Court Opinion

ID: 6323300
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-03-15 13:08:44.771097+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:34.650659
License: Public Domain

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as Ohio
State Bar Assn. v. Pro-Net Fin., Inc., Slip Opinion No. 2022-Ohio-726.]

                                          NOTICE
      This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
      advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
      promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
      South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
      formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
      the opinion is published.

                           SLIP OPINION NO. 2022-OHIO-726
      OHIO STATE BAR ASSOCIATION v. PRO-NET FINANCIAL, INC., ET AL.
  [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
 may be cited as Ohio State Bar Assn. v. Pro-Net Fin., Inc., Slip Opinion No.
                                      2022-Ohio-726.]
Unauthorized practice of law—The general provision of Civ.R. 8(B) that averments
        in a pleading are admitted when not denied in a responsive pleading has no
        application in default proceedings involving the unauthorized practice of
        law—The record does not contain sufficient evidence to support a finding
        that respondents engaged in the unauthorized practice of law—Charges of
        unauthorized practice of law dismissed.
  (No. 2016-1913—Submitted November 10, 2021—Decided March 15, 2022.)
   ON FINAL REPORT by the Board on the Unauthorized Practice of Law of the
                           Supreme Court, No. UPL 2012-05.
                                 ____________________
                                SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

        Per Curiam.
        {¶ 1} In a six-count amended complaint filed with the Board on the
Unauthorized Practice of Law on November 14, 2013, relator, Ohio State Bar
Association, alleged that respondents, Nationwide Support Services, Inc.
(“Nationwide”), Pro-Net Financial, Inc., and Pro-Net’s president, Andrew J. Bloom
(the “Pro-Net respondents”), had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law in
Ohio by counseling Ohio debtors and negotiating debt settlements on behalf of six
Ohio debtors.1
        {¶ 2} In an August 26, 2021 revised report, the board found that Nationwide
and the Pro-Net respondents had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by
providing advice and counsel to six Ohio customers regarding their debts and
negotiating, drafting, and reviewing settlement agreements on behalf of those
customers. For the reasons that follow, we find that there is insufficient evidence
in the record to support the board’s findings that Nationwide and the Pro-Net
respondents engaged in the unauthorized practice of law in Ohio. Accordingly, we
dismiss this case.
                                   Procedural History
        {¶ 3} After relator filed its amended complaint, the Pro-Net respondents
entered into stipulations of fact and agreed that they had engaged in the
unauthorized practice of law in Ohio.
        {¶ 4} Although the amended complaint was served on Nationwide by
certified mail, Nationwide did not answer it or otherwise participate in the
proceedings before the board. Consequently, relator filed a motion for default
against Nationwide.
        {¶ 5} Relying primarily upon the stipulations of the Pro-Net respondents
and Civ.R. 8(D), which provides that “[a]verments in a pleading to which a

1. Although the amended complaint also charged Marissa Bloom with engaging in the unauthorized
practice of law, relator voluntarily dismissed the charges against her.

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                                     January Term, 2022

responsive pleading is required * * * are admitted when not denied in the responsive
pleading,” a panel of the board found that the Pro-Net respondents and Nationwide
had engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. The panel recommended that the
respondents be enjoined from performing legal services in Ohio and that we assess
civil penalties of $60,000 against Nationwide and $12,000 jointly and severally
against the Pro-Net respondents.                The board adopted that report and
recommendation.
        {¶ 6} In December 2017, we remanded the matter to the board “for
supplementation of the record in accordance with the evidentiary standard set forth
in former Gov.Bar R. VII(7)(B)(2) (now Gov.Bar R. VII(12)(B)(2)), which requires
motions for default in unauthorized-practice-of-law proceedings to be supported by
sworn or certified documentary prima facie evidence in support of the allegations
of the complaint. 151 Ohio St.3d 1478, 2017-Ohio-9185, 87 N.E.3d 1274.
        {¶ 7} In July 2019, relator and counsel for the Pro-Net respondents
resubmitted their agreed stipulations to the board, along with ten exhibits identified
therein—including some of the documents that had previously been submitted in
support of relator’s motion for default against Nationwide. Relator and the Pro-Net
respondents also submitted affidavits from their counsel detailing how those
exhibits had been authenticated and averring that relator and the Pro-Net
respondents agreed that all the exhibits submitted with the stipulations “are
admissible for purposes of any and all matters regarding this case.”
        {¶ 8} A panel of the board found that those exhibits had been properly
authenticated and admitted into evidence, and it affirmed the report that was
originally filed with this court on December 30, 2016.2 On August 26, 2021, the

