincing evidence.
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	377
    for failing to properly handle and account for client funds
    and a 2009 admonishment for neglect of a legal matter;
    (2) a dishonest or selfish motive; (3) a pattern of miscon-
    duct, including repeated failures to correct flawed practices;
    (4) multiple offenses, in that the accused violated multiple
    rules and engaged in multiple instances of misconduct; (5) a
    refusal to acknowledge the wrongfulness of the charged mis-
    conduct, as evidenced by his “attempt to persuade Culp to
    accept money in exchange for withdrawing the Disciplinary
    Complaint”; (6) a vulnerable victim, because the accused
    knew that Culp “was not legally sophisticated, had limited
    resources, was impaired by alcoholism * * *, and desperately
    wanted [the accused] to complete collection as soon as possi-
    ble[,]” and (7) substantial experience in the practice of law.
    As a mitigating factor the trial panel found that, “to his
    credit, the [a]ccused admitted his incompetence with regard
    to the foreclosure claim * * * [and] agreed that this incompe-
    tence warrants a suspension from practice.”
    Given the accused’s violations and the balance of
    the aggravating and mitigating factors, the trial panel con-
    cluded that a one-year suspension was warranted. After the
    trial panel issued its order, the accused petitioned this court
    for review.
    II.  PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS ON REVIEW
    As mentioned, the accused concedes the rule vio-
    lations that the trial panel found, but challenges the trial
    panel’s decision on two grounds; he asserts that (1) the disci-
    plinary proceeding was barred by the statute of limitations
    set out at ORS 12.110, and (2) that the trial panel erred in
    its assessment of aggravating and mitigating factors and its
    imposition of the one-year suspension. In response, the Bar
    asserts that lawyer disciplinary proceedings are not sub-
    ject to any statute of limitations, and it asks this court to
    adopt the trial panel’s findings of fact and conclusions of law
    regarding the violations and to suspend the accused for not
    less than one year.
    III. ANALYSIS
    We review the trial panel’s decision de novo. See
    ORS 9.536(2) (so stating); Bar Rule of Procedure (BR) 10.6
    378	                                           In re Ramirez
    (same). We begin our analysis by addressing the accused’s
    argument that the disciplinary proceeding is barred by the
    statute of limitations set out at ORS 12.110.
    A.  Statute of Limitations
    The accused asserts that a lawyer may raise a stat-
    ute of limitations defense in a lawyer disciplinary proceed-
    ing. This court has held to the contrary, specifically stating,
    “The statute of limitations and latches are not defenses”
    in lawyer disciplinary proceedings. In re Ruben G. Lenske,
    
    269 Or 146
    , 164, 523 P2d 1262 (1974), cert den, 
    420 US 908
    (1975).
    Despite Lenske, the accused argues that lawyer
    disciplinary proceedings are subject to the statute of lim-
    itations set out in ORS 12.110(1). In support of his argu-
    ment, the accused relies on ORS.9.010, which provides, in
    part, that the Bar is a public corporation and is subject to
    certain statutes applicable to public bodies, including the
    Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure. ORS 9.010(2), (3)(d). In
    addition, the accused points out that ORCP 21 A provides
    that a statute of limitations defense may be raised through
    a motion to dismiss. The accused reasons that, because
    the Bar is subject to the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure
    and ORCP 21 A provides a procedure for raising a statute
    of limitations defense, a lawyer may raise such a defense
    in a Bar disciplinary proceeding. According to the accused,
    the applicable statute of limitations is ORS 12.110(1), which
    provides that “an action for assault, battery, false impris-
    onment, or for any injury to the person or rights of another,
    not arising on contract, and not especially enumerated in
    this chapter, shall be commenced within two years[.]” The
    accused contends that, in this case, the two-year limitations
    period began to run in August 2012, when he notified Culp
    that nothing further could be done to collect the judgment,
    and, consequently, the Bar’s complaint, which was filed in
    January 2015, was time-barred.
