In the Matter of Richard K. Cacioppo (Review Dept. 1992) 2 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 128
Facts
Richard K. Cacioppo represented client Dana Laurita in a small personal injury case that settled for $1,800. He deducted his fee and expenses, then applied the remaining balance to legal services previously performed for the Laurita family. The client disputed his authority to do so and obtained a small claims judgment against him for $1,100, which Cacioppo later paid with interest. The State Bar charged him with misappropriation, misrepresentation, failure to communicate, and trust-account violations.
Findings and Discussion
The Review Department found the evidence insufficient to prove misappropriation or dishonesty by clear and convincing evidence. Testimony from the client’s father supported that authorization had been given. However, Cacioppo failed to provide a proper accounting and did not communicate clearly with the client about use of the funds, violating former Rule 8-101(B)(3) (accounting) and Rule 6-101(A)(2) (competence). Mitigation included good character, restitution, and pro bono service; aggravation included a prior public reproval and delayed cooperation.
Sanctions Table
| Charge | Findings | Mitigation | Aggravation | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Misappropriation of client funds | Evidence insufficient; client’s father confirmed authorization to apply funds. | Good character; restitution made; no harm to client. | Prior public reproval (1989). | Not sustained. |
| Failure to account | No written accounting or communication clarifying fee application. | Restitution before discipline; cooperation after complaint. | Prior discipline noted. | Violation of Rule 8-101(B)(3). |
| Failure to communicate | Did not confirm authority in writing or follow up with client. | No client injury; misunderstanding rather than deceit. | Delayed response to inquiry. | Violation of Rule 6-101(A)(2). |
| Misrepresentation (§6106) | No proof of false statements; conflicting testimony. | Reputation for honesty among peers. | None established. | Not sustained. |
| Final Discipline | Limited misconduct involving communication and accounting duties. | Good character, restitution, and cooperation. | Prior reproval warranted monitoring. | Six-month stayed suspension; one-year probation with accounting conditions. |
Holding and Significance
The Review Department emphasized that miscommunication and poor recordkeeping do not automatically constitute misappropriation. Discipline is appropriate when an attorney fails to provide timely accounting or written confirmation of client authorization to apply funds. This decision underscores the need for written fee agreements and trust-account documentation even in informal or family-based matters.
Tags
Citation: In the Matter of Richard K. Cacioppo (Review Dept. 1992) 2 Cal. State Bar Ct. Rptr. 128.
