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SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY Disciplinary Review Board Docket No. DRB 15-087 District Docket No. VIII-2013-0004E IN THE MATTER OF PAUL F. CLAUSEN AN ATTORNEY AT LAW Decision Argued: May 21, 2015 Decided: October 26, 2015 Valerie Ann Jackson appeared on behalf of the Ethics Committee. VIII Respondent appeared pro se. To the Honorable Chief Justice and Associate Justices of ~the Supreme Court of New Jersey. This matter was before us on a recommendation for a reprimand filed by the District VIII Ethics Committee (DEC). The formal ethics complaint charged respondent with violating RPC l.l(a) (gross neglect), RPC 1.3 (lack of diligence), and RP_~C 1.4(b) (failure to keep a client reasonably informed about the status of a matter).

For the reasons set forth below, we to impose a reprimand. was to the New bar in 1982. He is New Jersey. in the of law in Clinton, Hunterdon In 2013, received a by consent, for practicing law while ineligible for failure to pay the annual attorney assessment to the New Lawyers Fund for Client Protection. In re 213 N.J. 461 (2013). One additional ethics matter, alleging gross neglect and lack of diligence, currently pending against respondent is in the hearing stage. On July 8, 2008, Grace Casement, an elderly woman, slipped and fell in a ShopRite supermarket in Spotswood, New Jersey. Casement, who lived with her daughter and her son-in-law, Mitchell Lazar, informed them about the incident. Casement alleged that she had fallen because no warning had been posted to alert customers that a recently mopped floor was wet. Casement sustained visible injuries to her lower body and was examined by her general practitioner, who referred her to an orthopedist for further examination and treatment. Lazar recommended that Casement explore a personal injury claim against ShopRite. He had previously met respondent through a mutual friend and, thus, called respondent to discuss

Casement s claim. to Casement in the as by a executed on July 28, 2008, twenty after the fall. The in part, that respondent s law firm would "make a claim on [Casement s] behalf who are for your and... [and] will protect your legal rights and do all legal work to properly represent you in this matter." In a joint stipulation of facts entered at the DEC hearing, however, respondent admitted that he never filed a complaint against ShopRite on behalf of Casement and that, as a result, the statute of limitations period expired, barring her personal injury claim. Although Casement and respondent were the parties to the agreement, it is undisputed that Casement designated Lazar as her proxy to communicate with respondent and coordinate the legal matter on her behalf and that respondent accepted that arrangement. Initially, respondent was diligent and communicative with respect to the matter. Lazar provided respondent with Casement s medical records concerning the fall and, on November 17, 2009, respondent asked Casement s orthopedist to draft a report documentingher injuries and providing his medical opinion as to theircause. Respondent later asked the orthopedist whether additional findings could be

made. the was unwilling to modify his which was on 2, 2010, and which concluded that Casement s injuries were sustained as a result of the slip and fall at ShopRite. Accordingly, on May 7, 2010, Lazar sent an e-mail to "[i]t appears that we can nothing further from [the orthopedist s office]. Please proceed with [Casement s] case to the best of your ability with the information/documentation Respondent acknowledged available to us at this time." at the hearing that, despite the client s clear instructions to him to proceed with the litigation, he had failed to take action. Lazar was unaware of any statute of limitations issue, as respondent admitted that he does not routinely discuss such issues with clients. Lazar testified that, after May 7, 2010, all communication from respondent s office ceased and his repeated e-mails, calls, and letters requesting updates were never returned. Respondent admitted that, at some point, in the summer of 2010, he stopped communicating with Lazar. Lazar testified that his final requests for updates, four letters sent by certified mail to respondent in February and March of 2011, went unanswered. The March letter cautioned respondent that, if he did not promptly provide an update, Lazar would engage another 4

for Casement s claim, that he had no recollection of receiving these letters from Lazar. after March 2011, Lazar the law firm of grievant Kathleen Cavanaugh to pursue Casement s and was expired. Casement s that the statute of injury claim had ShopRite, thus, morphed into a malpractice claim against respondent. In defense of the of gross neglect and lack of diligence, respondent asserted that, in addition to his activity on the file detailed above, he had engaged ShopRite in settlement negotiations. According to respondent, ShopRite was unwilling to offer any compensation to Casement. Respondent, however, produced no evidence of negotiations with ShopRite and could not recall whether such negotiations were ever discussed with the client. He conceded that Casement s case would likely have gone to if a complaint had been filed. In mitigation, respondent asserted that he had made Casement whole by accepting "full "by making a financial responsibility" and with [Casement], to [her] full satisfaction." On cross-examination, however, respondent conceded that the settlement was negotiated after a default judgment had been entered against him~in the malpractice action brought by Cavanaugh on Casementls behalf; that the settlement 5