    In response, the Bar acknowledges that ORS
    9.010(3)(d) provides that it is subject to the Oregon Rules of
    Civil Procedure, and that, in a civil action, those rules and
    any applicable statute of limitations would apply. But, the
    Bar contends, lawyer disciplinary proceedings are not civil
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	379
    actions; rather, they are “ ‘sui generis and within the inher-
    ent power of the Supreme Court to control.’ ” (Quoting ORS
    9.529.) They are governed by the Bar Rules of Procedure,
    which are adopted by the Bar’s Board of Governors and
    approved by this court. ORS 9.005(7); ORS 9.542(1) (“The
    board of governors, subject to the approval of the Supreme
    Court, may adopt rules of procedure * * * relating to the
    conduct of * * * disciplinary proceedings.”). According to the
    Bar, because the Bar Rules of Procedure do not provide a
    time limitation for the initiation of disciplinary proceedings,
    the disciplinary proceeding against the accused was not
    time-barred.
    We agree with the Bar. As mentioned, we have pre-
    viously held that there is no statute of limitations defense
    in lawyer disciplinary proceedings. Lenske, 269 Or at 164;
    see also State v. Mannix, 
    133 Or 329
    , 336, 
    288 P 507
    , reh’g
    den, 
    133 Or 399
    , 
    290 P 745
     (1930) (holding that the stat-
    ute of limitations governing criminal prosecutions is not a
    defense to a proceeding for suspension or disbarment of a
    lawyer). The accused’s argument to the contrary is unavail-
    ing. As the Bar argues, disciplinary proceedings are gov-
    erned by the Bar Rules of Procedure, not the Oregon Rules
    of Civil Procedure. ORS 9.529; ORS 9.542(1). Furthermore,
    even if the Oregon Rules of Civil Procedure applied, ORS
    12.110, which establishes the two-year limitations period
    upon which the accused relies, does not apply to disciplinary
    proceedings because they are not actions for injuries “to the
    person or rights of another”; they are proceedings to enforce
    professional rules. ORS 9.529 (disciplinary proceedings
    are “neither civil nor criminal in nature[;]. [t]hey are sui
    generis”); BR 1.3 (disciplinary proceedings “are designed as
    the means to determine whether an attorney should be dis-
    ciplined for misconduct”).
    B.  Violations
    Because we conclude that the disciplinary proceed-
    ing against the accused was not time barred, we turn to
    the alleged rule violations, which the Bar bears the bur-
    den of proving by “clear and convincing evidence,” that is,
    “evidence establishing that the truth of the facts asserted
    is highly probable.” In re Hostetter, 
    348 Or 574
    , 576, 238
    380	                                            In re Ramirez
    P3d 13 (2010)(internal quotation marks omitted); BR 5.2.
    As mentioned, the accused concedes that he violated the
    Rules of Professional Conduct as found by the trial panel.
    On de novo review, we accept the accused’s concession and
    adopt the trial panel’s findings and conclusions regarding
    the violations.
    C.  Sanction
    Having concluded that the accused violated multiple
    rules of professional conduct, we turn to the question of the
    appropriate sanction. As mentioned, the trial panel imposed
    a one-year suspension. On review, the accused disputes cer-
    tain findings by the trial panel; specifically, he disputes the
    panel’s finding that his foreclosure attempts failed because
    he “made the identical mistake three times,” and its finding
    that his November 2015 letter to Culp to resolve the disci-
    plinary proceeding “demonstrates that the [a]ccused does
    not accept or appreciate that his conduct toward Culp was
    dishonest and self-serving.” In addition, the accused asserts
    that trial panel erred in failing to treat the delay in the dis-
    ciplinary proceeding as a mitigating factor. According to the
    accused, a proper sanction would be either probation or a
    suspension for between 30 and 90 days.
    1.  Analytical framework
    To determine the appropriate sanction for violations
    of disciplinary rules, “we begin with the analytical frame-
    work set out in the American Bar Association’s Standards
    for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions (1991) (amended 1992)
    (ABA Standards)”. In re Jaffee, 
    331 Or 398
    , 408, 15 P3d
    533 (2000); see Hostetter, 348 Or at 594, (following Jaffee).
