People v. Vigil, 96SA361

Decision Date16 December 1996
Docket NumberNo. 96SA361,96SA361
Citation929 P.2d 1311
Parties20 Colorado Journal 1862 The PEOPLE of the State of Colorado, Complainant, v. Russell Edward VIGIL, Attorney-Respondent.
CourtColorado Supreme Court

Linda Donnelly, Disciplinary Counsel, John S. Gleason, Deputy Disciplinary Counsel, Denver, for Complainant.

Russell Edward Vigil, Denver, Pro Se.

PER CURIAM.

A hearing panel of the supreme court grievance committee approved the findings and recommendations of a hearing board that the respondent in this lawyer discipline proceeding be disbarred. Neither the respondent nor the deputy disciplinary counsel has excepted to the panel's action. We accept the hearing panel's recommendation.

I

The respondent was admitted to practice law in Colorado in 1976. Because he failed to answer the formal complaint filed by the deputy disciplinary counsel, a default was entered against him, and the allegations of fact contained in the complaint were deemed admitted. C.R.C.P. 241.13(b); People v. Barr, 855 P.2d 1386, 1386 (Colo.1993). Based on the respondent's default and the evidence presented by the complainant, the board made the following findings.

On June 2, 1992, Melissa Doll was involved in a serious automobile accident. She remained in a coma for about two weeks and was hospitalized for a total of three months in Colorado and Pennsylvania. She was twenty-four years old. Ms. Doll was incapacitated for several months and she continues to suffer from memory loss and other residual effects of her head injury.

The respondent knew Ms. Doll from the athletic club where she worked. Shortly after the accident, the respondent petitioned the probate court to become Ms. Doll's temporary conservator, after consulting with her father who lived in Pennsylvania. John Doll was ill at the time and could not stay in Colorado to assist his daughter. The respondent did not request that a guardian ad litem be appointed. He was approved as temporary conservator on June 15, 1992. The respondent's petition for appointment requested limited authority to confer with Ms. Doll's employer, negotiate PIP claims with the insurance company, and make initial contact with the insurance companies regarding their liability to Ms. Doll. The respondent's conservatorship was valid until September 15, 1992.

Melissa Doll's brother, Steve, was also a passenger in the car, but he was less seriously injured. The respondent entered into an agreement with the brother to handle his personal injury claim.

In July 1992, the respondent retained James DeRose, his father-in-law and a lawyer, to handle Melissa Doll's personal injury claim. The respondent, on the protected person's behalf, signed a contingent fee agreement which provided that his father-in-law would receive 20% of any settlement amount recovered. The respondent neither obtained nor sought the required court approval to enter into the contingent fee agreement.

The driver's insurance policy had a maximum liability limit of $300,000 per accident, without regard to the number of claimants. Melissa Doll and her brother therefore had to compete for their share of that amount. The respondent eventually settled Steve Doll's claim for $80,000. In September 1992, the respondent's father-in-law settled the protected person's claim for $220,000. DeRose performed limited services to obtain his $44,000 fee, consisting of a brief exchange of correspondence with the insurer. Before the insurer issued the settlement check, but after the respondent's temporary conservatorship had expired, the respondent and John Doll authorized the appointment of DeRose as trustee for Melissa Doll.

DeRose drafted the trust agreement that the respondent signed as conservator to create the trust, without the approval of the court. While the order of temporary conservatorship did not specifically require court approval for such action, the probate court expected the respondent to obtain court approval for extraordinary actions and expenditures. In addition to naming the respondent's father-in-law as trustee, the trust provided that the corpus and income were to be applied by the trustee solely for the benefit of Melissa Doll until her death, until she reached the age of forty, or until the corpus was exhausted. DeRose had "uncontrolled discretion" to make investments, purchase property, to loan, mortgage, lease, acquire or dispose of trust property, and to receive reasonable compensation for his duties as trustee.

The hearing board found, however, that the trust drafted by DeRose did not include language protecting the beneficiary from being disqualified for Medicaid benefits. Because Melissa Doll has no other assets or income, the board concluded that the protection of the trust assets and Medicaid eligibility were major considerations in the creation of the trust and acceptance of a settlement. As a result of these problems in the drafting of the trust signed by the respondent, Melissa Doll became liable to the State of Colorado for Medicaid payments made to her and she was potentially disqualified from receiving further benefits.

About one month after the trust was funded, the respondent's wife received $70,000 from the trust for a mortgage on a commercial building that the respondent uses in part as a law office. The respondent's father-in- law, the trustee, drafted the note. The respondent and his wife made regular payments on the note until the property was refinanced in summer 1994. The net proceeds from the 1994 sale were deposited into the trust.

DeRose also authorized the use of $73,000 of trust funds for the purchase of the house of respondent's parents. The house was then leased back to the parents for an amount below market value. The respondent's parents failed to make rental payments to the trust for a period of several months, but the trustee brought no enforcement action against respondent's parents.

The respondent signed a Medicaid application which notified him that he was required by law to report any personal injury settlement to the Department of Social Services. Nevertheless, the respondent failed to report the settlement.

