In re Harris Lindsey ( 2020 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 17-BG-859
    IN RE QUINNE HARRIS-LINDSEY, RESPONDENT.
    A Member of the Bar of the
    District of Columbia Court of Appeals
    (Bar Registration No. 451238)
    On Report and Recommendation of the
    Board on Professional Responsibility
    (Board Docket No. 15-BD-042)
    (DDN 384-02)
    (Argued September 26, 2018                             Decided December 10, 2020)
    Hamilton P. Fox, III, Disciplinary Counsel, with whom Jennifer P. Lyman,
    Senior Assistant Disciplinary Counsel at the time the brief was filed, for petitioner.
    Abraham C. Blitzer for respondent.
    Before GLICKMAN, THOMPSON and BECKWITH, Associate Judges.
    Opinion for the court by Associate Judge THOMPSON.
    Concurring opinion by Associate Judge GLICKMAN, in which Associate
    Judge BECKWITH joins, at page 27.
    THOMPSON, Associate Judge: Between 1994 and 2002, respondent Quinne
    Harris-Lindsey was the required second signatory for withdrawals from a
    guardianship-estate account. The other required signatory was the court-appointed
    guardian of the estate account, who was respondent’s cousin and client. The
    2
    record in this case establishes that on three occasions in 1995, 1996, and 1999,
    with the client’s consent, respondent authorized withdrawals from the account to
    pay her fees for the representation, and did so without prior court approval. The
    primary issue before us is whether respondent thereby misappropriated estate-
    account funds.
    “Our disciplinary cases define misappropriation as any unauthorized use of
    client’s funds entrusted to the lawyer[.]” In re Anderson, 
    778 A.2d 330
    , 335 (D.C.
    2001) (italics added, internal quotation marks and brackets omitted). A majority of
    the Board on Professional Responsibility (the “Board”) concluded that Disciplinary
    Counsel failed to prove misappropriation by clear and convincing evidence. In
    summary, the Board majority found that neither the court (the Superior Court
    Probate Division) nor the client had entrusted any funds to respondent and that
    respondent’s withdrawal of the funds was not unauthorized because it was made
    with the client’s consent.
    Disciplinary Counsel, petitioner in this matter, urges us to hold that on the
    facts described above, respondent committed negligent misappropriation.
    Disciplinary Counsel emphasizes that “[b]ut for [respondent’s] signature, the funds
    3
    [in question] would [have] remain[ed] intact” and that respondent’s client had “no
    right to disburse the[] [funds] on her own authority.” Acknowledging, however,
    that this court has not previously found misappropriation in a case in which two
    signatures were required for disbursal of funds from an account, Disciplinary
    Counsel states that “it may be appropriate to apply the ruling [he urges]
    prospectively only.”
    Also before us is a recommendation by a plurality of the Board that we
    sanction respondent only by imposing an informal admonition for what the Board
    unanimously found was her failure to satisfy Rule of Professional Conduct 1.15
    (a) 1 and (former) D.C Bar Rule XI, § 19(f) record-keeping requirements in
    connection with her representation of the guardian of the estate account. 2 Like the
    1
    The Board commented that the record “is silent” as to why Hearing
    Committee Number One (“the Hearing Committee”), elected to base its record-
    keeping-violation finding on § 19(f) and not also on Rule 1.15(a). The Hearing
    Committee did note that § 19(f) was deleted effective March 1, 2016, as
    duplicative of the “complete records requirement of Rule 1.15 (a).”
    2
    In addition, a majority of the Board determined, after considering a charge
    arising out of the same nucleus of facts, that respondent’s conduct did not seriously
    interfere with the administration of justice within the meaning of Rule 8.4(d),
    finding that it “did not taint the judicial process in more than a de minimis way.”
    We accept that finding and the Board’s finding as to the record-keeping violation
    without further discussion.
    4
    Board plurality, Disciplinary Counsel states that an informal admonition is
    warranted for respondent’s record-keeping violation.
    As explained below, one Division member agrees with the Board majority
    that misappropriation was not proven in this case. A majority of the Division
    concludes that facts satisfying the elements of misappropriation were proven by
    clear and convincing evidence, but that the Division’s interpretation as to whether
    there was “entrustment” of the estate-account funds and use of the funds “without
    authorization” should apply only prospectively.        Accordingly, the Division
    declines to impose a sanction on respondent for misappropriation. The Division is
    also unanimous in accepting the recommended sanction of an informal admonition
    for respondent’s record-keeping violation.
    I. Factual and Procedural History
    In 1994, the Probate Division appointed respondent’s cousin, Anglia
    Fulwood, to be guardian of the estate account of Ms. Fulwood’s minor child D.F.,
    who had been designated by a deceased relative as the beneficiary under a life
    insurance policy. Ms. Fulwood asked respondent to be her attorney in connection
    5
    with the estate account. Respondent, who had been admitted to the Pennsylvania
    Bar in 1993 but at the time had not yet been admitted in the District of Columbia,
    was working as a paralegal at a personal injury law firm and was able to get a
    partner at the firm to agree to enter an appearance on behalf of Ms. Fulwood. The
    Partner disclaimed substantive involvement with the probate matter, telling
    respondent “[t]his is your case, you handle it.”