    “Under that framework, we arrive at an initial presump-
    tive sanction based on: (1) the ethical duty violated, (2) the
    lawyer’s mental state, and (3) the actual or potential injury
    caused.” Jaffee, 
    331 Or at 408
    ; ABA Standard 3.0. We then
    determine whether any aggravating or mitigating factors
    justify either an increase or decrease in the sanction. ABA
    Standard 9.1; Jaffee, 
    331 Or at 408-09
    ; In re Kluge, 
    335 Or 326
    , 348, 66 P3d 492 (2003). Finally, we determine whether
    the sanction is consistent with our case law. Jaffee, 
    331 Or at 409
    . “In determining the appropriate sanction, our pur-
    pose is to protect the public and the administration of justice
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	381
    from lawyers who have not discharged properly their duties
    to clients, the public, the legal system, or the profession.”
    In re Renshaw, 
    353 Or 411
    , 419, 298 P3d 1216 (2013); ABA
    Standard 1.1.
    2.  Duties violated, mental state, and injury
    Regarding the duties violated, we conclude that
    the accused violated his duties to his client. Specifically, he
    violated his duties to represent Culp with competence and
    diligence and to avoid conflicts of interest. Those duties are
    among the most basic and important duties a lawyer owes
    a client. See In re Knappenberger, 
    338 Or 341
    , 356, 108 P3d
    1161 (2005) (“A lawyer’s most important ethical duties are
    those owed to clients, including the duty to avoid conflicts of
    interest.”) (Knappenberger I); ABA Standards 4.3, 4.4, 4.5.
    We next consider the accused’s mental state when
    he committed the violations. A lawyer acts “knowingly”
    when the lawyer acts with “the conscious awareness of
    the nature or attendant circumstances of [the lawyer’s]
    conduct but without the conscious objective or purpose to
    accomplish a particular result.” ABA Standards at 7. A
    lawyer acts “intentionally” when the lawyer acts with “the
    conscious objective or purpose to accomplish a particular
    result.” 
    Id.
     We find that the accused knowingly violated
    RPC 1.1, governing competence, when he represented Culp
    in the collection matter, with the conscious awareness that
    he lacked the competence to do so. We also find that the
    accused knowingly violated RPC 1.3, governing diligence,
    when he neglected the collection matter over several years,
    despite Culp’s requests and inquiries. We further find that
    the accused knowingly violated RPC 1.7(a), governing cur-
    rent conflicts of interests, when he continued to represent
    Culp in the collection matter after Culp had a potential mal-
    practice claim against him, without first informing Culp of
    his potential claim and obtaining Culp’s consent, in writ-
    ing, as required by RPC 1.7(b)(4). Finally, we find that the
    accused acted intentionally when he violated RPC 1.8(h),
    by acting to limit his liability for malpractice through the
    Culp release, without advising Culp of the desirability of
    independent counsel and affording him the opportunity to
    obtain such counsel; the accused acted with the conscious
    382	                                                          In re Ramirez
    goal of securing a release that protected his own interests
    over Culp’s. Thus, all of the accused’s violations were either
    knowing or intentional.
    As to the injury attributable to the accused’s vio-
    lations, we conclude that the accused caused Culp actual
    injury. ABA Standards at 7.2 Although Culp retained the
    accused to collect his $97,000 judgment against Christine
    and paid the accused $3,100 to do so, the accused’s incom-
    petent and neglectful representation resulted in the loss of
    Culp’s ability to collect any of the money Christine owed him.
    In addition, the accused injured Culp by inducing him to
    sign a release that the accused intended would cover Culp’s
    potential malpractice claims against the accused.