amount for both Casement s fall and his attorneys fees in the amount of $9,000 for the that the $25,000 for injury was by the in a for the case, which did not attend; and that, as of the ethics hearing date (June 17, 2014), respondent had not made a single payment towards satisfaction of the settlement, which had been negotiated in 2011. The DEC found Lazar s testimony credible and, thus, determined that respondent had not replied to, and had intentionally ignored, Lazar s numerous regarding the case since April 29, 2010. Although respondent refuted this specific timeframe, he offered no explanation for his cessation of all communication with Lazar, which he conceded occurred in the summer 2010, and was unable to produce evidence of any subsequent communications with Lazar. Unbeknownst to Lazar, by the time he sent the February and March 2011 letters to respondent by mail, the statute of limitations had long since expired, barring Casement s personal injury claim. For these reasons, the DEC determined that respondent violated RP ~C 1.4(b) by failing to communicate with Lazar and to keep him informed of the status of the matter.

The DEC further found that a conscious and lack of to the matter, allowing the statute of to expire, and court. The Casement of the to found that her case in was guilty of gross neglect, in violation of RPC l.l(a). The DEC did not address the RPC 1.3 charge included in the complaint. The DEC considered, in mitigation, that judgment had been entered against respondent for Casement s pain and suffering for the fall. After noting respondent s prior reprimand as an aggravating factor, the DEC recommended that respondent receive a "Public Reprimand." Following a de novo review of the record, we are satisfied that the DEC s conclusion that respondent was guilty of unethical conduct is fully supported by clear and convincing evidence. The DEC properly concluded that respondent violated both RP qc l.l(a) ~and RP qc 1.4(b). Morever, although the DEC did not address the charged violation of RP qc 1.3, the record contains clear and convincing evidence that respondent lacked diligence in handling Casement s matter, as well. Respondent that he failed to file a complaint on behalf of Casement prior

to the of the statute of and, thus, her injury claim against was time-barred. Casement retained respondent on July 28, 2008, only twenty days after she fell and injuries, thus, had the of all but three weeks of the statute of period to pursue Casement s Armed with an orthopedist s report opining that her injuries were directly caused by the fall and having been expressly instructed by the client, on May 7, 2010, to commence litigation, well before the statute of limitations expired, advance or preserve that claim. respondent did nothing to Although respondent asserted that he had engaged ShopRite in fruitless settlement discussions, he produced no evidence of them and "could not remember" whether he had even disclosed ShopRite s alleged position to his client. Beginning in April or May 2010, respondent inexplicably ceased all communication with Lazar. Respondent s failure to communicate with his client and his failure to even acknowledge Lazar s repeated attempts to contact him are well-documented in the record. As a result of that failure, and because respondent had not made Lazar aware of the statute of limitations, by the time Lazar retained Cavanaugh s firm, Casement s personal injury

claim already was time-barred. Thus, the DEC that respondent violated RPC 1.4(b).I concluded Respondent s clearly injured Casement by her of the opportunity to her case ShopRite to a jury. Although he later a settlement with her in 2011, that settlement was reached only after Casement had paid respondent s successor more than $9,000 to secure a default judgment against him in a malpractice action. Moreover,. although respondent asked us to consider his settlement with his client in mitigation, as of the June 17, 2014 DEC hearing date, he had made no payments to Casement towards satisfaction of their negotiated settlement. Conduct involving gross neglect, lack of diligence, and failure to communicate with clients ordinarily results in either an admonition or a reprimand, depending on the number of client matters involved, the harm to the clients, the attorney s i In this respect, although the record supports the conclusion that respondent also violated RP qc 1.4(c) (failure to explain a matter to the extent reasonably necessary to permit the client to make informed decisions regarding the representation) by his failure to inform his client of the approach and then the bar of the statute of the complaint did no~t charge respondent with a violation of that rule. Because R_~. 1:20-4(b) requires a complaint to "specify the ethical rules alleged to have been violated," we are precluded from making such a finding. For the same reason, we cannot find that respondent made a misrepresentation by silence, a violation of RPC 8.4(c), by failing to disclose to Casement that the statute of limitations had expired. 9

