[WSBAPT] Accessing Deceased Attorney's IOLTA

Carmen Rowe carmen at gryphonlawgroup.com
Fri Sep 15 14:39:46 PDT 2023


To back up what Amy shared:

It was some years ago, but a case I had been involved with faced a similar
dilemma. We had settled and I was waiting for the signed agreement with a
rapidly approaching trial date, when a paralegal from a neighboring office
called at 9 pm responding to my multiple messages. Her & her boss, who had
a neighboring office, found out and were desperately going through boxes
and trying to catch up with things and at least contact people involved in
impending actions.

Problem with resolution, as for many of the cases, was that the clients'
monies were in the IOLTA account - which kept both settlements from being
executed as well as clients being able to transfer the monies to a new
attorney as a deposit for their services, leaving clients with
urgent time-sensitive matters in highly vulnerable predicaments.

In that case the attorney petitioned the court, who then appointed an
attorney to handle the accounting, funds and distributions. So while my
info is third-hand, the answer I understood about non-attorneys handling
IOLTA funds was not just no, but he** no.  The court would not even allow
for the wife, who was the office manager, to sign an assignment of the
account over to the attorney willing to help handle things, as -
technically  she had no rights to handle the monies, so any "permission"
was void.

And, incidentally, the court and bar both had conveyed that the wife's name
(or anyone else who was not an attorney) even being on the account was an
ethical breach.

Important lesson for the rest of us. As with potential liability of the
business to clients for any damages flowing from lack of a plan.

Carmen Rowe



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Email:  Carmen at GryphonLawGroup.com

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Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2023 17:58:43 +0000
>
From: "Lewis, Amy C." <ALewis at Eisenhowerlaw.com>
To: WSBA Probate & Trust Listserv <wsbapt at lists.wsbarppt.com>
Subject: Re: [WSBAPT] Accessing  Deceased Attorney's IOLTA
Message-ID:
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MW2PR18MB2265ADCB7CDF0110C44CD699D9F6A at MW2PR18MB2265.namprd18.prod.outlook.com
>

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"

One of my colleagues is currently handling a probate of a deceased
attorney.  This attorney's practice area was immigration, and he had taken
deposits/retainers from many clients.  We felt it was necessary to find
another immigration attorney to assist with winding up the practice.  Here
are my colleague's comments regarding our matter:

In response to the questions of whether or not a non-attorney PR can
disburse funds from the IOLTA, the answer is no. The bank will not likely
allow access to the IOLTA account. Even if the bank were to, I would be
concerned with the PR having legal exposure, as a licensed attorney must
access those funds.

The guidance that I have gotten from the WSBA (and from the court) on this
issue is that a licensed attorney must "wind down" the law firm, which
includes handling the IOLTA (settling the accounts, issuing refunds, etc.),
as well as the operating (non-IOLTA account). What seems to be the
preferred/agreed upon path in these types of situations is for the PR to
retain an attorney, preferably someone with experience in the same practice
area(s) as the firm, and that attorney is hired to wind down the firm. The
attorney can retain non-attorney professionals to assist with things like
accounting, but the actual disbursements and refunds and assessment of
cases and fees earned should be handled by an attorney that the PR hires.

Some probate attorneys will do this as part of the representation of the PR
in the estate, but our analysis was that there is too much risk in doing so
and such work should be outsourced to a firm that has greater experience in
the practice area.


Amy Lewis, Attorney
Pronouns she/her/hers
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909 A Street, Suite 600 | Tacoma, WA 98402
phone 253.572.4500 | fax 253.272.5732 | www.eisenhowerlaw.com<
http://www.eisenhowerlaw.com/>
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