    The Hearing Committee and Board found that in December 1994,
    respondent deposited the insurance proceeds into an account at Independence
    Federal Savings Bank on behalf of the minor, with Ms. Fulwood identified as the
    guardian and with an opening balance of $40,760.75 from the life insurance policy
    proceeds. As shown on the signature card for the estate account, two signatures —
    Ms. Fulwood’s and respondent’s — were required for withdrawals from the
    account.    The signature card for a second, money market fund account,
    “denominated [D.F.], minor/Anglia Fulwood, gdn./Quinne Harris Lindsey, Atty.,”
    which was opened at the same bank, likewise required both Ms. Fulwood’s and
    respondent’s signatures for withdrawals. 3         The record contains documentary
    3
    The second account was funded when, as further described infra,
    respondent repaid amounts that she had accepted as attorney’s fees, but that had
    been withdrawn from the first account for that purpose without court approval.
    6
    evidence that respondent and Fulwood co-signed checks making withdrawals, and
    the Hearing Committee found that both women’s signatures were required for
    withdrawals from the accounts.
    Respondent told Ms. Fulwood that she did not want to be compensated for
    her work in connection with the estate account. However, after respondent spent
    considerable time and effort on the matter, “Ms. Fulwood insisted that respondent
    be paid, and respondent relented.” In 1995 and 1996, without prior court approval,
    but with Ms. Fulwood’s consent, respondent withdrew two installments of attorney
    fees from the estate account: $1,650, in the form of a cashier’s check, on or about
    December 27, 1995, and an additional $1,400, also as a cashier’s check, on or
    about February 27, 1996. The Board found that Disciplinary Counsel did not
    present evidence that respondent “could have obtained or did obtain a cashier’s
    check from the estate accounts without the client’s signature on the check request
    form.” In addition, at various times, Ms. Fulwood withdrew funds from the estate,
    without prior court approval but with respondent’s consent, to pay for expenditures
    related to the minor. Respondent filed a petition for “retroactive approval” of Ms.
    Fulwood’s 1996 withdrawals totaling $1,400. The Probate Division granted the
    petition in an April 11, 1997, order that did not include any admonition that prior
    court approval was required before expenditures could be made. As to her own
    7
    withdrawals in 1995 and 1996, respondent testified to her understanding at the time
    that “according to [a form issued by] the Register of Wills, attorney’s fees are
    included under the category of administrative expenses and therefore do not
    require an order of the [c]ourt for disbursement.”
    On June 3, 1996, respondent was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar.
    Sometime before March 1997, respondent spoke with a Probate Division employee
    who told her that prior court approval was required to withdraw attorney fees.
    That same month, respondent filed an accounting for the period of October 6,
    1995, through December 31, 1996, in which she reported the two disbursals for
    attorney fees, stated that she had been unaware that prior court approval was
    required for the corresponding withdrawals, and informed the court that she had
    since reimbursed the estate for the two payments. 4 The Hearing Committee found
    that Respondent repaid $3,069.46 for the two checks previously issued to her
    (including a $19.46 charge for a withdrawal penalty) into the money market
    account at Independence Federal Savings Bank.
    4
    On March 13, 1997, respondent also filed a praecipe with the Probate
    Division noting the withdrawal of the supervising attorney (the partner from her
    law firm) and indicating that respondent would continue as sole counsel to the
    guardian, Ms. Fulwood.
    8
    In December 1997, respondent filed an accounting covering the period from
    January 1 through September 30, 1997, and disclosed an $800 cash disbursement
    to Ms. Fulwood, made from one of the estate accounts in February 1997. On or
    about March 3, 1998, Ms. Fulwood filed a petition for retroactive approval of that
    disbursement, which the petition stated was used for a bond, child care expenses,
    school uniforms, and supplies. The Probate Division granted the petition the
    following week in an order that included the following admonition: “ORDERED,
    that Anglia Fulwood is admonished not to expend estate assets without prior court
    authorization.” The court mailed a copy of the order to respondent, who testified
    that she was timely aware of it.
    On October 1, 1999, respondent received a payment of $2,250 paid by a
    check drawn on the estate account, signed by Ms. Fulwood and respondent. 5 The
    $2,250 withdrawal was not disclosed to the Probate Division until more than
    eighteen months later, when, on June 21, 2001, respondent submitted an
    accounting covering the period from October 1, 1999, to June 11, 2001. 6
    5
    Respondent testified before the Hearing Committee that she and Ms.
    Fulwood agreed that the latter would assign her commission as guardian to
    respondent “in lieu of attorneys’ fees.”
    6
    The dissenting Board members found that the October 1, 1999, withdrawal
    was respondent’s only act of reckless misappropriation.