2. For purposes of this opinion, we assume—without deciding—that these documents have been
properly authenticated, and we decide this case on the merits. See State ex rel. Montgomery v. R &
D Chem. Co., 72 Ohio St.3d 202, 204, 648 N.E.2d 821 (1995), quoting DeHart v. Aetna Life Ins.
Co., 69 Ohio St.2d 189, 193, 431 N.E.2d 644 (1982) (“ ‘Fairness and justice are best served when a
court disposes of a case on the merits’ ”).

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                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

board submitted its revised final report to this court, once again finding that
Nationwide and the Pro-Net respondents had engaged in the unauthorized practice
of law by counseling, advising, and negotiating debts on behalf of the six identified
Ohio customers.
          The Board’s Findings of the Unauthorized Practice of Law
       {¶ 9} The board found that Pro-Net had been a closely held corporation that
had been formed under the laws of California and that had done business in Ohio.
Bloom, a California resident, was the sole shareholder and president of Pro-Net
until the company ceased operation in August 2010. Pro-Net provided debt-
negotiation services for customers in various states through its business relationship
with Nationwide, which is also a California corporation. None of the respondents
is an attorney licensed to practice law in the state of Ohio.
       {¶ 10} In 2007, the Pro-Net respondents, without the benefit of legal
counsel, entered into a contract with Nationwide. As Bloom understood the
relationship, Pro-Net agreed to serve as a marketing entity, screening and enrolling
customers in Nationwide’s debt-negotiation program. Nationwide provided the
enrollment materials that Pro-Net sent to prospective customers and managed the
database in which it required Pro-Net to enter basic customer information. Once
Pro-Net completed the data entry, Nationwide took over the customer’s account
and maintained complete control over the services that it provided. As Bloom
explained it, Pro-Net’s function was “to enroll customers and provide those
enrollments to Nationwide for them to do everything else.”
       {¶ 11} Bloom stated that to effectuate this business relationship,
Nationwide drafted a complex series of agreements through which customers
provided a limited power of attorney to Pro-Net and Pro-Net provided a limited
power of attorney to Nationwide. Under Nationwide’s agreement with Pro-Net,
Nationwide agreed to engage in debt-negotiation services as Pro-Net’s agent. Thus,
it appeared to customers and creditors that Pro-Net was providing the debt-

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                               January Term, 2022

negotiation services when, according to Bloom, Nationwide was actually the
exclusive provider of those services.
       {¶ 12} Pro-Net acknowledged that it had had approximately 90 Ohio
customers, including the six identified in relator’s amended complaint. In addition,
the Pro-Net respondents stipulated that from 2008 through 2010 they had rendered
legal services to the six identified Ohio customers through Pro-Net’s agent,
Nationwide. Specifically, they stipulated that through the actions of Nationwide,
they had counseled those customers and negotiated the resolution of the customers’
debts with their creditors or counsel for their creditors. They also stipulated that
they had rendered legal services through their agreement with Nationwide, because
Nationwide had contacted counsel for one customer’s creditors and represented that
it was the customer’s “attorney in fact” with the authority to represent him and
negotiate on his behalf with regard to a disputed debt. In addition, the Pro-Net
respondents stipulated that Nationwide charged another customer a $300 fee for, in
part, referring him to an attorney. They further acknowledged that while acting on
Pro-Net’s behalf, Nationwide caused substantial harm to another customer by
retaining funds that Nationwide had represented would be paid to her creditors.
       {¶ 13} The board concluded that Pro-Net, Bloom, and Nationwide had
engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by counseling, advising, and
negotiating debts on behalf of the six identified Ohio customers.
                       The Unauthorized Practice of Law
       {¶ 14} The unauthorized practice of law is the rendering of legal services
for another by any person not admitted or otherwise certified to practice law in
Ohio. Gov.Bar R. VII(31)(J). This includes the “ ‘preparation of pleadings and
other papers incident to actions and special proceedings and the management of
such actions and proceedings on behalf of clients before judges and courts.’ ” Land
Title Abstract & Trust Co. v. Dworken, 129 Ohio St. 23, 28, 193 N.E. 650 (1934),
quoting People v. Alfani, 227 N.Y. 334, 337-338, 125 N.E. 671 (1919). In Ohio

