Toledo Bar Assn. v. Stahlbush , 126 Ohio St. 3d 366 ( 2010 )


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  • [Cite as Toledo Bar Assn. v. Stahlbush, 
    126 Ohio St. 3d 366
    , 2010-Ohio-3823.]
    TOLEDO BAR ASSOCIATION v. STAHLBUSH.
    [Cite as Toledo Bar Assn. v. Stahlbush, 
    126 Ohio St. 3d 366
    , 2010-Ohio-3823.]
    Attorneys at law — Misconduct — Two-year license suspension with one year
    stayed on conditions.
    (No. 2010-0032 — Submitted March 30, 2010 — Decided August 24, 2010.)
    ON CERTIFIED REPORT by the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and
    Discipline of the Supreme Court, No. 08-059.
    __________________
    Per Curiam.
    {¶ 1} Respondent, Kristin Ann Stahlbush of Toledo, Ohio, Attorney
    Registration No. 0064019, was admitted to the practice of law in Ohio in 1994. In
    August 2008, relator, Toledo Bar Association, filed a complaint charging her with
    violations of the Code of Professional Responsibility and the Ohio Rules of
    Professional Conduct for inflating the billable hours for work she performed as a
    court-appointed attorney in the juvenile- and general-division courts in Lucas
    County. Based upon findings that respondent committed multiple violations of
    the ethical standards incumbent upon Ohio lawyers, the board recommends that
    we suspend respondent’s license to practice law in Ohio for two years, with one
    year stayed on conditions. For the reasons that follow, we accept the board’s
    recommendation.
    Misconduct
    {¶ 2} Respondent, a solo practitioner in Toledo, Ohio, limited her
    practice primarily to court-appointed work in the juvenile and general divisions of
    the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas.                In early 2007, court personnel
    discovered that respondent’s billings in the juvenile court were very high and that
    she had billed the juvenile court for more than 24 hours per day on at least three
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    occasions, and more than 20 hours per day on five other occasions, in 2006.
    Further investigation revealed that on numerous additional occasions, respondent
    had billed the court for work in excess of 14 and up to 19 hours per day. When
    respondent failed to provide documentation to support the hours she had billed,
    the juvenile court’s administrative judge referred the matter to relator. After
    conducting an investigation, relator filed a five-count complaint alleging that
    respondent’s conduct violated DR 1-102(A)(4) (prohibiting conduct involving
    dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation), 1-102(A)(5) (prohibiting conduct
    prejudicial to the administration of justice), 1-102(A)(6) (prohibiting conduct that
    adversely reflects on a lawyer’s fitness to practice law), and 2-106(A) (prohibiting
    a lawyer from charging an excessive fee) and Prof.Cond.R. 8.1(b) (requiring a
    lawyer’s cooperation with disciplinary authority).1
    {¶ 3} On the third day of the hearing before a panel of the Board of
    Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline, the parties submitted stipulations
    that the respondent had billed the county for 3,451.4 hours for appointed-counsel
    services in 2006, that a portion of the time she billed was false and fraudulent, and
    that her conduct violated DR 1-102(A)(4), 1-102(A)(5), 1-102(A)(6), and 2-
    106(A). The panel accepted these stipulations and found that in addition to billing
    more than 24 hours in a day, respondent’s submissions to the court also aver that
    she worked 14 to 24 hours on numerous occasions. In one 96-hour period,
    respondent billed 90.3 hours, and in a separate 144-hour period, she billed 139.5
    hours.    Additionally, the board found that respondent admitted that she had
    double-billed the general division of the court for work she performed in a capital
    case and that she had returned the unearned portion of those fees.
    1. Relator charged respondent with misconduct pursuant to applicable rules for acts occurring
    before and after February 1, 2007, the effective date of the Rules of Professional Conduct, which
    superseded the Code of Professional Responsibility.
    2
    January Term, 2010
    {¶ 4} Based upon the parties’ stipulations and its own factual findings,
    the panel and board concluded, and we agree, that respondent’s conduct violated
    DR 1-102(A)(4), 1-102(A)(5), 1-102(A)(6), and 2-106(A).
    {¶ 5} The parties did not stipulate, and the panel and the board made no
    finding, regarding the allegation that respondent violated Prof.Cond.R. 8.1(b).
    However, in light of relator’s apparent abandonment of the claim and
    respondent’s eventual cooperation with the disciplinary process, we hereby
    dismiss Count Five of relator’s complaint.
    Sanction
    {¶ 6} When imposing sanctions for attorney misconduct, we consider
    relevant factors, including the ethical duties that the lawyer violated and the
    sanctions imposed in similar cases. Stark Cty. Bar Assn. v. Buttacavoli, 96 Ohio
    St.3d 424, 2002-Ohio-4743, 
    775 N.E.2d 818
    , ¶ 16.             In making a final
    determination, we also weigh evidence of the aggravating and mitigating factors
    listed in Section 10(B) of the Rules and Regulations Governing Procedure on
    Complaints and Hearings Before the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and
    Discipline (“BCGD Proc.Reg.”). Disciplinary Counsel v. Broeren, 115 Ohio
    St.3d 473, 2007-Ohio-5251, 
    875 N.E.2d 935
    , ¶ 21.
    {¶ 7} The board found that three of the nine aggravating factors set forth
    in BCGD Proc.Reg. 10(B)(1) are present: a dishonest or selfish motive, a pattern
    of misconduct, and multiple offenses. BCGD Proc.Reg. 10(B)(1)(b), (c), and (d).
    {¶ 8} In mitigation, the board found that respondent has no prior
    disciplinary record and that she is known by clients, peers, judges, and
    magistrates as a competent, hard-working attorney who represents her clients
    zealously. BCGD Proc.Reg. 10(B)(2)(a) and (e). The board also noted that
    respondent has made restitution to the general division of the common pleas court
    for the double-billing in one case, has agreed to forgo any claim for the $12,000
    in attorney-fee applications that she submitted to the court in 2007, and has been
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    denied court appointments in the juvenile court, her primary source of income.
    See BCGD Proc.Reg. 10(B)(2)(f).
    {¶ 9} Relator sought a one-year suspension of respondent’s license to
    practice law, with six months stayed. Respondent, in contrast, argued for a two-
    year suspension, but urged that the entire suspension be stayed. After considering
    respondent’s conduct, the aggravating and mitigating factors, and the sanctions
    imposed by this court in Disciplinary Counsel v. Agopian, 
    112 Ohio St. 3d 103
    ,
    2006-Ohio-6510, 
    858 N.E.2d 368
    ; Disciplinary Counsel v. Holland, 106 Ohio
    St.3d 372, 2005-Ohio-5322, 
    835 N.E.2d 361
    ; and Disciplinary Counsel v. Rohrer,
    