history, factors. and the presence of e g~, In the Matter of Robert A. or Unqvar, DRB 13-099 (September 30, 2013) (admonition on who, in a civil action, the to be dismissed for to with then failed to timely an appeal, in the appeal s dismissal; the attorney also failed to inform the client of his decision not to pursue the appeal or of the appeal s dismissal); In the Matter of James E. Younq, DRB 12-362 (March 28, 2013) (admonition imposed on who failed to file any pleadings in a workers compensation case and failed to appear at courtordered hearings, resulting in the petition s with prejudice for lack of prosecution; for the next five or six years, the attorney failed to advise the client of the dismissal and failed to reply to the client s repeated requests for information; the attorney later paid the client the amount he estimated the claim was worth ($8,500)); In the Matter of Edward Benjamin Bush, DRB 12-073 (April 24, 2012), 210 N.J. 182 (2012) (attorney admonished for failure to reply to his client s numerous multiple telephone calls and letters over an elevenmonth period and for lack of in handling the client s matter); In the Matter of James M. Docherty, DRB 11-029 (April 29, 2011) (admonition for attorney who filed an appearance in i0

his client s had a civil rights action and in the matter was to his client s behalf, who had with his client, what work he had done on him $i0,000, and to disciplinary investigator s requests for about the grievance); In re Uffelman, 200 N.J. 260 (2009) (attorney reprimanded for gross neglect, lack of diligence, and failure to communicate with a client; although the attorney had no disciplinary record, the reprimand was premised on the extensive harm caused to the client, who was forced to shut down his business for three months because of the attorney s failure to represent the client s interests diligently and responsibly); I ~n re Aranqure~n, 172 N.J. 236 (2002) (reprimand for attorney who failed to act with diligence in a bankruptcy matter, failed to communicate with the client, and failed to memorialize the basis of the fee; prior admonition and six-month suspension); In re to to the Zeitler, 165 503 (2000) (attorney who lacked diligence and failed to communicate with clients was reprimanded; extensive ethics history); and In re Gordon, 139 N.J ~. 606 (1995) (attorney reprimanded for lack of diligence and failure to communicate with the clients in two matters; in one of the the ii

reprimand). also Respondent s to return the file to the is not an prior in matter. and as the the conduct under of is in that Nothing in the record supports a finding of any mitigating factors. Respondent s failure to make a single payment towards satisfaction of the settlement with Casement, as of June 2014, after negotiating the settlement with her in 2011, belies his assertion that he had accepted "full financial responsibility. by making a financial arrangement with [Casement], to [her] full satisfaction... During oral argument, respondent represented to us that he had finally made settlement payments to Casement, but could not recall any details regarding the payments, including the balance owed to Casement. He offered to submit proof of such payments to us after the hearing and, by letter dated May 22, 2015, we required him to provide a written certification detailing all monetary payments made to Casement to date, including supporting documentation. On June 5, 2015, respondent submitted a certification in response, including a from Casement s attorney, which enclosed a warrant to satisfy the judgment against him. Respondent s submission did 12

not when were made to Casement, making it for us to whether had been during oral argument. this did establish that, as of June 23, 2014, still had not made a to Casement but rather had and was a plan. As of June 5, 2015, the was finally paid in full. Based on the vague details respondent provided at oral argument and in his post-hearing certification, a finding of mitigation is unwarranted. Like the attorney in Uffelman, respondent is guilty of gross neglect, lack of diligence, and failure to communicate with his client. His unethical conduct resulted in serious harm to Casement, who was unable to pursue her personal injury claim due to respondent s neglect and who was not made whole until four years after she had pursued a malpractice claim against respondent. For these reasons, we find that the appropriate quantum of discipline for respondent s misconduct is a reprimand. We further determine to require respondent to reimburse the Disciplinary Oversight Committee for administrative costs and 13

actual expenses incurred in the in R_~. 1:20-17. of this Disciplinary Review Board C. Chair as By: Chief Counsel 14

SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY DISCIPLINARY REVIEW BOARD VOTING RECORD In the Matter of Paul F. Clausen Docket No. DRB 15-087 Argued: May 21, 2015 Decided: October 26, 2015 Disposition: Reprimand Members Disbar Reprimand Dismiss Did not Frost X Baugh,,, Clark Gallipoli Hoberman X Rivera X Sin~er X Zmirich X Total: llen A. Chief Counsel