Court Opinion

ID: 7797710
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-04 14:03:06.084005+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:28:40.991774
License: Public Domain

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             DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

                                No. 19-BG-555

                      IN RE BILLY L. PONDS, RESPONDENT.
                           A Member of the Bar of the
                      District of Columbia Court of Appeals
                         (Bar Registration No. 379883)

                         On Report and Recommendation
                   of the Board on Professional Responsibility
                         (DDN-377-11; BDN 17-BD-15)

(Argued November 9, 2021                                Decided August 4, 2022)

      Barry Coburn, with whom Kimberly Jandrain was on the brief, for
respondent.

      Myles V. Lynk, Senior Assistant Disciplinary Counsel, with whom Hamilton
P. Fox, III, Disciplinary Counsel, and Dolores Dorsainvil, Assistant Disciplinary
Counsel, were on the brief, for Disciplinary Counsel.

      Before GLICKMAN and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and FERREN, Senior
Judge.

      PER CURIAM: A Hearing Committee concluded that respondent Billy L. Ponds

committed several violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct, including
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reckless misappropriation of client funds. The Hearing Committee recommended

that Mr. Ponds be disbarred. The Board on Professional Responsibility agreed with

the Hearing Committee’s conclusions in some respects but concluded that Mr.

Ponds’s misappropriation of client funds was negligent rather than reckless. The

Board therefore recommended that Mr. Ponds be suspended from the practice of law

for nine months. We agree with the Hearing Committee that Mr. Ponds recklessly

misappropriated client funds. We therefore disbar Mr. Ponds.

                                           I.

      The record before the Hearing Committee and the Board addresses a number

of alleged violations involving two different clients. For current purposes, it suffices

to focus on the allegation that Mr. Ponds recklessly misappropriated client funds

belonging to Joseph Young, by impermissibly failing to treat an unearned flat fee as

client property. It is undisputed that Mr. Ponds misappropriated client funds. The

sole issue is whether he did so recklessly or instead only negligently.
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                                          A.

      Flat fees paid to attorneys in advance must ordinarily be treated as client funds

until they are earned. In re Mance, 980 A.2d 1196, 1202 (D.C. 2009). Such flat fees

therefore must ordinarily be held in a trust account or escrow account. Id. A client

can consent to different treatment of flat fees, as long as the client’s consent is

informed. Id. at 1204.

      Informed consent requires an attorney to discuss the “material risks of and

reasonably available alternatives to the proposed course of conduct.” In re Mance,

980 A.2d at 1206 (internal quotation marks omitted). To satisfy this requirement in

connection with a flat-fee agreement, the attorney must “expressly communicate to

the client verbally and in writing” that (1) “the attorney will treat the advance fee as

the attorney’s property upon receipt;” (2) “the attorney can keep the fee only by

providing a benefit or providing a service for which the client has contracted;” (3)

“the fee agreement must spell out the terms of the benefit to be conferred upon the

client;” (4) “the client must be aware of the attorney’s obligation to refund any

amount of advance funds to the extent that they are unreasonable or unearned if the

representation is terminated by the client”; and (5) “unless there is agreement

otherwise, the attorney must . . . hold the flat fee in escrow until it is earned by the
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lawyer’s provision of legal services.” Id. at 1206-07 (internal quotation marks

omitted).

                                           B.

       Except as indicated, the following facts appear to be undisputed in this court.

After this court’s decision in In re Mance, Mr. Ponds revised his standard fee

agreement. The revised standard agreement stated that flat fees paid under the

agreement are non-refundable and are the property of the attorney; the client waives

any property interest in such fees; and the client waives the requirement that such

fees be placed in escrow. The agreement also advised clients that Mr. Ponds was

not required to maintain a record of the hours he expended in cases involving a flat

fee.

       Mr. Young subsequently hired Mr. Ponds to represent him in a criminal matter

that had not yet resulted in charges. The two entered into a fee agreement requiring

Mr. Young to pay Mr. Ponds a $20,000 flat fee to represent Mr. Young, with an

additional $10,000 fee if a trial date was set.
                                          5

      The fee agreement between Mr. Ponds and Mr. Young described the flat fee

as non-refundable. It further provided that Mr. Ponds was not required to keep a

record of the time he spent working on Mr. Young’s case; that the flat fee was the

exclusive property of Mr. Ponds; that Mr. Young waived any claim of property

interest in the flat fee; and that Mr. Young agreed that the flat fee would not be

placed in an escrow account. The fee agreement did not advise Mr. Young that Mr.

Ponds could keep the flat fee only if Mr. Ponds provided the agreed-upon services

or that Mr. Ponds was required to return the flat fee if it was unreasonable or

unearned. The fee agreement also did not explain what an escrow account is or the

benefits of keeping client funds in such an account.

      Although there was somewhat conflicting testimony about the discussion

between Mr. Ponds and Mr. Young concerning the fee agreement, the Hearing

Committee concluded that Mr. Ponds did not discuss with Mr. Young “the topics

. . . required for informed consent.”