    9
    On July 6, 2001, after reviewing that accounting, the Auditor for the
    Register of Wills requested that respondent explain both the October 1, 1999,
    withdrawal and her failure to file the estate’s tax return for 2000. The Auditor also
    advised the Probate Division that respondent had accepted fees without prior court
    approval and recommended that the court direct respondent to redeposit the $2,250
    fee and explain why the matter should not be referred to Disciplinary Counsel. On
    October 24, 2001, the Probate Court issued an order to that effect. On June 19,
    2002, the Probate Division denied respondent’s request to retain the compensation
    and referred the matter to Disciplinary Counsel for investigation. The court also
    issued an order on June 20, 2002, advising Ms. Fulwood that if she did not
    “proceed to obtain new counsel, a new guardian m[ight] be appointed in
    [Fulwood’s] place.” Thereafter, Ms. Fulwood wrote to the court requesting that
    respondent be removed as counsel. The Probate Division denied Ms. Fulwood’s
    request, explaining that respondent had been retained by Ms. Fulwood, not
    appointed by the court, such that it was “within the guardian’s sole authority to
    release [respondent].”
    After a period of unemployment during which she was without funds to
    repay the estate, respondent repaid the estate on December 8, 2003, “for all of the
    10
    unapproved fees.”      The net result was that respondent “did not receive any
    compensation in connection with her representation of Ms. Fulwood.”
    In 2002, the Office of Disciplinary Counsel opened an investigation into the
    matters referred by the Probate Division. The charges that Disciplinary Counsel
    eventually brought against respondent were the subject of a petition for negotiated
    discipline, in which respondent “admitted to three instances of negligent
    misappropriation of funds and additional violations in connection with her services
    as attorney for the guardian of the estate.” In re Harris-Lindsey, 
    19 A.3d 784
    , 784
    (D.C. 2011). The parties agreed to a one-year suspension from the practice of law
    with six months stayed in favor of one year of probation with conditions.
    Id. at 2.
    An Ad Hoc Hearing Committee conducted a limited hearing on July 7, 2009, 7 and
    recommended approval of the petition. Subsequently, this court referred the matter
    to the Board for its recommendation. On July 1, 2010, the Board issued a report
    recommending that the court reject the petition in favor of a contested discipline
    proceeding. Accepting the Board’s recommendation, we denied the petition for
    negotiated attorney discipline and remanded the matter for “the presentation of
    7
    See D.C. Bar Rule XI, § 12.1(c).
    11
    evidence in a contested proceeding,” citing the “insufficiency of the record . . . to
    permit a satisfactory determination of respondent’s culpability.”
    Id. at 785.
    After this court rejected the petition for negotiated discipline, Disciplinary
    Counsel filed a new Specification of Charges, charging respondent with violations
    of Rule 1.15(a) (intentional, reckless, or negligent misappropriation), D.C. Bar R.
    XI, Sec. 19(f) (failure to maintain complete records), and Rule 8.4(d) (conduct that
    seriously interfered with the administration of justice). The matter was assigned to
    Hearing Committee Number One. After an additional evidentiary hearing in July
    2015, the Hearing Committee found respondent’s testimony to be generally
    credible, attributing inconsistencies in her testimony to her difficulty with
    recollection of events that occurred between fifteen and twenty years ago, and
    found that Respondent had been fully cooperative with Disciplinary Counsel’s
    investigation and had had an “exemplary” career as a government attorney since
    2002. On the merits, the Committee found a Rule 19(f) record-keeping violation;
    found that the charge that respondent violated Rule 8.4(d) by seriously interfering
    with the administration of justice had not been proven by clear and convincing
    evidence; and found that respondent committed negligent misappropriation as to
    the 1995 and 1996 withdrawals to her fees and reckless misappropriation as to the
    12
    1999 withdrawal for the same purpose. The Hearing Committee recommended
    disbarment.
    On June 28, 2017, the Board issued its majority and plurality findings and
    recommendations that are the subject of this opinion. The Board majority found
    that the Hearing Committee’s credibility determination was “‘well-supported by
    substantial evidence” and adopted it.
    II. Standard of Review
    “When considering a Report and Recommendation from the Board on
    Professional Responsibility, we accept the findings of fact made by the Board
    unless they are unsupported by substantial evidence in the record, and shall adopt
    the recommended disposition of the Board unless to do so would foster a tendency
    toward inconsistent dispositions for comparable conduct or would otherwise be
    unwarranted.” In re Pleshaw, 
    2 A.3d 169
    , 172 (D.C. 2010) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). “While we defer to the Board’s findings of fact, we review the
    Board’s determinations of disciplinary violations de novo.”
    Id. III.
       Analysis
    13
    “[M]isappropriation” is “any unauthorized use of client’s funds entrusted to
    the lawyer, including not only stealing but also unauthorized temporary use for the
    lawyer’s own purpose, whether or not he derives any personal gain or benefit
    therefrom.”   In re Abbey, 
    169 A.3d 865
    , 872 (D.C. 2017) (brackets omitted)
    (quoting 
    Anderson, 778 A.2d at 335
    ). The three elements of misappropriation are
    (1) that client funds were entrusted to the attorney; (2) that the attorney used those
    funds for the attorney’s own purposes; and (3) that such use was unauthorized. In
    re Travers, 
    764 A.2d 242
    , 250 (D.C. 2000).              To prove misappropriation,
    Disciplinary Counsel bears the burden of establishing each element by clear and
    convincing evidence. 