    3.  Presumptive sanction
    Having identified the duties violated, the accused’s
    mental state, and the injuries caused, we next determine
    the presumptive sanction under the ABA Standards. Jaffee,
    
    331 Or at 408
    ; ABA Standard 3.0. Under the ABA stan-
    dards, the presumptive sanction for the accused’s knowing
    violations of his duties of competence, diligence, and loyalty
    is suspension. ABA Standard 4.52 (suspension generally
    appropriate when lawyer engages in the practice of law in
    an area in which he knows he is not competent and causes
    injury or potential injury); ABA Standard 4.42 (suspension
    generally appropriate when lawyer knowingly fails to per-
    form services for a client, or engages in a pattern of neglect,
    thereby causing injury or potential injury to the client);
    ABA Standard 4.32 (suspension generally appropriate when
    lawyer knows of, but does not disclose, a conflict of interest
    and causes injury or potential injury to the client).
    4.  Aggravating and mitigating factors
    To determine whether a sanction other than sus-
    pension is appropriate, we consider any aggravating or mit-
    igating factors. Jaffee, 
    331 Or at 408-09
    . As aggravating
    factors, the trial panel found, inter alia, that the accused
    has a prior history of discipline, acted with a dishonest or
    2
    “Injury” is “harm to a client, the public, the legal system or the profession
    which results from a lawyer’s misconduct.” Injury may be actual or potential.
    ABA Standard 3.0.
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	383
    selfish motive, committed multiple offenses, took advantage
    of a vulnerable person, and had substantial experience in
    the practice of law. ABA Standard 9.22(a), (b), (d), (h), (i).
    The accused does not dispute those factors, and we adopt the
    trial panel’s findings and conclusions regarding them.
    The accused appears to dispute, in part, the trial
    panel’s finding that he engaged in “a pattern of misconduct.”
    ABA Standard 9.22(c). The trial panel found that,
    “[o]ver the course of more than five years (2008-2013), the
    Accused did virtually nothing to advance his client’s only
    objective - - collection of the debt owed to him. Instead, the
    Accused repeated flawed and inadequate processes and
    procedures, without attempting to correct his practices or
    learn from his failed efforts.”
    Later in its opinion, the trial panel stated that the accused
    admitted that he “made the identical mistake three times in
    attempting to foreclose on the [Ranger Court] property[.]”
    On review, the accused asserts that the attempts failed
    for different reasons; specifically, he asserts that the first
    attempt failed because he did not properly provide notice to
    the parties, the second attempt failed because he did not pro-
    vide the required public notice, and the third attempt failed
    because Washington Mutual initiated its own foreclosure.
    We find that, regardless of whether the accused
    repeated the identical mistake in his foreclosure attempts, he
    repeatedly failed to learn and comply with the basic require-
    ments for foreclosure. Based on the accused’s repeated
    neglect and incompetence in the collection matter, combined
    with his violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct gov-
    erning conflicts of interest and his prior admonishment for
    neglect of a legal matter in another case, we conclude that
    the accused engaged in a pattern of misconduct. See In re
    Redden, 342, Or 393, 397, 153 P3d 113 (2007) (observing
    that this court has found a pattern of misconduct in cases
    where the accused engaged in similar misconduct in the
    past or violated multiple disciplinary rules).
    The accused also disputes the trial panel’s finding
    that he refused to acknowledge the wrongful nature of his
    conduct. ABA Standard 9.22(d). In support of that finding,
    the trial court relied on the accused’s contacts with Culp
    384	                                            In re Ramirez
    during the disciplinary proceeding. As described above, in
    November 2015, after the Bar issued its formal complainant
    against the accused, the accused sent Culp a letter, which
    states, “As you know, the bar is looking into my represen-
    tation of you regarding the Split Rail property and the
    Ranger Court foreclosure. I would like to attempt to resolve
    this matter. Please give me a call.” Thereafter, the accused
    offered Culp $1,000, and later $1,500, in the hope that Culp
    would withdraw his Bar complaint. During the disciplinary
    trial, the accused introduced a copy of the November 2015
    letter, as an exhibit in his own defense. He also testified that
    his offer to pay Culp was an attempt to respond to Culp’s
    concerns, in the hope that Culp would withdraw his com-
    plaint or that the Bar would view his offer to pay Culp as an
    attempt at restitution and treat it as a mitigating factor.
