
    In the Matter of J. Quintus Cohen, an Attorney.
    First Department,
    November 5, 1915.
    Attorney at law disciplined — delay in paying over money to client.
    Attorney at law severely censured for depositing moneys received in settlement of a client’s claim in his own account, for using the proceeds, and for delay in paying over to his clients.
    It is the duty of an attorney to keep his client’s moneys safely and apart from his own funds.
    Application on the report of official referee upon charges against the respondent, an attorney and counselor at law, for professional misconduct.
    
      Einar Chrystie [John O. Jackson of counsel], for the petitioner.
    
      Michel Kirtland, for the respondent.
   Per Curiam:

This is a disciplinary proceeding prosecuted by the Association of the Bar of the City of New York against the respondent, who has been a member of the bar for upwards of twenty-five years. The undisputed evidence shows that the respondent has been guilty of an offense which we have frequently condemned in unequivocal language, to wit, that of appropriating to his own use the money of his clients.

In May, 1913, a proceeding in bankruptcy was pending in the United States District Court, based on a petition prepared in respondent’s office and filed by him as attorney for the petitioning creditors. Prior to that time respondent had represented the company or its owners as its general attorney and counsel. The receiver appointed in the bankruptcy proceeding retained respondent as his counsel, and, after being appointed trustee, continued the retainer.

Among the creditors of the company were six employees, all Greeks, only one of whom, a man named Chiricos, could speak English with any degree of fluency. Shortly after the Star Candy Company had gone into bankruptcy, one of the owners of the concern brought these Greeks down to respondent’s office for the purpose of having claims prepared and presented against the company. Respondent being at that time the attorney for the receiver considered that he could not also appear as attorney for the Greek claimants, and so turned them over to a Mr. Hall, a friend and former business associate, who prepared and filed the claims. While the Greek claimants were formally represented by Mr. Hall as their attorney it seems quite clear that it was respondent upon whom they relied and that he so understood. Indeed when dividends were declared some time afterwards Mr. Hall turned the dividend checks over to respondent, leaving it to him to settle with the claimants. The men were sent for and instructed to sign the checks and return them to respondent for collection. This they did and respondent deposited the money in his own account in the bank, commingling it with his own funds. This was about the 1st of June, 1913. On July 29,1913, Chiricos received from respondent a check for thirty-six dollars and forty-nine cents, being one-half of the dividend allowed on his claim. Payment of this check was refused by the bank for lack of funds. Later, on August 29, 1913, respondent gave Ohiricos another check for the same amount which was paid. There seems to have been a dispute between respondent and the two Greeks, whose cases were dwelt upon before the referee, as to the amount of fees, respondent claiming to be entitled to one-half of the dividends, although no agreement to that effect had previously been made. The result was that from May to August these men were unpaid. In the meantime respondent had deposited their checks in his own account and had spent or used the money for his own purposes, his balance in the bank being almost continuously less than what he admitted to be due to the claimants.

It would not be a fair inference from the evidence that respondent intended at any time to permanently misappropriate the amounts which he admitted to be due to the claimants, but he was certainly censurable for the careless manner in which he handled the money intrusted to him, and for so dealing with it that it might have been lost to the claimants who had trusted him and whom he had undertaken to serve. The amounts involved were small, and it is probable that there was at no time any appreciable danger that respondent could not eventually and by some means, even if he had not the money in the bank, have made out to pay the claimants what was due them, but he should have realized that his ability to. pay the money of another which he had misappropriated, was not equivalent to keeping it safely and apart from his own funds, as it was-his clear duty to have done.

That the respondent was guilty of professional misconduct cannot be denied, but in view of the apparent absence of a dishonest motive, we are of opinion that it will be sufficient if he is severely censured for his unprofessional and blameworthy conduct. It is so ordered.

Present — Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ.

Respondent censured. Order to be settled on notice.  