    Anderson, 778 A.2d at 335
    .
    We observed in Travers that “whether an attorney who is a joint signatory
    on an estate account is ‘entrusted’ with the funds in that account . . . is not an easy
    question to 
    answer.” 764 A.2d at 250
    . Noting that the relevant case law was
    “sparse and inconclusive, especially on the question of whether the attorney must
    have exclusive control of client funds, as opposed to joint control with the
    representative of the estate” for there to be entrustment, we declined to answer the
    question and resolved the matter then before us on other grounds.
    Id. 14
    In the instant case, the members of the Board reached divergent conclusions
    about whether the estate account funds in this case were entrusted to appellant and,
    if so, whether her use of the funds was unauthorized. A majority of the Board
    reasoned that respondent’s receipt of three payments of fees and expenses from the
    estate accounts in 1995, 1996, and 1999, “undisputedly . . . with the client’s
    consent,”   “was wrongful” because there had not been the “required advance
    approval by the probate court.” 8 However, Disciplinary Counsel did not charge
    respondent with taking a wrongful fee, 9 and on the issue of whether respondent’s
    conduct constituted misappropriation, the Board majority found that it did not. It
    did not, the Board majority found, because the Probate Division had not appointed
    respondent as a fiduciary, and because client Fulwood “retained check-writing
    oversight by remaining as a signatory of the [estate] account[s],” with the result
    8
    As the basis of the prior-court-approval requirement, the Board majority
    cited Super. Ct. Probate R. 225(e)(1) (“[A]n attorney may petition for allowance of
    reasonable attorney’s fees for preparing pleadings filed with the Court and for
    other necessary legal services rendered to the fiduciary in the administration of the
    estate[.]”). The Board majority acknowledged that the rule does not explicitly state
    that court approval is required before making legal fee payments. The more clear
    authority in this case was the Probate Division’s 1998 order, of which respondent
    was aware, directing Ms. Fulwood not to withdraw funds without prior court
    authorization.
    9
    See Rule 1.5(a) (providing that “[a] lawyer’s fee shall be reasonable” and
    that the reasonableness of a fee is measured in part by reference to “limitations
    imposed . . . by the circumstances”). The petition for negotiated discipline
    included a Rule 1.5 illegal-fee charge, but Disciplinary Counsel did not include
    that charge in the Specification of Charges in this contested proceeding.
    15
    that respondent “could not issue a check without the client’s consent and
    participation.” The Board majority concluded that “[u]nder those circumstances,
    the payment of fees, with the client’s consent and participation but without prior
    court approval, was not a misappropriation of entrusted funds.”
    With regard to the 1995 and 1996 withdrawals by cashier’s checks, the
    Board majority found that the evidence fell “far short of clear and convincing
    evidence that the . . . cashier’s checks were taken from funds the client had
    ‘entrusted’ to [r]espondent.” Citing this court’s opinion in In re Arneja, 
    790 A.2d 552
    (D.C. 2002), the Board majority also concluded that respondent’s use of the
    funds was not unauthorized because it was made with the client’s consent. See
    id. at 556
    (“To establish misappropriation [Disciplinary] Counsel had to prove by
    clear and convincing evidence that the client did not consent to the attorney’s use
    of the funds.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). 10
    10
    The Board majority recognized that the parties’ arguments had not
    addressed the issue of whether entrustment and unauthorized use had been proven,
    but disagreed that there had been a waiver of those issues, determining that the
    issues involved questions of law that the parties could not waive even by
    stipulation. The Board cited its responsibility to ensure that its recommendations
    to this court “have a sound basis in law and fact.” Before us, the parties have not
    argued that these issues are waived.
    16
    Disciplinary Counsel asserts that “[e]ntrustment, in law practice, reflects the
    special protections that apply when a lawyer has authority over property belonging
    to someone else” and that there can be entrustment even when a lawyer does not
    have unilateral control over funds or other property.11 Disciplinary Counsel urges
    us to adopt “the common understanding of the term [“entrustment”], i.e., that
    “funds are entrusted to a lawyer whose signature is required for their disbursal”
    (even if the account requires two signatures for disbursal), such that the lawyer “is
    trusted with authority to prevent their unauthorized disbursal.” That was the case
    here, Disciplinary Counsel argues, because “[b]ut for [respondent’s] [] signature on
    the check,” the funds in question could not have been withdrawn. Disciplinary
    Counsel also argues that the elements of misappropriation were satisfied despite
    the client’s consent to withdrawal of the funds because the client “had no interest
    in the funds and no right to disburse them on her own authority,” such that her
    “acquiescence was of no moment.”           Disciplinary Counsel asserts that the
    misappropriation in this case was negligent misappropriation because it was a
    result of respondent’s misunderstanding about whether her fees could be treated as
    11
    Disciplinary Counsel’s brief also asserts that “[a] lawyer in possession of
    the funds of a client or a third person is entrusted with those funds.” However,
    Disciplinary Counsel retreated from that position during oral argument, conceding,
    for example, that a lawyer who is in possession of funds that a client or other
    person inadvertently left in the lawyer’s office has not necessarily been entrusted
    with those funds.