    The trial panel found that the accused’s contacts
    with Culp during the disciplinary hearing established that
    the accused did not appreciate the wrongful nature of his
    conduct. On review, the accused disputes that finding. He
    points out that, as the trial panel found, he “admitted his
    incompetence with regard to the foreclosure claim.” He also
    renews his contention that his offer to pay Culp during the
    disciplinary hearing was an attempt at restitution. The Bar
    takes a different view of the accused’s offer to pay Culp, con-
    tending that the accused was attempting to secretly manip-
    ulate Culp and undermine the disciplinary proceeding.
    On review, we conclude that the evidence is insuffi-
    cient to establish that the accused has refused to acknowl-
    edge the wrongfulness of his conduct. Throughout the pro-
    ceedings, the accused has admitted that his foreclosure
    efforts were incompetent, and, on review, he has expressly
    conceded that his violated the Rules of Professional
    Conduct, as the trial panel found. His contacts with Culp
    during the disciplinary proceeding do not reflect a refusal to
    acknowledge the nature of his past misconduct. Moreover,
    we cannot conclude that those contacts, which the accused
    believed were mitigating, were not intended to be attempts
    at restitution.
    Finally, the accused asserts that the delay in the dis-
    ciplinary proceedings is a mitigating factor. As mentioned,
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	385
    Culp contacted the bar about the accused in November 2013,
    and the Bar filed its formal complaint in January 2015. The
    trial was held in October 2016, and the trial panel issued its
    decision in December 2016. The Bar asserts that, given the
    investigation, discovery, motions, and pretrial proceedings,
    the delay, while lengthy, was not unreasonable. A lengthy
    period of time between misconduct and a disciplinary deci-
    sion can be a mitigating factor, if there has not been further
    misconduct by the accused. See, e.g., In re Cohen, 
    330 Or 489
    , 504, 8 P3d 953 (2000) (so stating and finding that four-
    year delay was a mitigating factor, where the parties agreed
    that no complaints had been filed against the accused since
    the time of the charged misconduct). The accused asserts
    that there have been no new complaints against him, but
    the Bar responds that the accused’s efforts in 2015 to pay
    Culp to resolve the disciplinary proceeding constitute mis-
    conduct, and therefore the delay should not be treated as a
    mitigating factor. Even assuming that delay is a mitigating
    factor in this case, the mitigating factors are substantially
    outweighed by the aggravating factors.
    5.  Duration of sanction
    To determine the appropriate length of the sus-
    pension, we turn to our case law for guidance. In re Obert,
    
    352 Or 231
    , 262, 282 P3d 825 (2012); Hostetter, 348 Or at
    603 (although case matching in lawyer discipline cases is
    an “inexact science,” the court’s case law can “provide some
    guidance” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Given the
    facts of this case, we look to other cases that also involved
    multiple violations and numerous aggravating factors. We
    find two cases, In re Knappenberger, 
    340 Or 573
    , 135 P3d
    297 (2006) (Knappenberger II), and In re Altstatt, 
    321 Or 324
    , 897 P2d 1164 (1995) cert dismissed, 
    517 US 1129
     (1996),
    particularly instructive.
    In Knappenberger II, this court imposed a one-year
    suspension on a lawyer who neglected a legal matter for sev-
    eral years. Knappenberger represented a client in a mar-
    ital dissolution proceeding, and the dissolution judgment
    provided that his client was to receive one-half of her for-
    mer husband’s pension, through a qualified domestic rela-
    tions order (QDRO). Despite repeated inquiries from his
    386	                                           In re Ramirez
    client, opposing counsel, and the pension administrators,
    Knappenberger did not finalize the QDRO until eight years
    after entry of the dissolution judgment. This court held
    that Knappenberger violated the then-current rule govern-
    ing neglect and that, although he ultimately finalized the
    QDRO, he had caused actual harm to his client, “in the form
    of anger, fear, and frustration arising out of [his] failure to
    act[,]” and that he caused her potential injury because his
    neglect put her “eligibility for benefits * * * at risk,” until
    the QDRO was finalized. 
