Court Opinion

ID: 2765304
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-12-30 16:08:50.127518+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:24:19.448482
License: Public Domain

Annex A

Rule 1.7     Conflict of Interest: Current Clients

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Comment:

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Personal Interest Conflicts

        [10] The lawyer’s own interests should not be permitted to have an adverse
effect on representation of a client. For example, if the probity of a lawyer’s own
conduct in a transaction is in serious question, it may be difficult or impossible for the
lawyer to give a client detached advice. Similarly, when a lawyer has discussions
concerning possible employment with an opponent of the lawyer’s client, or with a law
firm representing the opponent, such discussions could materially limit the lawyer’s
representation of the client. In addition, a lawyer may not allow related business
interests to affect representation, for example, by referring clients to an enterprise in
which the lawyer has an undisclosed financial interest. See Rule 5.8 for specific Rules
that prohibit or restrict a lawyer’s involvement in the offer, sale, or placement of
investment products regardless of an actual conflict or the potential for conflict.
See Rule 1.8 for specific Rules pertaining to a number of personal interest conflicts,
including business transactions with clients. See also Rule 1.10 (personal interest
conflicts under Rule 1.7 ordinarily are not imputed to other lawyers in a law firm).

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Rule 1.8     Conflict of Interest: Current Clients: Specific Rules

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Comment:

Business Transactions Between Client and Lawyer

        [1]    A lawyer’s legal skill and training, together with the relationship of trust
and confidence between lawyer and client, create the possibility of overreaching when
the lawyer participates in a business, property or financial transaction with a client, for
example, a loan or sales transaction or a lawyer investment on behalf of a client. The
requirements of paragraph (a) must be met even when the transaction is not closely
related to the subject matter of the representation, as when a lawyer drafting a will for a
client learns that the client needs money for unrelated expenses and offers to make a
loan to the client. The Rule applies to lawyers engaged in the sale of goods or services
related to the practice of law, for example, the sale of title insurance or investment
services to existing clients of the lawyer’s legal practice. See Rule 5.7. But see Rule
5.8 for specific Rules that prohibit or restrict a lawyer’s involvement in the offer,
sale, or placement of investment products regardless of an actual conflict or the
potential for conflict. [It] Rule 1.8 also applies to lawyers purchasing property from
estates they represent. It does not apply to ordinary fee arrangements between client
and lawyer, which are governed by Rule 1.5, although its requirements must be met
when the lawyer accepts an interest in the client’s business or other nonmonetary
property as payment of all or part of a fee. In addition, the Rule does not apply to
standard commercial transactions between the lawyer and the client for products or
services that the client generally markets to others, for example, banking or brokerage
services, medical services, products manufactured or distributed by the client, and
utilities services. In such transactions, the lawyer has no advantage in dealing with the
client, and the restrictions in paragraph (a) are unnecessary and impracticable.

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Rule 1.15    Safekeeping Property

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      (c)    Required records. Complete records of the receipt, maintenance and
disposition of Rule 1.15 Funds and property shall be preserved for a period of five
years after termination of the client-lawyer or Fiduciary relationship or after distribution
or disposition of the property, whichever is later. A lawyer shall maintain the writing
required by Rule 1.5(b) (relating to the requirement of a writing communicating
the basis or rate of the fee) and the records identified in Rule 1.5(c) (relating to
the requirement of a written fee agreement and distribution statement in a
contingent fee matter). A lawyer shall also maintain the following books and records
for each Trust Account and for any other account in which Fiduciary Funds are held
pursuant to Rule 1.15(l):

              (1)    all transaction records provided to the lawyer by the Financial
       Institution or other investment entity, such as periodic statements, cancelled
       checks in whatever form, deposited items and records of electronic
       transactions; and

             (2)    check register or separately maintained ledger, which shall include
       the payee, date, purpose and amount of each check, withdrawal and transfer,
       the payor, date, and amount of each deposit, and the matter involved for each
       transaction[.]; provided, however, that where an account is used to hold
       funds of more than one client, a lawyer shall also maintain an individual
       ledger for each trust client, showing the source, amount and nature of all
       funds received from or on behalf of the client, the description and
       amounts of charges or withdrawals, the names of all persons or entities to
       whom such funds were disbursed, and the dates of all deposits, transfers,
       withdrawals and disbursements.

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              (3)   The records required by this [rule] Rule may be maintained in
       [electronic or] hard copy form[.] or by electronic, photographic, or other
       media provided that the records otherwise comply with this Rule and that
       printed copies can be produced. Whatever method is used to maintain
       required records must have a backup so that the records are secure and
       always available. If records are kept only in electronic form, then such records
       shall be backed up [at least monthly] on a separate electronic storage device[.]
       at least at the end of any day on which entries have been entered into the
       records. These records shall be readily accessible to the lawyer and
       available for production to the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client
       Security or the Office of Disciplinary Counsel in a timely manner upon a
       request or demand by either agency made pursuant to the Pennsylvania
       Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement, the Disciplinary Board Rules, the
       Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security Board Rules and
       Regulations, agency practice, or subpoena.

             (4)    A regular trial balance of the individual client trust ledgers
       shall be maintained. The total of the trial balance must agree with the
       control figure computed by taking the beginning balance, adding the total
       of moneys received in trust for the client, and deducting the total of all
       moneys disbursed. On a monthly basis, a lawyer shall conduct a
       reconciliation for each fiduciary account. The reconciliation is not
       complete if the reconciled total cash balance does not agree with the total
       of the client balance listing. A lawyer shall preserve for a period of five
       years copies of all records and computations sufficient to prove
       compliance with this requirement.