    17
    administrative expenses that did not require court approval in advance.          But
    Disciplinary Counsel urges this court to make clear that “[w]hen . . . funds belong
    to a guardianship estate, the lawyer cannot spend those funds for her legal fees
    without the prior agreement of the court.”
    The Division agrees that respondent withdrew funds without authorization
    because, in the context of a guardianship account (and to use the Hearing
    Committee’s words), “approval was the court’s and not the guardian’s to give.” As
    to whether the account funds were “entrusted” to respondent, the Division agrees
    with the Board’s observation that “[t]he law on this issue [is] nearly as ‘sparse and
    
    inconclusive,’” 764 A.2d at 250
    , as it was when this court issued its 2000 opinion
    in Travers.
    There is, however, some relevant guidance, and on the basis of that
    guidance, the author of this opinion agrees with the Board majority that the record
    evidence “falls short of clear and convincing evidence that [the amounts taken
    from the account to pay attorney’s fees to respondent] were taken from funds [that
    had been] ‘entrusted’ to [r]espondent.”       According to the general dictionary
    definition, to ‘entrust’ means to “give over (something) to another for care.” In re
    C.G.H., 
    75 A.3d 166
    , 172 (D.C. 2013) (quoting WEBSTER’S II NEW COLLEGE
    18
    DICTIONARY 231, 246, 384 (3d ed. 2005). Our case law does not define
    “entrustment” in the attorney discipline context, but we have said that “[t]he
    underlying purpose of . . . Rule 1.15 [] [the Rule of Professional Conduct
    pertaining to ‘safekeeping property’] is . . . to make it possible for a client to
    entrust property to the safekeeping of a lawyer with confidence that the funds will
    be as safe as they would be if the client herself were to continue to hold them.” In
    re Haar, 
    698 A.2d 412
    , 425 (D.C. 1997).
    Thus, entrustment of funds has to do with giving funds over to the care of an
    attorney with confidence that the funds will be as safe as they would be if the client
    were to continue to hold them. That understanding of the term is consistent with
    definitions of “entrustment” that have been employed by other courts. See, e.g.,
    United Specialty Ins. Co. v. Barry Inn Realty, Inc., 
    130 F. Supp. 3d 834
    , 839
    (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (explaining that “the term ‘entrust’ . . . means that the insured
    ‘surrender[ed] or deliver[ed] or transfer[red] . . . possession [of premises] with
    confidence that the property would be used for the purpose intended by the owner
    and as stated by the recipient.’”); Truck Ins. Exchange v. Bill Olinger Mercury,
    Inc., 
    495 P.2d 1201
    , 1204 (Or. 1972) (“‘Entrust,’ as defined by Webster’s New
    International Dictionary 855 (2d ed. 1961), is . . . ‘to commit or surrender
    (something) to another with a certain confidence regarding his care, use, or
    19
    disposal of it[.]’”); State v. Moss, 
    487 P.2d 1347
    , 1349 (N.M. Ct. App. 1971) (“The
    common meaning of ‘entrust’ is to . . . commit or surrender to another with a
    certain confidence regarding his care, use, or disposal.” (citing Webster’s Third
    New International Dictionary (1966)); cf. United States v. Whitlock, 
    663 F.2d 1094
    , 1109 n.4 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (implying that misappropriation requires “access
    in a situation of confidence”); Kafantaris v. Signore (In re Signore), 
    436 B.R. 71
    ,
    77 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2010) (stating, somewhat circularly, that entrustment entails
    “someone -- a lawyer for example, or a guardian, or a managing partner -- in whom
    confidence is reposed [being] entrusted with another person’s money for
    safekeeping.”).
    Clear and convincing evidence is “evidence that will produce in the mind of
    the trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the facts sought to be established.”
    In re Cater, 
    887 A.2d 1
    , 24 (D.C. 2005) (quoting In re Dortch, 
    860 A.2d 346
    , 358
    (D.C. 2004)). In the view of the author of this opinion, the evidence in this case
    cannot support a firm conviction that anyone entrusted the estate-account funds to
    respondent. The court did not appoint respondent as a fiduciary to safeguard the
    estate-account funds. As far as the record discloses, neither did the minor child
    commit the funds to respondent’s care.          Ms. Fulwood, respondent’s cousin,
    presumably trusted respondent to a certain extent since she asked her to represent
    20
    her in connection with her duties as court-appointed guardian of the estate account.