    340 Or at 583-84
    . As aggravating
    factors, we found that Knappenberger had been previously
    disciplined and had substantial experience in the practice
    of law. Id at 584 85. As mitigating factors, we found that
    he had not acted with a dishonest or selfish motive and had
    fully cooperated with the disciplinary proceeding. 
    Id. at 586
    .
    Considering the violations and the aggravating and mitigat-
    ing factors, we concluded that a one-year suspension was
    appropriate. 
    Id. at 588
    .
    In Altstatt, the lawyer borrowed money from a client
    for several years. After the client’s death, the lawyer repre-
    sented the personal representatives of that client’s estate,
    but did not disclose his conflict of interest and convinced
    the personal representatives to delay collection of his debt
    until the estate closed. This court found that Alstatt’s con-
    duct violated the then-current disciplinary rule govern-
    ing personal conflicts of interest. Based on other conduct,
    this court found that Altstatt also accepted payment of a
    fee without prior court approval. As aggravating factors,
    this court found that Altstatt acted with a selfish motive,
    was indifferent to making restitution, engaged in deceptive
    practices in the disciplinary proceeding, and had substan-
    tial experience in the practice of law. As a mitigating factor,
    this court found that he had no prior disciplinary violations.
    Considering Altstatt’s conduct and the aggravating and mit-
    igating factors, this court concluded that a one-year suspen-
    sion was appropriate. 
    321 Or at 339
    . See also In re Schenck,
    
    345 Or 350
    , 372 194 P3d 804 (2008), modified on recons, 
    345 Or 652
    , 202 P3d 165 (2009) (imposing a one-year suspension
    on lawyer who, among other violations, renegotiated his per-
    sonal debt to the client, without advising the client to seek
    independent counsel).
    Cite as 
    362 Or 370
     (2018)	387
    Like Knappenberger II, this case involves years of
    neglect of a legal matter by a lawyer with substantial experi-
    ence and a history of discipline. This case also involves, like
    Altstatt, a personal conflict of interest and a selfish motive.
    The accused asserts that a sanction of between 30
    and 90 days is appropriate, relying on In re Spencer, 
    355 Or 679
    , 330 P3d 538 (2014), and In re Jagger, 
    357 Or 295
    , 348
    P3d 1136 (2015). In Spencer, this court held that a 30-day
    sanction was appropriate, where, during the course of a law-
    yer’s legal representation of a client, the lawyer also served
    as the client’s real estate broker, and, thereby, entered into
    a business transaction with a client, but did not obtain the
    client’s informed consent in writing, as required by RPC
    1.8(a). 355 Or at 689. In so holding, we explained that the
    case involved “a single violation” and, “unlike most cases”
    involving violations of the business transaction rule, “the
    accused’s misconduct did not involve nondisclosure or lack
    of consent regarding a financial transaction in which the
    accused’s role was directly adverse to or intertwined with
    the client’s[.]” Id at 701-702. In Jagger, the lawyer facili-
    tated telephone contact between his client and his client’s
    girlfriend, who had a restraining order against the client.
    Based on that single act, which violated RPC 1.1 (compe-
    tence) and RPC 1.2(a) (assisting a client in illegal conduct),
    we concluded that a 90-day sanction was appropriate. 357
    Or at 298.
    The accused’s misconduct at issue in this disci-
    plinary proceeding is readily distinguishable from that in
    Spencer and Jagger. Unlike those cases, this case does not
    involve a single violation; it involves multiple, repeated vio-
    lations over a long period of time. Moreover, unlike Spencer,
    the accused’s interests were directly adverse to Culp’s when
    he settled the potential malpractice claim.
    Given the accused’s multiple violations in this case,
    each of which was knowingly or intentionally committed;
    the extended time period over which the violations occurred;
    the substantial injury caused to Culp; the multiple aggra-
    vating factors, including the accused’s selfish motive and
    Culp’s vulnerability; and the limited mitigating factors, we
    conclude that a lengthy sanction is appropriate. Therefore,
    388	                                       In re Ramirez
    we agree with and adopt the one-year suspension imposed
    by the trial panel.
    The accused is suspended from the practice of law
    for a period of one year, commencing 60 days from the date
    of this decision.