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       (g)    The responsibility for identifying an account as a Trust Account shall be
that of the lawyer in whose name the account is held. Only a lawyer admitted to
practice law in this jurisdiction or a person under the direct supervision of the
lawyer shall be an authorized signatory or authorize transfers from a Trust
Account or any other account in which Fiduciary Funds are held pursuant to Rule
1.15(l).

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Comment:

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       [2]   A lawyer should maintain on a current basis books and records in
accordance with sound accounting practices consistently applied and comply with any
recordkeeping rules established by law or court order, including those records identified
in paragraph (c). With little exception, funds belonging to a client or third party
must be deposited into a Trust Account as defined in paragraph (a)(11), and
funds belonging to the lawyer must be deposited in a business operating account
maintained pursuant to paragraph (j). Thus, unless the client gives informed

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consent, confirmed in writing, to a different manner of handling funds advanced
by the client to cover fees and expenses, the lawyer must deposit those funds
into a Trust Account pursuant to paragraph (i). If the lawyer pools such funds
belonging to more than one client, under paragraph (c)(2) the lawyer must keep a
ledger for each individual client, regularly recording all funds received from the
client and their purpose, and all disbursements of earned fees and expenses
incurred. As fees become earned, the lawyer must promptly transfer those funds
to the operating account. If the lawyer pools client funds after settlement or
verdict in a single Trust Account, the lawyer must maintain a ledger of receipts
and disbursements for each individual client, regularly recording the dates of
each transaction, the identity of payors and payees, and the purpose of each
disbursement, withdrawal or transfer of funds. The requirement of monthly
reconciliations should deter situations where an attorney’s Trust Account
contains a shortfall for any significant period of time. Additionally, if a lawyer
fails to maintain the records identified in paragraph (c) or to perform the required
monthly reconciliations, later claims by the lawyer that a shortfall (i.e.,
misappropriation) resulted from negligence, even if credible, will necessarily be
balanced against the lawyer’s abdication of responsibility to comply with
essential requirements associated with acting as a fiduciary and serving in a
position of trust. The failure to maintain or timely produce the records required
by paragraph (c) hampers rule-mandated or agency-promulgated investigative
inquiries by the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security and the Office of
Disciplinary Counsel and may serve as a basis for emergency temporary
suspension of the lawyer’s license to practice law. See Pa.R.D.E. 208(f)(1),
208(f)(5), 213(g)(2) and 221(g)(3).

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Rule 5.7 Responsibilities Regarding Nonlegal Services

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Comment:

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Providing Nonlegal Services that Are Not Distinct from Legal Services

       [3]    Under some circumstances, the legal and nonlegal services may be so
closely entwined that they cannot be distinguished from each other. In this situation,
confusion by the recipient as to when the protection of the client-lawyer relationship
applies [are] is likely to be unavoidable. Therefore, Rule 5.7(a) requires that the lawyer
providing the nonlegal services adhere to all of the requirements of the Rules of
Professional Conduct.

       [4]     In such a case, a lawyer will be responsible for assuring that both the
lawyer’s conduct and, to the extent required by Rule 5.3, that of nonlawyer employees,
comply in all respects with the Rules of Professional Conduct. When a lawyer is obliged
to accord the recipients of such nonlegal services the protection of those Rules that

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apply to the client-lawyer relationship, the lawyer must take special care to heed the
proscriptions of the Rules addressing conflict of interest (Rules 1.7 through 1.11,
especially Rules 1.7(b) and 1.8(a), (b) and (f)), and to scrupulously adhere to the
requirements of Rule 1.6 relating to disclosure of confidential information. The
promotion of the nonlegal services must also in all respects comply with Rule 5.8
relating to prohibitions and restrictions on dealing in investment products, and
with Rules 7.1 through 7.3, dealing with advertising and solicitation.

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Rule 5.8     Dealing in Investment Products: Prohibitions and Restrictions

     (a)    A lawyer shall not broker, offer to sell, sell, or place any investment
product unless separately licensed to do so.

       (b)   A lawyer shall not recommend or offer an investment product to a
client or any person with whom the lawyer has a fiduciary relationship, or invest
funds belonging to such a person in an investment product, if the lawyer or a
person related to the lawyer:

             (1)   has an interest in compensation paid or provided by a person
      other than the client or person with whom the lawyer has a fiduciary
      relationship; or

           (2)    has an ownership interest in the entity that sponsors, insures,
      underwrites, manages, or issues the investment product.

      (c)    For purposes of this Rule:

             (1)   the term “investment product” includes: an annuity contract;
      a life insurance contract; a commodity; a swap; an investment fund,
      including but not limited to a collective trust fund, a common trust fund, a
      real estate investment fund, and registered investment company; a
      security, whether or not the security is registered with any federal or state
      securities regulator; or an investment adviser’s, bank’s, trust company’s,
      insurance company’s, or other financial institution’s service as an
      investment manager or investment adviser;

            (2)   “person related to the lawyer” includes a spouse, child,
      grandchild, parent, grandparent or other relative or individual with whom
      the lawyer maintains a close familial relationship; and

            (3)    the term “ownership interest” does not include shares of an
      issuer that has registered the shares under federal securities laws, the
      issuer’s shares are traded on a securities exchange that is registered under
      federal securities laws, and the lawyer’s aggregate interest in shares of all
      classes is less than one percent of the issuer’s outstanding common
      shares.

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Comment:

       [1]    Paragraph (a) prohibits a lawyer from brokering, offering to sell,
selling, or placing any investment product, as defined in paragraph (c)(1), unless
separately licensed to do so. Licensing and registration requirements vary by
state. Before offering or selling any investment product in relation to the
provision of legal services, a lawyer must consult all applicable federal and state
laws to determine eligibility, licensing and regulatory requirements. Paragraph
(a) neither addresses the giving of investment advice nor is intended to supplant
or otherwise affect federal and state laws that either require licensing and
registration in order to give investment advice or exempt lawyers from their
regulatory scheme.

