In the Matter of David Romano Isola (Review Dept. 2022) 5 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 911
Charges Brought Against Respondent
The case arose from coverage and remediation disputes tied to a former dry-cleaning site. After a key “diner meeting,” Isola pursued insurance coverage and engaged with counterparties and regulators to protect the client family’s interests. OCTC charged him with moral turpitude and appearing without authority, as well as failing to communicate significant developments and failing to promptly convey written settlement offers (former Rule 3-510). The thrust was that Isola acted without clear client authorization and made misrepresentations in the course of coverage efforts.
Defenses and Arguments
Isola contended that an attorney–client relationship formed at the diner meeting, that he had actual or implied authority to take reasonable steps to secure coverage and defend claims, and that any inconsistencies were the product of mistake rather than dishonesty. He emphasized tangible results: insurer defense contributions and an eventual settlement that limited client exposure to insurance proceeds.
The Review Department largely agreed. It found the relationship and scope of authority existed and concluded the record did not clearly and convincingly prove moral turpitude or unauthorized appearance. However, it determined that Isola violated 6068m by failing to keep his clients informed about significant developments for extended periods and violated former 3-510 by not promptly relaying written settlement offers. The court reiterated that communicating with an insurer is not a substitute for communicating with the client.
Mitigation
Mitigation was substantial: more than two decades of discipline-free practice, positive character testimony, successful client outcomes, and acceptance of responsibility regarding communication lapses (including acknowledging that he should have memorialized the retainer and documented updates). Aggravation was moderate, focused on multiple failures within a single matter over a lengthy period.
Outcome & Sanction Analysis
Weighing culpability limited to communications violations against strong mitigation and low recurrence risk, the Review Department imposed a 30-day actual suspension, with a stayed suspension and probation conditions. The court expressly rejected moral-turpitude and authority-based counts but emphasized that lawyers must directly inform clients of significant events and promptly convey written offers. The sanction aligns with comparable cases where communication failures—not performance failures—were at issue and where attorneys presented strong mitigation.
Sanctions Summary
| Tribunal | State Bar Court – Review Department (Honn, J.) |
| Culpability (Found) | 6068m (failure to communicate); former Rule 3-510 (written offers) |
| Dismissed/Not Proven | 6106 (moral turpitude); appearing without authority |
| Mitigation | 21-year discipline-free record; good character; acceptance of responsibility; favorable client outcome |
| Outcome | 30-day actual suspension; stayed suspension; probation with conditions |
