THE FLORIDA BAR EX REL. WOLFE
Citation | 767 So.2d 1174 |
Decision Date | 14 September 2000 |
Docket Number | No. SC94573.,SC94573. |
Parties | THE FLORIDA BAR re Joe Rawls WOLFE. |
Court | United States State Supreme Court of Florida |
Roland D. Waller of Waller & Mitchell, New Port Richey, Florida, for Petitioner.
John F. Harkness, Jr., Executive Director and John A. Boggs, Staff Counsel, Tallahassee, Florida; and Thomas E. DeBerg, Assistant Staff Counsel, Tampa, Florida, for The Florida Bar, Respondent.
This proceeding is before the Court on a petition to review the referee's findings of fact and recommendation that Joe Rawls Wolfe's petition for reinstatement to the practice of law be denied. In 1995, Wolfe was suspended from the practice of law for three years. See Florida Bar v. Wolfe, 664 So.2d 250 (Fla.1995). We have jurisdiction. Art. V, § 15, Fla. Const. For the reasons expressed herein, we reject the referee's factual findings and recommendation and order that Wolfe be reinstated as an active member of The Florida Bar.
In October 1995, Wolfe and counsel for the Bar signed a conditional guilty plea for consent judgment. On November 16, 1995, this Court accepted the plea in an order in which this Court suspended Wolfe from the practice of law for three years to be followed by three years of probation.
In the plea, Wolfe stipulated to the following facts. Wolfe was trustee of the Baumgardner Trust, which a deceased client, Richard B. Baumgardner, Sr., had created for his children. Wolfe took funds from the Baumgardner Trust and used them without the consent of trust beneficiaries to purchase mortgage receivables from a real estate development company in which Wolfe owned a seventy-nine percent interest. Wolfe later, without notification to or consent from the trust beneficiaries, loaned part of the trust's funds to an apparel company in which he owned a fifty-percent interest. Wolfe also loaned himself money from his attorney trust/escrow account. Wolfe admitted to violating the following Rules Regulating the Florida Bar: rule 4-1.15(a) ( ); rule 4-1.15(b) ( ); 4-8.4(a) ( ); rule 5-1.1(a) ( ); rule 5-1.1(e) ( ); rule 5-1.2(c)(1)(b) ( ); rule 5-1.2(c)(2) ( ); rule 5-1.2(c)(4) ( ).
In the Plea, Wolfe and the Bar agreed to the following discipline:
The plea provided that, upon reinstatement, Wolfe is to be placed on probation for three years with conditions that during the probationary period, he undergo full review by the Law Office Management and Advisory Service (LOMAS) of the Bar and comply at his own expense with LOMAS recommendations. Other conditions of probation are that Wolfe shall advise the Bar upon the opening of any trust account, shall submit quarterly reports in affidavit form to the Bar detailing financial transactions and record keeping, and shall certify that he has complied with all trust accounting records and procedures as required by the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar. Wolfe is also to be subject to random trust account audits during the term of the probation and must complete a trust accounting course.
The record reflects that prior to the filing of the plea, a civil action was filed against Wolfe on behalf of the Baumgardner Trust. This action resulted in a jury verdict in favor of the Trust of $1.5 million compensatory damages and $3 million punitive damages. A settlement of $850,000 was paid in July 1998, and Wolfe received a release from further civil liability.
Wolfe filed his motion for reinstatement on December 22, 1998. The reinstatement referee held a hearing at which Wolfe testified along with his character witnesses and creditors. The Bar presented testimony of the attorney representing the beneficiaries of the Baumgardner Trust. Three of the beneficiaries testified. In a report dated September 16, 1999, the referee found that Wolfe was not fit to resume the practice of law in that he failed to present evidence of an unimpeachable character. The referee made the following findings of fact, in relevant part, as to Wolfe's fitness as to reinstatement:
The referee concluded, "I recommend that the Petitioner not be reinstated at this time."
Wolfe challenges the referee's factual findings and recommendation, claiming that the referee's finding that Wolfe has failed to present evidence of an unimpeachable character is not supported by the record and is contradicted by the referee's own findings. Wolfe argues that his efforts to restructure his finances and to reimburse the Baumgardner Trust during his suspension show that he does have unimpeachable character. Wolfe notes that the referee expressly stated that Wolfe has met the conditions imposed during suspension and the procedural requirements of rule 3-7.10 and has shown "clear evidence of Petitioner's good reputation for professional ability" as well as his "lack of malice and ill feeling toward those involved in the disciplinary proceeding." Wolfe also notes that the referee found that Wolfe "has made the appropriate assurances as to his sense of repentance and his desire to conduct his law practice in an exemplary fashion in the future." Wolfe also states that he has paid $850,000 in restitution; he disputes the referee's finding that his "claims regarding his efforts to fully reimburse the trust beneficiaries prior to the case going to trial were not...
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