Many of Melissa Doll's medical bills that were not covered by insurance were paid by Medicaid. Eighteen months after the respondent's application for Medicaid, social services began to inquire into the case. In April and October 1993, a Colorado Senior Assistant Attorney General sent letters to the respondent regarding the state's claims. The respondent did not reply. The attorney general then sent a demand letter to DeRose for the amount paid by Medicaid on behalf of Melissa Doll. In early March 1994, the respondent and his father-in-law appeared at the attorney general's office to discuss the state's claim. The attorney general noted that the trust drafted by DeRose did not shield the beneficiary from Medicaid collections. Apparently out of sympathy for Melissa Doll, the attorney general agreed to accept $47,000 in full settlement of the Medicaid claims, paid from trust funds. Doll eventually was reimbursed by the state after her subsequent lawyer discovered an error in the calculations.

After the respondent's temporary conservatorship terminated, he continued to perform various legal tasks for Melissa Doll, including communicating with social services and the Office of the Attorney General about the Medicaid issue.

At no time did the respondent disclose any of the potential or real conflicts of interests to Melissa Doll, nor did he divulge his relationship with DeRose. The respondent did not reveal to the beneficiary of the trust the manner in which he had elected to use her trust funds, including the use of the funds by his relatives.

After the automobile accident, Melissa Doll moved to Pennsylvania to recuperate near her brother and her ill father. Her father died in April 1993. Following her father's death, and having received no funds from the respondent, Ms. Doll was compelled to work as a nanny to earn room and board. She tried many times to contact the respondent, usually without success. When he did talk to her, he did not give her specific details, but told her that the trust funds were tied up in real estate. The respondent never gave her the information necessary for her to ascertain the status of her trust funds.

Sometime during this time period, Melissa Doll gave her permission for another lawyer to investigate the matter. Upon learning the nature of the investments made with her trust funds, the new lawyer filed actions in the probate court and the district court against the respondent and DeRose.

The respondent did not cooperate in the probate matter and he was held in contempt for failing to provide an accounting of Ms. Doll's funds as ordered by the court. The respondent was ordered to pay Ms. Doll's new lawyer $550, but that amount has never been paid. The respondent afterwards moved to recuse the probate judge because of the contempt proceeding and the matter was transferred to another judge. The respondent thereby caused delay in the dissolution of the trust, contrary to Melissa Doll's interests.

The respondent also delayed the civil action. Although ordered to participate in alternative dispute resolution, he waited until the day before the scheduled meeting before indicating that he could not afford his portion of the fee, and the meeting was canceled. He did not respond to discovery requests and ultimately defaulted. He also filed for bankruptcy shortly before the trial date, resulting in a continuance. The bankruptcy proceeding was later dismissed because the respondent failed to submit required documents. The hearing board found that the respondent's intention in filing the bankruptcy was to delay the civil case.

According to the board, the complainant's expert testified "that the respondent's conduct in representing Ms. Doll was so egregious and wanton as to be considered reckless. The purpose of a conservatorship is to protect the ward,...

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3 cases
  • People v. Calvert
    • United States
    • Colorado Supreme Court
    • November 15, 2011
    ...and handling legal and investment matters without the requisite experience, where the attorney had no prior discipline). 80.929 P.2d 1311 (Colo.1996). 81.Id. at 1312–14. 82.Id. at 1315. 83.19 A.3d 431, 437–38 (Md.2011). 84.Id. at 439–40. 85.Id. at 447–55. 86.275 S.C. 269, 269 S.E.2d 765, 76......
  • People v. DeRose, 97SA160
    • United States
    • Colorado Supreme Court
    • September 22, 1997
    ...respondent's conduct, as reflected in the findings of the hearing board, is not as aggravated as that of his son-in-law in People v. Vigil, 929 P.2d 1311 (Colo.1996), and therefore we do not find disbarment Accordingly, it is hereby ordered that James M. DeRose be suspended from the practic......
  • People v. Vigil, 97SA241
    • United States
    • Colorado Supreme Court
    • October 27, 1997
    ...Denver, Pro Se. PER CURIAM. The respondent in this lawyer discipline proceeding was disbarred on December 16, 1996. See People v. Vigil, 929 P.2d 1311 (Colo.1996). Following the respondent's disbarment, this disciplinary proceeding was submitted to the court. A hearing panel of the supreme ......
2 books & journal articles
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    • United States
    • Colorado Bar Association Colorado Lawyer No. 41-9, September 2012
    • Invalid date
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  • Chapter 40 - § 40.17 • ATTORNEY VIOLATIONS OF PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY RULES
    • United States
    • Colorado Bar Association Wade/Parks Colorado Law of Wills, Trusts, and Fiduciary Administration (CBA) Chapter 40 Fiduciary and Attorney Misconduct
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    ...judge, magistrate, and guardian ad litem of judicial misconduct and conspiracy. Discipline: Disbarred. People v. Russell E. Vigil, 929 P.2d 1311 (Colo. 1996); 945 P.2d 1385 (Colo. 1997) Violation: Pattern of multiple neglect, self-dealing (with family members) and conflicts of interest as a......

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