      Mr. Young and his wife paid Mr. Ponds the $20,000 fee. Mr. Ponds treated

the flat fee as if it had been earned, placing it into several accounts. The balance of

one of those accounts fell well below the payments from the Youngs that had been

placed into the account.
                                         6

       Mr. Ponds subsequently met with Mr. Young several times over the next few

months. There was a dispute about the length of those meetings. Mr. Ponds had

brief notes about two such meetings and one telephone call, but he kept no time

records of his work on the case.

       Mr. Young eventually was arrested and charged. Mr. Ponds then demanded

an additional $30,000 to represent Mr. Young. The Youngs could not pay the

additional $30,000, so they asked Mr. Ponds to refund the $20,000 flat fee. Mr.

Ponds refused to do so, instead taking the position that the entire flat fee had been

earned as soon as Mr. Ponds did any work on Mr. Young’s case. Mr. Ponds refused

to enter an appearance in the criminal matter, and a court-appointed attorney

represented Mr. Young.

       The Youngs sought to get the flat fee back from Mr. Ponds, by taking the

matter to the Attorney-Client Arbitration Board. The Arbitration Board awarded the

Youngs the entire flat fee, with interest. Mr. Ponds unsuccessfully moved to vacate

the arbitration award in Superior Court. Mr. Ponds nevertheless did not pay the

arbitration award. Disciplinary Counsel represented at oral argument that Mr. Ponds

still had not returned the flat fee.
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                                           C.

      The Hearing Committee concluded that Mr. Ponds misappropriated Mr.

Young’s client funds, by spending an unearned flat fee as though it was Mr. Ponds’s

property. The Hearing Committee acknowledged that In re Mance permits unearned

flat fees to be treated as the attorney’s property in some respects, as long as the client

has given informed consent. The Hearing Committee concluded, however, that Mr.

Ponds had not obtained informed consent. Specifically, the fee agreement (1) failed

to explain that Mr. Ponds would refund any unearned portion of the flat fee; (2) did

not advise Mr. Young that Mr. Ponds would otherwise have been obliged to place

the flat fee in an escrow account; and (3) did not explain what an escrow account is

or what the risks to the client are when client funds are not kept in an escrow account.

In the Hearing Committee’s view, the fee agreement failed to tell Mr. Young “the

very things the Court . . . identified as essential to obtaining informed consent.” The

Hearing Committee found that Mr. Ponds did not orally communicate the required

information to obtain informed consent.

      The Hearing Committee concluded that Mr. Ponds’s misappropriation was

reckless rather than merely negligent. As the Hearing Committee explained, In re

Mance provided a detailed explanation of what was required to obtain informed
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consent. Mr. Ponds was aware of In re Mance, but rather than complying with its

requirements Mr. Ponds framed his fee agreement so as to ensure that his clients

would consent to Mr. Ponds taking their flat fees as his upon payment. The Hearing

Committee did not decide whether Mr. Ponds was intentionally disregarding the

requirements of In re Mance, instead concluding that the fee agreement was at least

reckless and did not “reflect a good faith misunderstanding of Mance.”

      Having    found    reckless   misappropriation,    the   Hearing    Committee

recommended disbarment.

                                         D.

      The Board adopted the Hearing Committee’s findings of fact and agreed with

the Hearing Committee that Mr. Ponds had misappropriated client funds belonging

to Mr. Young. The Board concluded, however, that Mr. Ponds’s misappropriation

was negligent rather than reckless.           In the Board’s view, Mr. Ponds’s

misappropriation was based on a good-faith misunderstanding of In re Mance,

because Mr. Ponds (1) tried to bring his fee agreement into compliance after

reviewing In re Mance, reviewing other attorneys’ fee agreements, and discussing

the issue with other attorneys; (2) believed that the fee agreement’s language reduced
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In re Mance’s complicated language to something his clients would understand; and

(3) simply made a mistake of law.

                                          II.

      The proper resolution of this case turns on whether Mr. Ponds’s conceded

misappropriation was merely negligent -- i.e., reflected a good-faith but inadequate

effort to comply with the requirements of In re Mance -- or instead was reckless, i.e.,

reflected, at a minimum, “conscious indifference” to those requirements. In re

Smith, 70 A.3d 1213, 1216 (D.C. 2013) (per curiam) (brackets and internal quotation

marks omitted). Disciplinary Counsel has the burden to prove recklessness by clear

and convincing evidence. In re Gray, 224 A.3d 1222, 1228 (D.C. 2020) (per

curiam). This court and the Board must accept the Hearing Committee’s findings of

fact if those findings are supported by substantial evidence. Id. We decide de novo

whether given facts support a conclusion of recklessness. Id.

      The Hearing Committee, which heard Mr. Ponds’s testimony, determined that

the fee agreement did not reflect a good-faith effort to comply with the requirements

of In re Mance. As an original matter, one might view that determination as a finding

of fact to which this court and the Board should ordinarily defer. See generally, e.g.,
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Bridgforth v. Gateway Georgetown Condo Ass’n. Inc., 214 A.3d 971, 977 (D.C.