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                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

State Bar Assn. v. Kolodner, 103 Ohio St.3d 504, 2004-Ohio-5581, 817 N.E.2d 25,
¶ 15, we stated that the unauthorized practice of law also “includes representation
by a nonattorney who * * * negotiates on behalf of an individual or business in the
attempt to resolve a collection claim between debtors and creditors.”
       {¶ 15} But in Ohio State Bar Assn. v. Watkins Global Network, L.L.C., 159
Ohio St.3d 241, 2020-Ohio-169, 150 N.E.3d 68, ¶ 10, we clarified that Kolodner
did not enunciate a rule under which any person who negotiates a debt settlement
on behalf of another without being licensed to practice law in the state of Ohio
engages in the unauthorized practice of law. We found that such a per se rule would
be incorrect and inconsistent with our later pronouncement in Cleveland Bar Assn.
v. CompManagement, Inc., 111 Ohio St.3d 444, 2006-Ohio-6108, 857 N.E.2d 95,
which established that (1) a person may negotiate a debt on behalf of another
without practicing law and (2) whether a person engages in the practice of law while
negotiating a debt depends on whether that person’s actions include the rendering
of legal services (e.g., giving legal advice, drafting legal documents, raising legal
defenses). Watkins Global at ¶ 12. Ultimately, “ ‘an allegation that an individual
or entity has engaged in the unauthorized practice of law must be supported by
either an admission or by other evidence of the specific act or acts upon which the
allegation is based.’ ” Id. at ¶ 20, quoting CompManagement at ¶ 26.
       {¶ 16} Applying those precepts, we determined that two of the respondents
in Watkins Global—a company and its sole owner—did not engage in the practice
of law by presenting offers to their customers’ creditors, leaving it up to the
creditors to accept the offer or make a counteroffer, and relaying any counteroffer
to the customer. Id. at ¶ 14-15. In contrast, we found that the same Watkins Global
respondents did engage in the unauthorized practice of law when they advised and
counseled a customer to make a payment on a real-property loan, even though the
customer was not the borrower, and made a legal recommendation to the creditor’s

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                               January Term, 2022

counsel that the matter needed to be resolved outside of the foreclosure
proceedings. Id. at ¶ 18.
       {¶ 17} Under Watkins Global, the determination whether Nationwide and
the Pro-Net respondents engaged in the unauthorized practice of law depends on
the evidence of the specific acts that they undertook on behalf of their customers.
                                Standard of Proof
       {¶ 18} In most cases, Gov.Bar R. VII(12)(G) and (I) require proof by a
preponderance of the evidence that a respondent has engaged in the unauthorized
practice of law. Nationwide, however, is in default of answer and has not otherwise
appeared in this proceeding.     Although Civ.R. 8(D) generally provides that
averments in a pleading are admitted when not denied in a responsive pleading, the
Rules of Civil Procedure have limited application in proceedings regarding the
unauthorized practice of law. Gov.Bar R. VII(12)(C) provides that in unauthorized-
practice-of-law proceedings, “[t]he hearing panel shall follow the Rules of Civil
Procedure and Rules of Evidence wherever practicable, unless a provision of
[Gov.Bar R. VII] or Board hearing procedures and guidelines provide otherwise.”
(Emphasis added.) In addition, Gov.Bar R. VII(12)(B)(2) specifies that a motion
for default shall contain “[s]worn or certified documentary prima facie evidence in
support of the allegations of the complaint.” Because Gov.Bar R. VII(12)(B)(2)
“provide[s] otherwise,” the general provision of Civ.R. 8(B) has no application in
default proceedings involving the unauthorized practice of law.          Therefore,
Nationwide’s failure to answer relator’s complaint may not be deemed equivalent
to an admission of the facts alleged in relator’s complaint. Furthermore, we note
that Nationwide was not a party to the agreed stipulations in this case and may not
be bound by the factual stipulations contained therein. See, e.g., Thomas v. Wright
State Univ. School of Medicine, 2013-Ohio-3338, 3 N.E.3d 211, ¶ 17 (10th Dist.)
(“Factual stipulations are not binding on a non-party”).