    124 Ohio St. 3d 65
    , 2009-Ohio-5930, 
    919 N.E.2d 180
    , the panel and board now
    recommend that we impose a two-year license suspension with one year stayed on
    the conditions that respondent submit to one year of monitored probation and
    commit no further ethical violations. Respondent objects to the recommended
    sanction, arguing that it is excessive in light of the facts and the case law cited by
    the board.
    {¶ 10} In Agopian, the respondent had submitted fee requests for work
    performed in excess of 24 hours on three separate days. Agopian, 
    112 Ohio St. 3d 103
    , 2006-Ohio-6510, 
    858 N.E.2d 368
    , ¶ 6. The record demonstrated that the
    respondent had performed all the work he claimed in each case but that he had
    failed to accurately record the dates he appeared in court or the specific number of
    hours he had spent on those cases. 
    Id. Nonetheless, there
    was no evidence that
    respondent had attempted to collect fees for work he did not perform. 
    Id. Rather, the
    evidence demonstrated that the respondent had “ ‘routinely perform[ed]
    services in an amount far in excess of the time for which he submit[ted] payment
    requests.’ ” 
    Id., quoting the
    panel. Instead of “ ‘taking one hour * * * and turning
    it into three,’ ” it appeared that he “ ‘was taking three hours and turning it into
    one.’ ” (Ellipsis sic.) 
    Id., quoting a
    panel member. Therefore, we concluded that
    a public reprimand was the appropriate sanction in that case. 
    Id. at ¶
    15.
    4
    January Term, 2010
    {¶ 11} Respondent equates her “sloppy record-keeping” to the billing
    errors committed by the respondent in Agopian.           The evidence, however,
    demonstrates that not only did she fail to keep adequate records of the hours she
    worked on behalf of her clients, but she also submitted fee requests that
    deceptively inflated the hours she worked, and that in some instances, she merely
    guessed at the time she had spent on a case. Viewed in isolation, her fee requests
    did not appear unreasonable to the judges and officials charged with reviewing
    them, but viewed on a continuum, they were simply incredible.
    {¶ 12} When confronted with the excessiveness of her fee requests,
    respondent initially maintained that she had worked every hour that she had
    billed. She eventually admitted that she could have made some mistakes in her
    billing, that she had failed to keep accurate time records, and that if her billing
    records were correct, she would have been working an average of almost ten
    hours a day, 365 days a year. Ultimately, she conceded that while she worked
    long hours, she did not maintain such a schedule.
    {¶ 13} Additionally, respondent regularly submitted bills exceeding the
    fee caps for her juvenile cases.     Moreover, the former administrative judge
    testified that in 2006, attorneys practicing in the court were aware that he was
    “quite liberal” with approving fee requests that exceeded those caps.
    {¶ 14} As the board recognized, the facts of Holland are very similar to
    those in the case at bar. There, the respondent overcharged a juvenile court for
    services he provided as court-appointed counsel. Holland, 
    106 Ohio St. 3d 372
    ,
    2005-Ohio-5322, 
    835 N.E.2d 361
    , at ¶ 7-8.           Although he was acquitted of
    criminal charges arising from his conduct, we agreed with the board’s
    determination that the respondent’s practice of charging multiple clients for the
    same hours violated DR 1-102(A)(4). 
    Id. at ¶
    19.
    {¶ 15} In Holland, we observed, “Padding client bills with hours not
    worked is tantamount to misappropriation,” and disbarment is the presumptive
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    sanction for misconduct involving misappropriation. Holland, 
    106 Ohio St. 3d 372
    , 2005-Ohio-5322, 
    835 N.E.2d 361
    , ¶ 20, citing Toledo Bar Assn. v. Batt
    (1997), 
    78 Ohio St. 3d 189
    , 
    677 N.E.2d 349
    , and Dayton Bar Assn. v. Gerren, 
    103 Ohio St. 3d 21
    , 2004-Ohio-4110, 
    812 N.E.2d 1280
    , ¶ 14. We emphasized that
    “[b]y overcharging the juvenile court, respondent exploited an already
    overburdened system designed to aid the poorest members of our society and
    lessened public confidence in the legal profession and compromised its integrity.”
    