    But, according to respondent’s credited testimony, respondent told Fulwood that
    she “didn’t know how to do [the work entailed in setting up and administering an
    estate account],” and there was “some hesitation . . . within the family about not
    doing it.” Ms. Fulwood also knew that respondent was a newly-minted attorney
    with no experience with Probate Division matters, i.e., that this “was going to be
    [respondent’s] first case.” Respondent testified that she “took [Fulwood] with
    [her]” when she went to the Probate Division “because [Fulwood] was going to
    help me with this because I didn’t really know what we were doing.” In addition,
    Fulwood told respondent that she (Fulwood) “would handle the [estate] tax part.”
    Respondent further testified that her recommendation to Ms. Fulwood was
    that Fulwood retain a probate attorney, but Fulwood “said she would rather work
    with [respondent].” Disciplinary Counsel emphasizes that Ms. Fulwood was a
    “close relative, who relie[d] on the lawyer for advice” and “look[ed] to the lawyer
    for legal advice as to whether a disbursal may be properly made.”               But
    Respondent, whose testimony the Hearing Committee credited, told the Hearing
    Committee that she was “doing this with a family member who knew as much as I
    knew.”
    21
    In light of the foregoing, the record supports an inference that Ms.
    Fulwood’s engagement of respondent perhaps had more to do with saving money
    (Ms. Fulwood engaged her cousin as a lawyer who did not plan to charge a fee) or
    with identifying a lawyer with whom Fulwood had a comfortable relationship, than
    with any confidence regarding the safekeeping of the estate funds. Furthermore,
    while the record does not disclose why the two-signatures-required-for-withdrawal
    arrangement came to be, it permits an inference that Ms. Fulwood wanted or
    accepted the dual-signature requirement because it did not require her to vest
    confidence in respondent’s unilateral handling of the funds. 12 In short, there is not
    clear and convincing evidence that Ms. Fulwood gave respondent authority over
    the estate-account funds with confidence that respondent would keep the funds as
    safe as they would be if Ms. Fulwood alone had access to them.
    12
    The Hearing Committee found that “[t]he record does not show if
    [r]espondent was aware of or assented to” [Ms. Fulwood’s] $800 withdrawal in
    1997, which the Board found may have been accomplished through “a cash
    withdrawal from an ATM.” The implication is that Ms. Fulwood may have
    exercised unilateral control over the estate-account funds. However, the record
    does not establish or suggest that respondent ever did so or had the power to do so
    (except possibly in connection with a March 2, 2001, request to Independence
    Federal Savings Bank for account statements for the estate money market account
    for the period covering October 1999, wherein respondent directed the bank to
    “Please deduct any associated charges for this request from the above referenced
    money market fund”).
    22
    A majority of the Division, by contrast, agrees with Disciplinary Counsel on
    both prongs of his argument pertaining to the elements of misappropriation: (1)
    that a lawyer is “entrusted” with client or third party funds when she is imbued
    with authority to prevent their unauthorized use 13 (e.g., when her signature is
    required for their disbursal, even if (to quote Disciplinary Counsel) “a co-signature
    is required [along with the lawyer’s signature] before a check can be drawn on an
    . . . account”); and (2) that “unauthorized use” of funds can be established by
    proving either that the client did not consent to the attorney’s use of the funds, or,
    regardless of whether there is client consent, that the funds or assets were accessed
    without required advance approval by a court.          The Division majority also
    concludes that Disciplinary Counsel proved by clear and convincing evidence that
    respondent (negligently) misappropriated funds belonging to the estate account
    because she failed to exercise her authority to prevent (and indeed facilitated)
    withdrawal of the funds when there had been no prior court approval.
    Nevertheless, since this opinion announces for the first time what it means
    for client or third party funds to be “entrusted” to a lawyer and expands our
    application of the term “unauthorized use” for purposes of determining whether
    13
    This of course would include situations where the lawyer is the court-
    appointed fiduciary of an estate account.
    23
    funds have been misappropriated, the Division unanimously concludes that the
    holding in this case, concluding that there was misappropriation on the facts
    presented, should be prospective only. See In re Mance, 
    980 A.2d 1196
    , 1205-06
    (D.C. 2009) (concluding that the opinion would be given prospective effect only
    because the “application [of the governing Rule was] not clear on its face” and the
    understanding among lawyers was different from the interpretation the court
    announced).    As the Board majority noted, its conclusion that there was no
    misappropriation was supported by the interpretation in a number of prior Board
    decisions — including ones in which Disciplinary Counsel took no exception to
    the Board’s reasoning “that misappropriation does not occur when an attorney
    accepts a fee from a guardian or personal representative, issued without court
    approval, unless that client has also relinquished control of the account to the
    attorney” and its reasoning that “‘unauthorized use,’ in the context of
    misappropriation in estate cases, means without the client’s consent.” See, e.g., In
    re Fair, 
    780 A.2d 1106
    , 1110 n.10 (D.C. 2001) (“[T]he Board’s consistent position
    has been that no misappropriation is involved when an attorney who is not also the
    personal representative accepts payment of a fee without court authorization.”). As
    the Board also noted, case law and D.C. Bar ethics opinions state that an attorney
    to the fiduciary of an estate does not have a fiduciary relationship with the estate. 14
    14
    See Hopkins v. Akins, 
    637 A.2d 424
    , 428 (D.C. 1993) (“Whether a
    (continued…)
    24
    Applying the Division’s holding prospectively is also consistent with our
    purpose in disciplinary cases “not to discipline attorneys for inadvertent violations
    based on reasonable, but mistaken interpretations of the rules, but to make lawyers’
    obligations clear so that the interest of the public will be protected.” 