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                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

  The Evidence in this Case Does Not Support the Board’s Conclusion that
   Nationwide and the Pro-Net Respondents Engaged in the Unauthorized
                                 Practice of Law
       {¶ 19} Here, the board found that Nationwide and the Pro-Net respondents,
through the actions of Nationwide, (1) negotiated and settled debts on behalf of
Ohio customers with their creditors and counsel for their creditors, (2) provided
advice and counsel to Ohio customers about debt settlements, and (3) drafted,
reviewed, and validated settlement agreements and term agreements.
       {¶ 20} Yet relator has presented no direct evidence from any of
Nationwide’s customers, their creditors, or their creditors’ counsel who participated
in those alleged negotiations. Instead, relator has submitted the affidavit and
deposition testimony of Bloom along with the stipulations of the Pro-Net
respondents. None of that evidence provides sufficient detail for this court to
independently determine whether Nationwide’s conduct crossed the line from
permissible debt-settlement negotiations to the rendering of legal services that
constitute the unauthorized practice of law under Watkins Global, 159 Ohio St.3d
241, 2020-Ohio-169, 150 N.E.3d 68. On the contrary, the evidence offers little
more than conclusory statements about the general nature of the actions that
Nationwide took on behalf of its Ohio customers.
       {¶ 21} For example, Bloom averred:

       [Nationwide’s senior officer Joanne Garneau] represented to me that
       [Nationwide is] the back-end company. That [it] take[s] care of all
       customer service related issues. That once the enrollment process is
       completed by [Pro-Net] the customer is handed over to
       [Nationwide] and provided the customer was approved by
       [Nationwide, it] would then take care of everything else from soup

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                                January Term, 2022

       to nuts there on out.        All customer contact, all customer
       communication all debtor communication, all everything.

       {¶ 22} Bloom further averred that Nationwide (1) “engaged in negotiations
with third parties including legal counsel and creditors on behalf of a customer in
an effort to negotiate and/or settle the customer[’]s debt,” (2) “advise[d] client[s]
with respect to good faith offers of settlement and * * * negotiated settlement
agreements on behalf of Ohio clients,” and (3) indicated to Bloom that as part of its
services to customers, it would “verify that settlement terms were properly
documented” to ensure that creditors can never claim that the customers’ accounts
had not been adequately resolved.
       {¶ 23} In addition to Bloom’s affidavit and testimony being devoid of any
detail regarding the specific content of the communications that Nationwide had
with its customers, their creditors, or their creditor’s counsel, his affidavit
demonstrates that he had no specific knowledge of what Nationwide did on behalf
of its customers once Pro-Net enrolled them in the debt-resolution program.
Indeed, Bloom averred that Pro-Net “had no actual knowledge and no way to obtain
actual knowledge about [Nationwide’s] negotiations and/or settlement agreements
and/or communications with creditors and/or communications with clients and/or
communications with creditors’ counsel.”        Consequently, many of Bloom’s
averments are nothing more than inadmissible hearsay. As such, they do not
constitute proper sworn or certified evidence and may not support a finding that
Nationwide engaged in the unauthorized practice of law.
       {¶ 24} Even though Bloom specifically disavowed any personal knowledge
of Nationwide’s communications with or on behalf of its customers, he also averred
that Nationwide, using the name Pro-Net, “would send settlement agreements to
customers and would explain to the customers[:] * * * ‘[c]ompany will advise client
of all good faith offers made by creditors and collectors and of their acceptance of