      [2]    Paragraph (b) prohibits investment situations that are fraught with a
potential for a conflict of interest or that provide an opportunity for the lawyer to
control or unduly influence the use or management of the funds throughout the
course of the investment. Clients who place their trust in their lawyer and
assume or expect that the lawyer will protect them from harm are likely to feel
deceived if substantial sums of money are lost on investments pursued at the
lawyer’s recommendation or prompting and the lawyer or a person related to the
lawyer either receives compensation or a pecuniary benefit from a person other
than the client or has an ownership interest in the entity that sponsors, insures,
underwrites, manages, or issues the investment product, even when the reason
for the loss is limited to unexpected market conditions. The prohibition of
paragraph (b) is not imputed to other lawyers in the lawyer’s firm or those
lawyers’ relatives.

       [3]   This Rule applies to a lawyer under any circumstance—whether the
lawyer is providing legal services, nonlegal services that are not distinct from
legal services, or nonlegal services that are distinct from legal services. See Rule
5.7(e) for the meaning of the term “nonlegal services.” The prohibition of
paragraph (b) is in addition to the restrictions imposed by Rules 1.7(a)(2), 1.8(a)
and 5.7.

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                                                                           Annex B

Rule 208.   Procedure.

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      (f)   Emergency temporary suspension orders and related relief.

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             (5)    The Board on its own motion, or upon the petition of Disciplinary
      Counsel, may issue a rule to show cause why the respondent-attorney should
      not be placed on temporary suspension whenever it appears that the
      respondent-attorney has disregarded an applicable provision of the Enforcement
      Rules, failed to maintain or produce the records required to be maintained
      and produced under Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(c) and subdivisions (e) and (g) of
      Enforcement Rule 221 in response to a request or demand authorized by
      Enforcement Rule 221(g) or any provision of the Disciplinary Board Rules,
      [refused] failed to comply with a valid subpoena, or engaged in other conduct
      that in any such instance materially delays or obstructs the conduct of a
      proceeding under these rules. The rule to show cause shall be returnable within
      [30] ten days. If the response to the rule to show cause raises issues of fact, the
      [Chairman of the] Board Chair may direct that a hearing be held before a
      member of the Board who shall submit a report to the Board upon the conclusion
      of the hearing. If the period for response to the rule to show cause has passed
      without a response having been filed, or after consideration of any response and
      any report of a Board member following a hearing under this paragraph, the
      Board may recommend to the Supreme Court that the respondent-attorney be
      placed on temporary suspension. The recommendation of the Board shall be
      reviewed by the Supreme Court as provided in subdivision (e) of this rule[.],
      although the time for either party to file with the Court a petition for review
      of the recommendation or determination of the Board shall be fourteen
      days after the entry of the Board’s recommendation or determination, and
      any answer or responsive pleading shall be filed within ten days after
      service of the petition for review.

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Rule 213.   Subpoena power, depositions and related matters.

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        (d)    Challenges; appeal of challenges to subpoena. Any attack on the
validity of a subpoena issued under this rule shall be handled as follows:

            (1)   A challenge to a subpoena authorized by subdivision (a)(1) shall be
      heard and determined by the hearing committee or special master before whom
      the subpoena is returnable in accordance with the procedure established by
      the Board. See D.Bd. Rules § 91.3(b) (relating to procedure).

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              (2)    A challenge to a subpoena authorized by subdivision (a)(2) shall be
      heard and determined by a member of a hearing committee in the disciplinary
      district in which the subpoena is returnable in accordance with the procedure
      established by the Board. See D.Bd. Rules § 91.3(b) (relating to procedure).

             (3)   A determination under paragraph (1) or (2) may [not] be appealed
      to a lawyer-Member of the Board[, but may be appealed to the Supreme
      Court under subdivision (g)] within ten days after service pursuant to D.Bd.
      Rules §§ 89.21 and 89.24 of the determination on the party bringing the appeal
      by filing a petition with the Board setting forth in detail the grounds for
      challenging the determination. The appealing party shall serve a copy of
      the petition on the non-appealing party by mail on the date that the
      appealing party files the appeal, and the non-appealing party shall have five
      business days after delivery to file a response. No attack on the validity of
      a subpoena will be considered by the Designated lawyer-Member of the
      Board unless previously raised before the hearing committee. The Board
      Member shall decide the appeal within five business days of the filing of
      the non-appealing party’s response, if any. There shall be no right of
      appeal to the Supreme Court. Any request for review shall not serve to
      stay any hearing or proceeding before the hearing committee or the Board
      unless the Court enters an order staying the proceedings.

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      (g)   Enforcement of subpoenas[; appeal of challenges to subpoenas].

             (1)    Either Disciplinary Counsel or a respondent-attorney may petition
      the Supreme Court to enforce a subpoena [or to review a determination under
      subdivision (d)(1) or (2) on the validity of a subpoena. No attack on the
      validity of a subpoena will be considered by the Court unless previously
      raised as provided in subdivision (d)] that was not the subject of a
      challenge pursuant to subdivision (d)(1) or (2), or that was the subject of a
      challenge and has not been finally quashed by either the hearing
      committee or the Board Member designated to hear the appeal, provided
      that the party filing the petition to enforce attaches a certification in good
      faith that: a) the party exhausted reasonable efforts to secure the presence
      of the witness or the evidence within the witness’s custody or control, b)
      the testimony, records or other physical evidence of the witness will not be
      cumulative of other evidence available to the party, and c) the absence of
      the witness will substantially handicap the party from prosecuting or
      defending the charges, or from establishing a weighty aggravating or
      mitigating factor. If the object of a petition to enforce is a subpoena
      directed to the respondent-attorney for, in whole or in part, production
      pursuant to Enforcement Rule 221(g)(2) of required records under
      Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(c) and Enforcement Rule 221(e), no certification will be
      required for the subpoena or portion thereof that pertains to the required
      records. See also Enforcement Rule 208(f)(5) (relating to emergency temporary
      suspension orders and related relief).