    Mance, 980 A.2d at 1206
    ; cf. 
    Haar, 698 A.2d at 424
    (mitigating sanction for negligent
    misappropriation because respondent believed “in good faith, although negligently,
    that he had an undisputed right” to withdraw money from the trust account to pay
    for his legal services).
    IV.    Sanction
    That brings us to what sanction is appropriate. In determining what sanction
    to impose, this court examines the “nature of the violation, aggravating and
    mitigating circumstances, the absence or presence of prior disciplinary sanctions,
    the moral fitness of the attorney, and the need to protect the legal profession, the
    (…continued)
    beneficiary of an estate may sue the attorney of the personal representative for
    negligence is an issue this court has not had occasion to decide. We now join the
    broad majority of the courts considering the question and hold, as a matter of law,
    that no such duty exists.”).
    25
    courts, and the public.” In re Samad, 
    51 A.3d 486
    , 499 (D.C. 2012) (quoting In re
    Steele, 
    868 A.2d 146
    , 153 (D.C. 2005)). The Board’s sanction recommendation, if
    any, “comes to us with a strong presumption in favor of its imposition.” In re
    Martin, 
    67 A.3d 1032
    , 1053 (D.C. 2013) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Here, respondent was retained to prepare and file the accountings related to
    the estate account. The nature of the violation for which we impose a sanction was
    that she “failed to submit her complete file, asserting that a number of the relevant
    documents had been lost in an office move.” For that record-keeping violation, the
    Board had no majority sanction recommendation. Disciplinary Counsel, noting
    that a “six-month suspension is the norm for attorneys who have negligently
    misappropriated client funds,” In re Herbst, 
    931 A.2d 1016
    , 1017 (D.C. 2007),
    acknowledges that “[t]here are no cases in which a sanction has been imposed on a
    record-keeping violation unaccompanied by other violations.”            Disciplinary
    Counsel emphasizes, however, the importance of compliance with record-keeping
    requirements, explaining that “failure to keep records protects misappropriating
    lawyers.” Disciplinary Counsel also acknowledges the many mitigating factors in
    this case: respondent acknowledged her misconduct and made no excuses for
    herself; she fully cooperated in Disciplinary Counsel’s investigation; she has no
    prior discipline; she did not benefit financially from her misconduct and undertook
    26
    the representation solely to assist a relative; this was her “first, and in all
    likelihood, only” probate matter; she did not hide her conduct from her client or the
    court; her former supervisor, aware of the charged violations, strongly commended
    her integrity as a lawyer; and her “record-keeping deficiencies did not hamper
    Disciplinary Counsel’s ability to investigate.” Disciplinary Counsel states that
    respondent’s   record-keeping    violation    warrants   an   informal   admonition.
    Respondent agrees.
    We, too, agree that on the facts of this case, an informal admonition is the
    appropriate sanction. Accordingly, Disciplinary Counsel is directed to issue an
    informal admonition to respondent for her record-keeping violation.
    Though we decline to sanction respondent for misappropriation, we reiterate
    what we stated above: that a lawyer is “entrusted” with client or third party funds
    when she is imbued with authority to prevent their unauthorized use, and that
    “unauthorized use” of funds can be established by proving either that the client did
    not consent to the attorney’s use of the funds or that the funds or assets were
    accessed without required prior approval by a court. If a lawyer fails to exercise
    her authority to prevent the unauthorized use of client or third-party funds, a
    finding of misappropriation may lie.
    27
    It is
    So ordered.
    GLICKMAN, Associate Judge, with whom BECKWITH, Associate Judge, joins,
    concurring: In all respects but one, we are in agreement with our colleague, Judge
    Thompson, as to the disposition of this matter. We write separately to explain
    more fully why we disagree with Judge Thompson’s conclusion that
    misappropriation of entrusted funds was not proved in this case.