    Id. at ¶
    22. Therefore, while recognizing the respondent’s reputation and lack of a
    prior disciplinary record as mitigating factors, we concluded that his practice of
    certifying inflated fee requests that could not be explained by any conceivable
    mistake warranted a harsher sanction than the recommended one-year suspension
    with six months stayed. 
    Id. at ¶
    23-25. Accordingly, we imposed a one-year
    suspension from the practice of law. 
    Id. at ¶
    25.
    {¶ 16} Respondent also objects to the board’s reliance upon Rohrer, 
    124 Ohio St. 3d 65
    , 2009-Ohio-5930, 
    919 N.E.2d 180
    , claiming that “the issues were
    completely different,” because in Rohrer, the respondent deliberately violated a
    court order not to discuss a client’s case with the media and then lied about doing
    so. See Rohrer at ¶ 20. In contrast, respondent contends that the board found that
    many of her problems were due to her “sloppy record-keeping” and, with one
    exception, were not intentional. Respondent steadfastly maintained that she had
    worked every hour she billed until relator confronted her with the fact that she
    would have had to have worked an average of almost ten hours per day, 365 days
    a year to have worked all of the hours she billed – testimony that was patently
    false in light of her admission that she did not maintain such a schedule. Despite
    respondent’s arguments, poor record keeping alone cannot explain overbilling of
    such magnitude.
    {¶ 17} Having reviewed the record, weighed the aggravating and
    mitigating factors, and considered the sanctions imposed for comparable conduct,
    6
    January Term, 2010
    we reject respondent’s objection and adopt the board’s recommended sanction of
    a two-year license suspension with one year stayed. Accordingly, Kristin Ann
    Stahlbush is suspended from the practice of law in the state of Ohio for two years,
    with one year stayed on the conditions that she submit to one year of monitored
    probation and commit no further ethical violations. If respondent fails to meet
    these conditions, the stay of her suspension will be lifted, and respondent will
    serve the entire two-year suspension from the practice of law. Costs are taxed to
    respondent.
    Judgment accordingly.
    PFEIFER, LUNDBERG STRATTON, O’CONNOR, O’DONNELL, FARMER, and
    CUPP, JJ., concur.
    BROWN, C.J., not participating.
    SHEILA G. FARMER, J., of the Fifth Appellate District, sitting for
    LANZINGER, J.
    __________________
    Jonathan B. Cherry, Bar Counsel, George E. Gerken, and Vincent S.
    Mezinko, for relator.
    Lorin J. Zaner, for respondent.
    ______________________
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2010-0032

Citation Numbers: 2010 Ohio 3823, 126 Ohio St. 3d 366

Judges: Brown, Cupp, Farmer, Fifth, Lanzinger, Lundberg, O'Connor, O'Donnell, Pfeifer, Sheila, Stratton

Filed Date: 8/24/2010

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023