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                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

any offers made by company on behalf of client.’ ” (Emphasis added.) Bloom
further averred that those settlement agreements explained: “Company may
negotiate what is known as a term settlement on client’s behalf. This is a settlement
in which the company negotiates a lower amount than what is owed and makes
payment arrangements with the creditors over time.” However, Bloom’s deposition
testimony and the exhibits submitted therein show that the content of those
averments is taken directly from a document titled “Debt Settlement Agreement”
that Nationwide, using the name Pro-Net, used to formalize its relationship with its
customers. Notably, Bloom did not suggest in either his affidavit or his deposition
testimony that Nationwide drafted any settlement agreements to memorialize the
terms of any negotiated debt settlement—an action that would clearly fall within
the definition of providing legal services. Nor has relator submitted copies of any
such documents for this court’s review.
       {¶ 25} Moreover, the scope of the representation as set forth in
Nationwide’s agreement with its customers does not appear to exceed the range of
actions delineated in Watkins Global as permissible debt-settlement negotiations
by nonattorneys, because there is no indication that Nationwide intended to use any
legal tactics or methods during negotiations to effect results for its customers. See
Watkins Global, 159 Ohio St.3d 241, 2020-Ohio-169, 150 N.E.3d 68, at ¶ 11-12.
On the contrary, Nationwide’s agreement expressly states: “In the event a creditor
or debt collector pursues legal remedies against Client, neither this Agreement nor
the Service includes legal representation.” And there is no evidence in this record
to establish that Nationwide engaged in any specific acts that exceeded the scope
of that agreement.
       {¶ 26} Although the Pro-Net respondents have stipulated to additional facts
that are not contained in Bloom’s affidavit or deposition testimony, those
stipulations are similarly infirm. They identify general types of conduct that
Nationwide purportedly engaged in, such as faxing powers of attorney, advising,

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                                January Term, 2022

counseling, and validating and negotiating the resolution of debts. Again, there is
no description of the advice that Nationwide gave to its customers or how
Nationwide went about conducting negotiations on behalf of the customers—just
the bare and erroneous legal conclusion that the general actions of giving
unspecified advice and counsel and negotiating debt settlements necessarily
constitute the unauthorized practice of law.       And we are not bound by the
stipulations of the parties on that issue of law. See, e.g., State ex rel. Steffen v.
Myers, 143 Ohio St.3d 430, 2015-Ohio-2005, 39 N.E.3d 483, ¶ 16 (“no court may
be bound by any agreement, stipulation, or concession from the parties as to what
the law requires”); accord State ex rel. Finkbeiner v. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Elections,
122 Ohio St.3d 462, 2009-Ohio-3657, 912 N.E.2d 573, ¶ 18 (“this court is not
bound by the parties’ stipulation on [a] legal issue”).
       {¶ 27} In light of these significant evidentiary deficiencies regarding the
specific actions that Nationwide undertook on behalf of its customers, we cannot
find that relator has submitted sufficient sworn or certified evidence to support its
motion for default against Nationwide. Nor can we find that relator has proved by
a preponderance of the evidence that the Pro-Net respondents engaged in the
unauthorized practice of law through the actions of Nationwide.
                                    Conclusion
       {¶ 28} We dismiss this case.
                                                                   Cause dismissed.
       O’CONNOR, C.J., and KENNEDY, DEWINE, DONNELLY, STEWART, and
BRUNNER, JJ., concur.
       FISCHER, J., not participating.
                                _________________
       Fanger & Associates, L.L.C., and Jeffrey J. Fanger; and Jean Desiree
Blankenship, Bar Counsel, for relator.

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                           SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

       McNeal, Schick, Archibald, & Biro Co., L.P.A., and Marilyn J. Singer, for
respondents Andrew J. Bloom and Pro-Net Financial, Inc.
                             _________________

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