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                Note: The reference to Enforcement Rule 208(f)(5) is intended
                to make clear that, where the person who is resisting
                complying with a subpoena is the respondent-attorney, the
                provisions of this rule are cumulative of those in Enforcement
                Rule 208(f)(5).

             (2)    Upon receipt of a petition for enforcement of a subpoena, the Court
      shall issue a rule to show cause upon the person to whom the subpoena is
      directed, returnable within ten days, why the person should not be held in
      contempt.     If the subpoena is directed to a respondent-attorney for
      production of required records and the respondent-attorney has not
      produced the records, the Court shall issue upon the respondent-attorney
      a rule to show cause why the respondent-attorney should not be placed on
      temporary suspension for failing to produce the records. If the period for
      response has passed without a response having been filed, or after consideration
      of any response, the Court shall issue an appropriate order.

             [(3) A petition for review of a determination made under
      subdivision (d)(1) or (2) must set forth in detail the grounds for challenging
      the determination. Upon timely receipt of a petition for review, the Court
      shall issue a rule to show cause upon the party to the proceeding who is
      not challenging the determination, returnable within ten days, why the
      determination should not be reversed. If the period for response has
      passed without a response having been filed, or after consideration of any
      response, the Court shall issue an appropriate order.]

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Rule 215.    Discipline on Consent

        (a)    Voluntary resignation. – An attorney who is the subject of an investigation
into allegations of misconduct by the attorney may submit a resignation, but only by
delivering to Disciplinary Counsel or the Secretary of the Board a verified statement
stating that the attorney desires to resign and that:

              (1)   the resignation is freely and voluntarily rendered; the attorney is not
      being subjected to coercion or duress; the attorney is fully aware of the
      implications of submitting the resignation; and whether or not the attorney has
      consulted or followed the advice of counsel in connection with the decision to
      resign;

              (2)   the attorney is aware that there is presently pending investigation
      into allegations that the attorney has been guilty of misconduct the nature of
      which the verified statement shall specifically set forth;

            (3)     the attorney acknowledges that the material facts upon which the
      complaint is predicated are true; [and]

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              (4)   the resignation is being submitted because the attorney knows that
       if charges were predicated upon the misconduct under investigation the attorney
       could not successfully defend against them[.];

             (5)    the attorney is fully aware that the submission of the
       resignation statement is irrevocable and that the attorney can only apply
       for reinstatement to the practice of law pursuant to the provisions of
       Enforcement Rule 218(b) and (c);

             (6)   the attorney is aware that pursuant to subdivision (c) of this
       Rule, the fact that the attorney has tendered his or her resignation shall
       become a matter of public record immediately upon delivery of the
       resignation statement to Disciplinary Counsel or the Secretary of the
       Board;

             (7)     upon entry of the order disbarring the attorney on consent, the
       attorney will promptly comply with the notice, withdrawal, resignation, trust
       accounting, and cease-and-desist provisions of subdivisions (a), (b), (c)
       and (d) of Enforcement Rule 217;

             (8)   after the entry of the order disbarring the attorney on consent,
       the attorney will file a verified statement of compliance as required by
       subdivision (e)(1) of Enforcement Rule 217; and

              (9)    the attorney is aware that the waiting period for eligibility to
       apply for reinstatement to the practice of law under Enforcement Rule
       218(b) shall not begin until the attorney files the verified statement of
       compliance required by Enforcement Rule 217(e)(1), and if the order of
       disbarment contains a provision that makes the disbarment retroactive to
       an earlier date, then the waiting period will be deemed to have begun on
       that earlier date.

       (b)    Order of disbarment. – Upon receipt of the required statement, the
Secretary of the Board shall file it with the Supreme Court and the Court shall enter an
order disbarring the attorney on consent.

        (c)    Confidentiality of resignation statement. – The fact that the attorney has
submitted a resignation statement to Disciplinary Counsel or the Secretary of the
Board for filing with the Supreme Court shall become a matter of public record
immediately upon delivery of the resignation statement to Disciplinary Counsel or
the Secretary of the Board. The order disbarring the attorney on consent shall be a
matter of public record. If the statement required under the provisions of subdivision (a)
of this rule is submitted before the filing and service of a petition for discipline and the
filing of an answer or the time to file an answer has expired, the statement shall not be
publicly disclosed or made available for use in any proceeding other than a subsequent
reinstatement proceeding except:

              (1)    upon order of the Supreme Court,

              (2)    pursuant to an express written waiver by the attorney,

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              (3)    upon a request of another jurisdiction for purposes of a reciprocal
      disciplinary proceeding,

             (4)    upon a request by the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client
      Security Board pursuant to Enforcement Rule 521(a) (relating to cooperation with
      Disciplinary Board), or

              (5)    when the resignation is based on an order of temporary suspension
      from the practice of law entered by the Court either pursuant to Enforcement
      Rule 208(f)(1) (relating to emergency temporary suspension orders and related
      relief) or pursuant to Enforcement Rule 214 (relating to attorneys convicted of
      crimes).

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Rule 217.    Formerly admitted attorneys.