2019) (“A trial court’s finding as to good faith is a factual determination that we

review for clear error.”). Our attorney-discipline cases, however, indicate that this

court will decide de novo issues of “ultimate fact,” such as whether misappropriation

was reckless or instead negligent. E.g., In re Gray, 224 A.3d at 1228. Moreover,

Disciplinary Counsel has not asked this court to give deference to the Hearing

Committee’s determination that the fee agreement did not reflect good faith. Finally,

the Hearing Committee’s view about Mr. Ponds’s state of mind is not entirely clear,

because the Hearing Committee stated as a finding of fact that Mr. Ponds believed

that his fee agreement was consistent with the requirements of In re Mance. We

therefore consider de novo whether Mr. Ponds’s misappropriation was reckless or

instead merely negligent.

      We agree with the Hearing Committee’s determination that Mr. Ponds’s

misappropriation was at a minimum reckless. In re Mance is not clear in all respects.

See In re Haar, 270 A.3d 286, 295 (D.C. 2022) (In re Mance is unclear about

whether attorneys were required to apply its requirements retroactively to funds

received from clients before In re Mance was decided). On the issues raised in this

case, though, In re Mance is quite clear: (1) flat fees paid in advance are client

property and must be treated accordingly unless the client gives informed consent to
                                          11

a different arrangement; (2) informed consent requires an attorney to discuss the

“material risks of and reasonably available alternatives to the proposed course of

conduct”; and (3) to obtain informed consent in this context, an attorney must

“expressly communicate to the client verbally and in writing” five specific pieces of

information. In re Mance, 980 A.2d at 1206-07 (internal quotation marks omitted);

see also supra pp. 3-4 (listing five required disclosures).

      Mr. Ponds’s fee agreement and his conduct in this case are fundamentally

incompatible with the requirements of In re Mance. Rather than making clear that

the unearned portion of a flat fee must be returned, the fee agreement indicated

precisely the opposite. Rather than complying with the requirement to return

unearned advance fees, Mr. Ponds refused, despite an arbitral award requiring him

to comply. As the Hearing Committee explained, the fee agreement also omits other

topics specifically required by In re Mance, and neither the fee agreement nor Mr.

Ponds’s discussion with Mr. Young provided the information that would have been

necessary for Mr. Young to have given informed consent.

      We view it as quite implausible that an attorney who was trying in good faith

to comply with the requirements of In re Mance would have drafted the fee

agreement in this case or would have acted as Mr. Ponds has acted in this case. We
                                        12

need not rest, however, on a conclusion of subjective bad faith. Even assuming that

Mr. Ponds may have subjectively believed that the fee agreement and his conduct

were permissible, we think it quite clear that Mr. Ponds at a minimum demonstrated

“conscious indifference” to the requirements of In re Mance. See, e.g., In re Gray,

224 A.3d at 1232 (“Reckless misconduct requires a conscious choice of a course of

action, either with knowledge of the danger to others involved in it or with

knowledge of facts that would disclose this danger to any reasonable person.”

(internal quotation marks omitted); see also, e.g., In re Cloud, 939 A.2d 653, 661

(D.C. 2007) (holding that attorney’s failure to pay client “back within a reasonable

time after discovering [attorney’s] error” supports          finding of reckless

misappropriation); In re Anderson, 778 A.2d 330, 339 (D.C. 2001) (reckless

misappropriation may be shown by proof of “a pattern or course of conduct

demonstrating an unacceptable disregard for the welfare of entrusted funds”).

      We are not persuaded by Mr. Ponds’s argument that, to the contrary, his

failure to comply with the requirements of In re Mance was simply a good-faith but

perhaps negligent mistake of law. For the reasons we have already explained, we

conclude that Mr. Ponds’s failure to comply with the requirements of In re Mance

reflected more than an understandable mistake of law that could be viewed as merely

negligent. Cf. In re Gray, 224 A.3d at 1232 (“[W]e have never held that an
                                          13

attorney’s assertion of a good faith belief . . . will preclude a finding of reckless

misappropriation where that belief was objectively unreasonable.”).

                                          III.

      “Disbarment is normally the appropriate sanction when an attorney has

intentionally or recklessly misappropriated client funds.” In re Smith, 70 A.3d at

1218. Mr. Ponds does not dispute that disbarment is required if he is determined to

have recklessly misappropriated client funds belonging to Mr. Young. We therefore

conclude that Mr. Ponds must be disbarred. In light of that disposition, we need not

address the other alleged disciplinary violations in this case. See, e.g., In re Kanu, 5

A.3d 1, 17 n.4 (D.C. 2010) (“[T]he decision to disbar [the] attorney because of

misappropriation of funds makes it unnecessary to consider an additional rule

violation.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).

      Respondent Billy L. Ponds is hereby disbarred from the practice of law in the

District of Columbia. For the purposes of reinstatement, the period of disbarment

will begin to run when Mr. Ponds has filed an affidavit demonstrating full

compliance with District of Columbia Bar Rule XI, § 14(g).
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     So ordered.