    The prohibition on misappropriation derives from Rule 1.15 of the Rules of
    Professional Conduct. In pertinent part, Rule 1.15(a) provides that “[a] lawyer
    shall hold property of clients or third persons that is in the lawyer’s possession in
    connection with a representation separate from the lawyer’s own property.” The
    Rule goes on to specify how funds of clients or third persons in the lawyer’s
    possession must be maintained in trust and safeguarded. Comment [1] to this Rule
    further elaborates that “[a] lawyer should hold property of others with the care
    28
    required of a professional fiduciary. . . . This rule, among other things, sets forth
    the longstanding prohibitions of the misappropriation of entrusted funds . . . .” 1
    Our cases commonly state that misappropriation “includes any unauthorized
    use of a client’s entrusted funds,” 2 but the text of the Rule makes clear that a
    lawyer’s fiduciary duties also extend to entrusted funds (or other property) of non-
    clients. Thus, misappropriation also includes a lawyer’s unauthorized withdrawal
    of funds from an estate account entrusted to the lawyer without the required prior
    court approval, even though the funds are not client funds. 3
    The present case concerns respondent’s unauthorized withdrawal of funds
    from a guardianship-estate account. The account held money belonging to the
    guardian’s minor child. The guardian, Ms. Fulwood, was respondent’s client;
    1
    Although the Comment speaks of “entrusted” funds, the Rule itself does
    not use the word “entrusted”; it requires lawyers to safeguard any property of
    clients or third persons that is “in their possession in connection with a
    representation[.]” Because we conclude there was “entrustment” in this case, we
    need not consider whether the prohibition on misappropriation applies only to
    property “entrusted” to a lawyer.
    2
    In re Gray, 
    224 A.3d 1222
    , 1229 (D.C. 2020); cf. ante at 2 (“Our
    disciplinary cases define misappropriation as any unauthorized use of client’s
    funds entrusted to the lawyer[.]” (quoting In re Anderson, 
    778 A.2d 330
    , 335 (D.C.
    2001))).
    3
    See, e.g., In re Pleshaw, 
    2 A.3d 169
    , 173 (D.C. 2010).
    29
    respondent’s role was to counsel and guide her in fulfilling her legal duties as
    guardian. In connection with that representation, Ms. Fulwood requested that
    respondent be a second signatory on the estate account. Respondent acceded to
    that request, and her signature was required, along with that of the guardian, to
    withdraw any funds from it. Respondent and Ms. Fulwood thus had joint control
    over the account’s funds.    Acting in concert, but without the required court
    approval, they withdrew money from the account to pay respondent’s legal fees.
    The Board majority concluded that this withdrawal was not a
    misappropriation of “entrusted” funds. The Board reasoned that there had been no
    “entrustment” because the Probate Court did not appoint respondent as a fiduciary
    to safeguard the estate-account funds, and “[t]he client retained check-writing
    oversight by remaining as a signatory of the account; as a result, [r]espondent
    could not issue a check without the client’s consent and participation.”   On the
    premise that “entrustment of funds has to do with giving funds over to the care of
    an attorney with confidence that the funds will be as safe as they would be if the
    client were to continue to hold them,” 4 Judge Thompson likewise finds insufficient
    proof of entrustment. The evidence, she notes, “permits an inference that Ms.
    4
    Ante at 18.
    30
    Fulwood wanted or accepted the dual-signature requirement because it did not
    require her to vest confidence in respondent’s unilateral handling of the funds.” 5
    We think the Board majority and Judge Thompson take too narrow a view
    of entrustment. Their reasoning might be more persuasive if the funds in question
    belonged solely to the client, though even then we might question the implicit
    assumption that entrustment necessarily equates to “unilateral handling” of the
    client’s funds by the lawyer without any residual client oversight or control. But
    here the money in the estate account belonged to a third person—the client’s minor
    child. Respondent’s client, Ms. Fulwood, had fiduciary duties to that child with
    respect to the account, duties on which it was respondent’s role as counsel to
    advise her. By engaging respondent to serve, in connection with that assignment,
    as a second, required signatory on the account, Ms. Fulwood ceded some of her
    power over the account as guardian and vested shared control over it in respondent.
    She empowered respondent to exercise independent responsibility for the proper
    disposition and safeguarding of the money in the account.               Respondent’s
    acceptance of that role authorized and obligated her, in the words of the comment
    to Rule 1.15, to “exercise the care required of a . . . fiduciary” over the funds under
    5
    Ante at 21.
    31
    her partial control to prevent unauthorized withdrawals. If the basic definition of
    “entrust” is to “give over (something) to another for care,” 6 it is accurate to say that
    Ms. Fulwood “entrusted” respondent with the care of the funds in the estate
    account. This is especially true when, as here, Ms. Fulwood herself sought to
    disburse them.
    Thus, in principle, we conclude there is “entrustment” for purposes of Rule
    1.15 when a lawyer has only joint rather than exclusive control over funds
    belonging to someone else, if (in connection with a representation) the lawyer is
    vested with sufficient authority to prevent improper disbursal of the funds. Where
    the funds belong to a non-client, this is the case even if it is the lawyer’s client who
    shares control over them and agrees to the disbursal. Accordingly, to answer the
    specific question posed in this case and left open in In re Travers, 7 the court now
    holds that a lawyer is “entrusted” with funds in an estate account when, in
    connection with a representation, the lawyer’s signature is required for disbursal of
    the funds—even if the lawyer’s client is a cosignatory who approves the disbursal.
    This means the elements of misappropriation were satisfied in this case when
    6
    Ante at 17.
    7
    
    764 A.2d 242
    , 250 (D.C. 2000); see ante at 13.
    32
    respondent allowed funds to be withdrawn from a guardian-estate account to pay
    her legal fees without the required prior approval of the court.