       (a)    A formerly admitted attorney shall promptly notify, or cause to be
promptly notified, [by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested,] all
clients being represented in pending matters, other than litigation or administrative
proceedings, of the disbarment, suspension, administrative suspension or transfer to
inactive status and the consequent inability of the formerly admitted attorney to act as
an attorney after the effective date of the disbarment, suspension, administrative
suspension or transfer to inactive status and shall advise said clients to seek legal
advice elsewhere. The notice required by this subdivision (a) may be delivered by
the most efficient method possible as long as the chosen method is successful
and provides proof of receipt. At the time of the filing of the verified statement of
compliance required by subdivision (e)(1) of this Rule, the formerly admitted
attorney shall file copies of the notices required by this subdivision and proofs of
receipt with the Secretary of the Board and shall serve a conforming copy on the
Office of Disciplinary Counsel. See D.Bd. Rules § 91.91(b) (relating to filing of
copies of notices).

             Note: Notice may be accomplished, for example, by delivery
             in person with the lawyer securing a signed receipt,
             electronic mailing with some form of acknowledgement from
             the client other than a “read receipt,” and mailing by
             registered or certified mail, return receipt requested.

        (b)   A formerly admitted attorney shall promptly notify, or cause to be
promptly notified, [by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested,] all
clients who are involved in pending litigation or administrative proceedings, and the
attorney or attorneys for each adverse party in such matter or proceeding, of the
disbarment, suspension, administrative suspension or transfer to inactive status and
consequent inability of the formerly admitted attorney to act as an attorney after the
effective date of the disbarment, suspension, administrative suspension or transfer to
inactive status. The notice to be given to the client shall advise the prompt substitution
of another attorney or attorneys in place of the formerly admitted attorney. In the event
the client does not obtain substitute counsel before the effective date of the disbarment,

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suspension, administrative suspension or transfer to inactive status, it shall be the
responsibility of the formerly admitted attorney to move in the court or agency in which
the proceeding is pending for leave to withdraw. The notice to be given to the attorney
or attorneys for an adverse party shall state the place of residence of the client of the
formerly admitted attorney. The notice required by this subdivision (b) may be
delivered by the most efficient method possible as long as the chosen method is
successful and provides proof of receipt. See Note after subdivision (a), supra.
At the time of the filing of the verified statement of compliance required by
subdivision (e)(1) of this Rule, the formerly admitted attorney shall file copies of
the notices required by this subdivision and proofs of receipt with the Secretary
of the Board and shall serve a conforming copy on the Office of Disciplinary
Counsel. See D.Bd. Rules § 91.92(b) (relating to filing of copies of notices).

       (c)     A formerly admitted attorney shall promptly notify, or cause to be
promptly notified, of the disbarment, suspension, administrative suspension or transfer
to inactive status[, by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested]:

             (1)     all persons or their agents or guardians, including but not limited
      to wards, heirs and beneficiaries, to whom a fiduciary duty is or may be owed
      at any time after the disbarment, suspension, administrative suspension or
      transfer to inactive status[, and];

             (2)    all other persons with whom the formerly admitted attorney may at
      any time expect to have professional contacts under circumstances where there
      is a reasonable probability that they may infer that he or she continues as an
      attorney in good standing[.]; and

            (3)    any other tribunal, court, agency or jurisdiction in which the
      attorney is admitted to practice.

The notice required by this subdivision (c) may be delivered by the most efficient
method possible as long as the chosen method is successful and provides proof
of receipt. See Note after subdivision (a), supra. At the time of the filing of the
verified statement of compliance required by subdivision (e)(1) of this Rule, the
formerly admitted attorney shall file copies of the notices required by this
subdivision and proofs of receipt with the Secretary of the Board and shall serve
a conforming copy on the Office of Disciplinary Counsel. The responsibility of the
formerly admitted attorney to provide the notice required by this subdivision shall
continue for as long as the formerly admitted attorney is disbarred, suspended,
administratively suspended or on inactive status.

       (d) (1) Orders imposing suspension, disbarment, administrative suspension or
transfer to inactive status shall be effective 30 days after entry. The formerly admitted
attorney, after entry of the disbarment, suspension, administrative suspension or
transfer to inactive status order, shall not accept any new retainer or engage as attorney
for another in any new case or legal matter of any nature. However, during the period
from the entry date of the order and its effective date the formerly admitted attorney may
wind up and complete, on behalf of any client, all matters which were pending on the
entry date.

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       (2)   In addition to the steps that a formerly admitted attorney must
promptly take under other provisions of this Rule to disengage from the practice
of law, a formerly admitted attorney shall promptly cease and desist from using
all forms of communication that expressly or implicitly convey eligibility to
practice law in the state courts of Pennsylvania, including but not limited to
professional titles, letterhead, business cards, signage, websites, and references
to admission to the Pennsylvania Bar.

       (3)   In cases of disbarment, suspension for a period exceeding one year,
temporary suspension under Enforcement Rule 208(f) or 213(g), or disability
inactive status under Enforcement Rule 216 or 301, a formerly admitted attorney
shall also promptly:

           (i)     resign all appointments as personal representative, executor,
       administrator, guardian, conservator, receiver, trustee, agent under a
       power of attorney, or other fiduciary position;

            (ii)   close every IOLTA, Trust, client and fiduciary account;

            (iii) properly disburse or otherwise transfer all client and fiduciary
       funds in his or her possession, custody or control; and

             (iv)  take all necessary steps to cancel or discontinue the next
       regular publication of all advertisements and telecommunication listings
       that expressly or implicitly convey eligibility to practice law in the state
       courts of Pennsylvania.

The formerly admitted attorney shall maintain records to demonstrate compliance
with the provisions of paragraphs (2) and (3) and shall provide proof of
compliance at the time the formerly admitted attorney files the verified statement
required by subdivision (e)(1) of this Rule.

