Attorney Grievance Comm. for the First Judicial Dep't v. Bernier (In re Bernier)
Decision Date | 17 September 2019 |
Docket Number | M–2967 |
Citation | 177 A.D.3d 37,107 N.Y.S.3d 24 |
Parties | In the MATTER OF Melissa P. BERNIER, (admitted as Melissa Philomene Bernier), an attorney and counselor-at-law: Attorney Grievance Committee for the First Judicial Department, Petitioner, v. Melissa P. Bernier, Respondent. |
Court | New York Supreme Court — Appellate Division |
Jorge Dopico, Chief Attorney, Attorney Grievance Committee, New York (Yvette A. Rosario, of counsel), for petitioner.
Respondent pro se.
Hon. Judith J. Gische, Justice Presiding, Marcy L. Kahn, Jeffrey K. Oing, Anil C. Singh, Peter H. Moulton, Justices.
Per Curiam Respondent Melissa P. Bernier was admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York by the Second Judicial Department on September 16, 2009, under the name Melissa Philomene Bernier. At all times relevant to this proceeding, respondent maintained an office for the practice of law within the First Judicial Department.
In 2018, the Attorney Grievance Committee (AGC) commenced this proceeding alleging that respondent was guilty of professional misconduct in violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct ( 22 NYCRR 1200.0 ) rules 1.3(a) ( ), 1.3(c) ( ), 1.15(a) ( ), 1.15(b) ( ), 8.4(c) ( ), and 8.4(h) ( ). The allegations arise from, inter alia, her intentional conversion of funds, remitted by a criminal client, which were intended for payment of a court imposed fine. Respondent submitted an answer in which she admitted some of the alleged facts, denied others, and denied the charges.
A Referee conducted a liability hearing on December 17, 2018. After waiting approximately 40 minutes for respondent, and without receiving any communication from her, the Referee accepted documentary evidence from the AGC and sustained all six charges. The next day the AGC received a telephone call from an unidentified woman who claimed that respondent had been hospitalized at NYU–Langone Medical Center at the time of the hearing. The AGC contacted four NYU affiliated hospitals and confirmed that respondent was not a patient at any of them on the date of the liability hearing.
A sanction hearing was held on January 30, 2019 at which respondent appeared pro se and testified on her own behalf. During respondent's testimony, the Referee requested that she submit, among other things, documents evidencing her hospitalization on the date of the liability hearing. While respondent represented that she would do so, she did not. Respondent was also permitted to submit character letters within 30 days after the sanction hearing but none were submitted. The AGC submitted additional documents relevant to sanction and a post-hearing memorandum urging disbarment; respondent did not submit a post-hearing memorandum. By report dated May 16, 2019, the Referee recommends respondent be disbarred.
The Committee now moves, pursuant to 22 NYCRR 603.8–a(t) and 1240.8(b), for an order affirming the Referee's report in full. Respondent, who is pro se, was served with the motion but has not submitted a response.2
The facts are undisputed. In or about September 2014, respondent was retained to represent a client who had been charged with burglary in the second degree. It was alleged that the client, on a tourist visa to the United States from Martinique, had traveled by bus to Montreal and on the way back to New York City, he departed the bus and was arrested after he broke into a private home in upstate New York and went to sleep.
The client's sister had previously used respondent's services and retained her to represent the client. Respondent charged the client a flat fee of $10,000, plus travel expenses, of which all but approximately $200 was paid. Respondent negotiated a plea agreement whereby Baldara pled guilty to the reduced charge of burglary in the third degree and was sentenced to time served and fined $1,375 which was to be paid within one year. After his release from prison in December 2014, the client returned to Martinique.
On July 24, 2015, respondent's client wired her $1,375 to pay his fine which funds were deposited into respondent's operating/business account. During the period at issue, respondent maintained an escrow account at Citibank. Respondent failed to promptly pay the fine. Instead, she used $827 of this client's funds to pay for business and personal expenses unrelated to his case. Over one year later, in September 2016, after the client complained to AGC, respondent sent a certified check in the amount of $1,375 to the Warren County Clerk to satisfy his fine.
Based on the documentary evidence, the Referee found respondent intentionally converted and misappropriated client funds in violation of rules 1.15(a), 8.4(c), and 8.4(h); by depositing her client's funds into her operating/business account she failed to segregate client funds, as well as, commingled client and business funds in violation of rules 1.15(a) and 1.15(b); by not paying her client's fine until September 2016, respondent failed to act with reasonable diligence and promptness and intentionally failed to carry out a contract of employment in violation of rules 1.3(a) and 1.3(c); and by falsely affirming in her 2015 OCA registration that she was in full compliance with rule 1.15 when in fact she had engaged in the escrow related misconduct at issue, she violated rule 8.4(c).
During the sanction hearing respondent testified that she would provide documentation showing that she had been hospitalized at the time of the liability hearing, as well as, documents pertaining to her client's criminal case, but she never did so.
As to the conduct at issue, respondent admitted that she failed to deposit her client's funds into her escrow account, as she should have done, and improperly used the funds without permission to meet her business and personal expenses which were unrelated to his case because she "was juggling too much at the time" and not "paying proper attention to what I should have at the time."
Respondent attributed her delay in paying her client's fine to the fact that he did not include the $15 wire transfer fee with his $1,375 payment, and she declined to advance such because he was purportedly hostile towards her. However, she ultimately paid the fine in September 2016 after he filed his complaint against her so as to bring their relationship to a close.
In his report, the Referee opined that the record amply supported the charges.
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