            Note: Paragraph (d)(3)(i) does not preclude a respondent-
            attorney who voluntarily assumes inactive or retired status, is
            placed on administrative suspension, is temporarily
            suspended under Enforcement Rule 214, or is suspended for
            one year or less, from completing existing appointments and
            accepting new appointments of the nature identified in
            paragraph (d)(3)(i). Nonetheless, in order to comply with
            subdivisions (a), (b) and (c) of this Rule, the formerly admitted
            attorney who desires to complete existing appointments or
            accept future appointments must give written notice of the
            formerly admitted attorney’s registration status or change in
            that status to appointing and supervising judges and courts,
            wards, heirs, beneficiaries, interested third parties, and other
            recipients of the formerly admitted attorney’s fiduciary
            services, as notice of the formerly admitted attorney’s other-
            than-active status gives all interested parties an opportunity to
            consider replacing the formerly admitted attorney or enlisting

                                        13
             a person other than the formerly admitted attorney to serve as
             the fiduciary in the first instance. Although the formerly
             admitted attorney would not be precluded by paragraph
             (d)(3)(ii) from continuing to use a fiduciary account registered
             with the bank as an IOLTA or Trust Account, paragraph (2) of
             subdivision (d) and paragraph (4)(iv) of subdivision (j) of this
             Rule prohibit the formerly admitted attorney from using or
             continuing to use account checks and deposit slips that
             contain the word “IOLTA,” “attorney,” “lawyer,” “esquire,” or
             similar appellation that could convey eligibility to practice in
             the state courts of Pennsylvania. Notwithstanding the specific
             prohibitions of subdivision (j) of this Rule, the formerly
             admitted attorney is authorized to perform those services
             necessary to carry out the appointment with the exception of
             any service that would constitute the unauthorized practice of
             law if engaged in by a nonlawyer. In relation to formerly
             admitted attorneys who are disbarred, suspended for a period
             exceeding      one    year, temporarily suspended         under
             Enforcement Rule 208(f) or 213(g), or transferred to disability
             inactive status, the requirements of paragraph (d)(3) continue
             throughout the term of the disbarment, suspension, temporary
             suspension, or disability inactive status, thereby precluding
             any new appointment or engagement.

       (e) (1) Within ten days after the effective date of the disbarment, suspension,
administrative suspension or transfer to inactive status order, the formerly admitted
attorney shall file with the Secretary of the Board a verified statement [showing] and
serve a copy on Disciplinary Counsel. In the verified statement, the formerly
admitted attorney shall:

              [(1)] (i) aver that the provisions of the order and these rules have been
      fully complied with; [and]

             [(2)] (ii) list all other state, federal and administrative jurisdictions to
      which [such person] the formerly admitted attorney is admitted to practice[.
      Such statement shall also set forth the residence or other address of the
      formerly admitted attorney where communications to such person may
      thereafter be directed.], aver that he or she has fully complied with the
      notice requirements of paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of this Rule, and
      aver that he or she has attached copies of the notices and proofs of receipt
      required by (c)(3); or, in the alternative, aver that he or she was not
      admitted to practice in any other tribunal, court, agency or jurisdiction;

            (iii) aver that he or she has attached copies of the notices required
      by subdivisions (a), (b), and (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this Rule and proofs of
      receipt, or, in the alternative, aver that he or she has no clients, third
      persons to whom a fiduciary duty is owed, or persons with whom the
      formerly admitted attorney has professional contacts, to so notify;

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             (iv)   in cases of disbarment or suspension for a period exceeding
      one year, aver that he or she has attached his or her attorney registration
      certificate for the current year, certificate of admission, any certificate of
      good standing issued by the Prothonotary, and any other certificate
      required by subdivision (h) of this Rule to be surrendered; or, in the
      alternative, aver that he or she has attached all such documents within his
      or her possession, or that he or she is not in possession of any of the
      certificates required to be surrendered;

            (v)     aver that he or she has complied with the requirements of
      paragraph (2) of subdivision (d) of this Rule, and aver that he or she has, to
      the extent practicable, attached proof of compliance, including evidence of
      the destruction, removal, or abandonment of indicia of Pennsylvania
      practice; or, in the alternative, aver that he or she neither had nor employed
      any indicia of Pennsylvania practice;

             (vi)   in cases of disbarment, suspension for a period exceeding one
      year, temporary suspension under Enforcement Rule 208(f) or 213(g), or
      disability inactive status under Enforcement Rule 216 or 301, aver that he
      or she has complied with the requirements of paragraph (3) of subdivision
      (d) of this Rule, and aver that he or she has attached proof of compliance,
      including resignation notices, evidence of the closing of accounts, copies
      of cancelled checks and other instruments demonstrating the proper
      distribution of client and fiduciary funds, and requests to cancel
      advertisements and telecommunication listings; or, in the alternative, aver
      that he or she has no applicable appointments, accounts, funds.
      advertisements, or telecommunication listings;

             (vii) aver that he or she has served a copy of the verified statement
      and its attachments on the Office of Disciplinary Counsel;

          (viii) set forth the residence or other address                    where
      communications to such person may thereafter be directed; and

            (ix)   sign the statement.

The statement shall contain an averment that all statements contained therein are
true and correct to the best of the formerly admitted attorney’s knowledge,
information and belief, and are made subject to the penalties of 18 Pa.C.S. § 4904
relating to unsworn falsification to authorities.

               Note:     A respondent-attorney who is placed on
               temporary suspension is required to comply with
               subdivision (e)(1) and file a verified statement. Upon the
               entry of a final order of suspension or disbarment, the
               respondent-attorney must file a supplemental verified
               statement      containing      the      information   and
               documentation not applicable at the time of the filing of
               the initial statement, or all of the information and

                                         15
                documentation required by subdivision (e)(1) if the
                respondent-attorney has failed to file the initial
                statement. Although the grant of retroactivity is always
                discretionary, a respondent-attorney who fails to file a
                verified statement at the time of temporary suspension
                should not expect a final order to include a reference to
                retroactivity.

     (2)   A formerly admitted attorney shall cooperate with Disciplinary
Counsel and respond completely to questions by Disciplinary Counsel regarding
compliance with the provisions of this Rule.

       (3)    After the entry of an order of disbarment or suspension for a period
exceeding one year, the waiting period for eligibility to apply for reinstatement to
the practice of law shall not begin until the formerly admitted attorney files the
verified statement required by subdivision (e)(1) of this Rule. If the order of
disbarment or suspension contains a provision that makes the discipline
retroactive to an earlier date, the waiting period will be deemed to have begun on
that earlier date.

               Note:    This subdivision (e)(3) and the corresponding
               provisions in subdivision (b) of Enforcement Rule 218
               apply only to orders entered on or after            , the
               effective date of this subdivision and the corresponding
               Enforcement Rule 218 provisions.

(Editor's Note: The blank refers to the effective date of adoption of this proposed
rulemaking.)

       (f)    The Board shall cause a notice of the suspension, disbarment,
administrative suspension or transfer to inactive status to be published in the legal
journal and a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the formerly
admitted attorney practiced. The cost of publication shall be assessed against the
formerly admitted attorney.

***

Rule 218.     Reinstatement.

***

       (b)    A person who has been disbarred may not apply for reinstatement until
the expiration of at least five years from the effective date of the disbarment, except that
a person who has been disbarred pursuant to Enforcement Rule 216 (relating to
reciprocal discipline and disability) may apply for reinstatement at any earlier date on
which reinstatement may be sought in the jurisdiction of initial discipline. Pursuant to
Enforcement Rule 217(e)(3), the waiting period for eligibility to apply for
reinstatement to the practice of law shall not begin until the person files the
verified statement required by subdivision (e)(1) of Enforcement Rule 217. If the
order of disbarment contains a provision that makes the disbarment retroactive

                                            16
to an earlier date, the waiting period will be deemed to have begun on that earlier
date. (See Note after Enforcement Rule 217(e)(3) for effective date of provisions
relating to commencement of waiting period for eligibility to apply for
reinstatement.)

***

Rule 219.    Annual registration of attorneys.

***

       (d)    On or before July 1 of each year all attorneys required by this rule to pay
an annual fee shall file with the Attorney Registration Office a signed or electronically
endorsed form prescribed by the Attorney Registration Office in accordance with the
following procedures:

             (1)    The form shall set forth:

                     (i)    The date on which the attorney was admitted to practice,
             licensed as a foreign legal consultant, granted limited admission as an
             attorney participant in defender and legal services programs pursuant to
             Pa.B.A.R. 311, or issued a Limited In-House Corporate Counsel License,
             and a list of all courts (except courts of this Commonwealth) and
             jurisdictions in which the person has ever been licensed to practice law,
             with the current status thereof.

                    (ii)   The current residence and office addresses of the attorney,
             each of which shall be an actual street address or rural route box number,
             and the Attorney Registration Office shall refuse to accept a form that sets
             forth only a post office box number for either required address. A preferred
             mailing address different from those addresses may also be provided on
             the form and may be a post office box number. The attorney shall indicate
             which of the addresses, the residence, office or mailing address, as well
             as telephone and fax number will be accessible through the website of the
             Board (http://www.padisciplinaryboard.org/) and by written or oral request
             to the Board. Upon an attorney’s written request submitted to the Attorney
             Registration Office and for good cause shown, the contact information
             provided by the attorney will be nonpublic information and will not be
             published on the Board’s website or otherwise disclosed.

                           Note: Public web docket sheets will show the
                           attorney’s address as entered on the court
                           docket.

                    (iii) The name of each [f]Financial [i]Institution, as defined in
             Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(a)(4), [in] within or outside this Commonwealth in which
             the attorney on May 1 of the current year or at any time during the
             preceding 12 months held funds of a client or a third person subject to

                                           17
Rule 1.15 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct. The form
shall include the name and account number for each account in which the
[lawyer] attorney [holds] held such funds, and each IOLTA Account
shall be identified as such. The form provided to a person holding a
Limited In-House Corporate Counsel License or a Foreign Legal
Consultant License need not request the information required by this
subparagraph.

      Note: If an attorney employed by a law firm receives
      fiduciary funds from or on behalf of a client and
      deposits or causes the funds to be deposited into a law
      firm account, the attorney must report the account of
      deposit under this subparagraph.

       (iv)  Every account not reported under subparagraph (iii),
that held funds of a client or third party, and over which the attorney
had sole or shared signature authority or authorization to transfer
funds to or from the account, during the same time period specified
in subparagraph (iii). For each account, the attorney shall provide
the name of the financial institution (whether or not the entity
qualifies as a “Financial Institution” under Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(a)(4)),
location, and account number.

      (v)    Every business operating account maintained or utilized
by the attorney in the practice of law during the same time period
specified in subparagraph (iii). For each account, the attorney shall
provide the name of the financial institution, location and account
number.

       [(iv)](vi) A statement that the attorney is familiar and in compliance
with Rule 1.15 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct
regarding the handling of funds and other property of clients and others
and the maintenance of IOLTA Accounts, and with Rule 221 of the
Pennsylvania Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement regarding the mandatory
reporting of overdrafts on fiduciary accounts.

      [(v)](vii) A statement that any action brought against the attorney
by the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security for the recovery of
monies paid by the Fund as a result of claims against the attorney may be
brought in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny, Dauphin or
Philadelphia County.

       [(vi)](viii) Whether the attorney is covered by professional liability
insurance on the date of registration in the minimum amounts required by
Rule of Professional Conduct 1.4(c). Rule 1.4(c) does not apply to
attorneys who do not have any private clients, such as attorneys in full-
time government practice or employed as in-house corporate counsel.

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                   Note: The Disciplinary Board will make the information
                   regarding insurance available to the public upon written or
                   oral request and on its website. The requirement of Rule
                   219(d)(3) that every attorney who has filed an annual fee
                   form or elects to file the form electronically must notify the
                   Attorney Registration Office of any change in the information
                   previously submitted within 30 days after such change will
                   apply to the information regarding insurance.

                    [(vii)](ix) Such other information as the Attorney Registration
             Office may from time to time direct.

***

Rule 221.    Funds of clients and third persons. Mandatory overdraft notification.

***

        (e)   An attorney shall maintain and preserve for a period of five years after
termination of the client-lawyer or Fiduciary relationship or after distribution or
disposition of the property, whichever is later, the writing required by Pa.R.P.C.
1.5 (relating to the requirement of a writing communicating the basis or rate of the
fee), the records identified in Pa.R.P.C. 1.5(c) (relating to the requirement of a
written fee agreement and distribution statement in a contingent fee matter), and
the following books and records for each Trust Account and for any other account in
which Rule 1.15 Funds are held:

              (1)    all transaction records provided to the attorney by the Financial
      Institution, such as periodic statements, canceled checks in whatever form,
      deposited items and records of electronic transactions; and

            (2)     check register or separately maintained ledger, which shall include
      the payee, date, purpose and amount of each check, withdrawal and transfer,
      the payor, date, and amount of each deposit, and the matter involved for each
      transaction[.]; provided, however, that where an account is used to hold
      funds of more than one client, a lawyer shall also maintain an individual
      ledger for each trust client, showing the source, amount and nature of all
      funds received from or on behalf of the client, the description and amounts
      of charges or withdrawals, the names of all persons or entities to whom
      such funds were disbursed, and the dates of all deposits, transfers,
      withdrawals and disbursements.

            (3)    A regular trial balance of the individual client trust ledgers
      shall be maintained. The total of the trial balance must agree with the
      control figure computed by taking the beginning balance, adding the total
      of moneys received in trust for the client, and deducting the total of all
      moneys disbursed. On a monthly basis, a lawyer shall conduct a
      reconciliation for each fiduciary account.      The reconciliation is not
      complete if the reconciled total cash balance does not agree with the total

                                         19
      of the client balance listing. A lawyer shall preserve for a period of five
      years copies of all records and computations sufficient to prove
      compliance with this requirement.

       (f)    The records required by this [rule] Rule may be maintained in [electronic
or] hard copy form[.] or by electronic, photographic, or other media provided that
the records otherwise comply with this Rule and that printed copies can be
produced. Whatever method is used to maintain required records must have a
backup so that the records are secure and always available. If records are kept only
in electronic form, then such records shall be backed up, on a separate electronic
storage device, at least [monthly] at the end of any day on which entries have
been entered into the records [on a separate electronic storage device].

       (g)   [The records required by this rule may be subject to subpoena and
must be produced in connection with an investigation or hearing pursuant to
these rules.] The records required to be maintained by Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 shall be
readily accessible to the lawyer and available for production to the Pennsylvania
Lawyers Fund for Client Security and the Office of Disciplinary Counsel in a
timely manner upon request or demand by either agency made pursuant to these
Enforcement Rules, the Rules of the Board, the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for
Client Security Board Rules and Regulations, agency practice, or subpoena.

             (1)    Upon a request by Disciplinary Counsel under this subdivision
      (g), which request may take the form of a letter to the respondent-attorney
      briefly stating the basis for the request and identifying the type and scope
      of the records sought to be produced, a respondent-attorney must produce
      the records within ten business days after personal service of the letter on
      the respondent-attorney or after the delivery of a copy of the letter to an
      employee, agent or other responsible person at the office of the
      respondent-attorney as determined by the address furnished by the
      respondent-attorney in the last registration statement filed by the
      respondent-attorney pursuant to Enforcement Rule 219(d), but if the latter
      method of service is unavailable, within ten business days after the date of
      mailing a copy of the letter to the last registered address or addresses set
      forth on the statement.

             (2)  When Disciplinary Counsel’s request or demand for Pa.R.P.C.
      1.15 records is made under an applicable provision of the Disciplinary
      Board Rules or by subpoena under Enforcement Rule 213(a), the
      respondent-attorney must produce the records and must do so within the
      time frame established by those rules.

             (3)   Failure to produce Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 records in response to a
      request or demand for such records may result in the initiation of proceedings
      pursuant to Enforcement Rule 208(f)(1) or (f)(5) (relating to emergency
      temporary suspension orders and related relief), the latter of which specifically
      permits [d]Disciplinary [c]Counsel to commence a proceeding for the temporary
      suspension of a respondent-attorney who [refuses] fails to [comply with a
      valid subpoena] maintain or produce Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 records after receipt of

                                          20
      a request or demand authorized by subdivision (g) of this Rule or any
      provision of the Disciplinary Board Rules. If at any time a hearing is held
      before the Board pursuant to Enforcement Rule 208(f) as a result of a
      respondent-attorney’s alleged failure to maintain or produce Pa.R.P.C. 1.15
      records, a lawyer-Member of the Board shall be designated to preside over
      the hearing.

             Note: If Disciplinary Counsel files a petition for temporary
             suspension, the respondent-attorney will have an
             opportunity to raise at that time any claim of impropriety
             pertaining to the request or demand for records.

***

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