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A
Practical Guide
to
Attorney Trust Accounts
and
Recordkeeping
Reprinted
with permission from
New
York Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection
What
are a lawyer's ethical obligations regarding client funds?
A lawyer in possession of
client funds and property is a fiduciary. The lawyer must safeguard
and segregate those assets from the lawyer's personal, business
or other assets.
A
lawyer is also obligated to notify a client when client funds or
property are received by the lawyer. The lawyer must provide timely
and complete accountings to the client, and disburse promptly all
funds and property to which the client is entitled. A client's non-cash
property should be clearly identified as trust property and be secured
in the lawyer's safe or safe deposit box.
These
fiduciary obligations apply equally to money and property of non-clients
which come into a lawyer's possession in the practice of law.
What is an attorney trust account?
It's a "special" bank account,
usually a checking account or its equivalent, for client money and
other escrow funds that a lawyer holds in the practice of law. A
lawyer can have one account, or several, depending on need. Each
must be maintained separately from the lawyer's personal business
accounts, and other fiduciary accounts, like those maintained for
estates, guardianships, and trusts.
Attorney trust accounts
must be maintained in banking institutions located within New York
State; that is, a "state or national bank, trust company, savings
bank, savings and loan association or credit union". Out-of-state
banks may be used only with the prior and specific written approval
of the client or other beneficial owner of the funds. In all cases,
lawyers can only use banks that have agreed to furnish "dishonored
check notices" pursuant to new statewide court rules.
These new rules also require
lawyers to designate existing or new bank accounts as either Attorney
Trust Account , Attorney Special Account ,
or Attorney Escrow Account , with pre-numbered
checks and deposit slips imprinted with that title.
What is the purpose of an attorney trust account?
To safeguard clients' funds
from loss, and to avoid the appearance of impropriety by the lawyer-fiduciary.
The account is used solely for funds belonging to clients and other
persons incident to a lawyer's practice of law.
Funds
belonging partly to a client and partly to the lawyer, presently
or potentially, must also be deposited in the attorney trust account.
The lawyer's portion may be withdrawn when due, unless the client
disputes the withdrawal. In that event, the funds must remain intact
until the lawyer and client resolve their dispute.
Withdrawals
from the attorney trust account must be made to named payees, and
not to cash. And only members of the New York bar can be signatories
on the bank account.
What
about bank service charges?
A lawyer may
deposit personal funds into the attorney trust account that are
necessary to maintain the account, including bank service charges.
Should interest-bearing accounts be used?
Lawyers,
as fiduciaries, should endeavor to make client funds productive
for their clients. By statute, every lawyer has complete discretion
to determine whether client and escrow funds should be deposited
in interest-bearing bank accounts.
For
funds nominal in amount, or which will be held only briefly by a
lawyer or law firm, the statute authorizes their deposit in so-called
IOLA bank accounts.
But
lawyers may also establish interest-bearing accounts for individual
clients. For all client funds, lawyers may use pooled accounts in
banks which have the capability to credit interest to individual
client sub-accounts. A lawyer or law firm any also do the calculations
necessary to allocate interest to individual clients or other beneficial
owners.
What is IOLA?
IOLA
is the acronym for the Interest On Lawyer Account fund and program.
IOLA is a state agency which uses interest on attorney trust accounts
to fund non-profit agencies which provide civil legal services for
the poor, and programs to improve the administration of justice.
The
IOLA account is designed for nominal and short-term client deposits:
a sum of money, for example, that would not generate more than $150
in interest for the client-owner.
A
lawyer's participation in IOLA has no income tax consequences for
the lawyer, or for the client. In addition, IOLA assumes the cost
of bank service charges and fees on the account.
IOLA's
offices are at 36 West 44th St., Suite 711, New York, New York 10036.
Telephone (212) 949-9640, or 1-800-222-IOLA.
How should large trust deposits be handled?
When
a client's funds and the anticipated holding period are sufficient
to generate meaningful interest, a lawyer may have a fiduciary obligation
to invest the client's funds in an interest-bearing bank account.
In
that case, prudence suggests that a lawyer consult with the client
or other beneficial owner. And when dealing with large deposits
and escrows, lawyers and clients should be mindful of federal bank
deposit insurance limits.
There
may also be income tax implications to consider. Using the law client's
social security or federal tax identification number on the bank
account can avoid unexpected tax problems for the lawyer.
May a lawyer retain the interest on an attorney trust account?
No. A lawyer, as a fiduciary,
cannot profit on the administration of an attorney trust account.
While a lawyer is permitted to charge a reasonable fee for administering
a client's account, all earned interest belongs to the client. Legal
fees cannot be pegged to the interest earned.
What happens if a trust account check bounces?
A bounced check on an attorney
trust account is a signal that law client funds may be jeopardy.
Beginning in 1993, banks in New York State will report dishonored
checks on attorney trust accounts to the Lawyers' Fund for Client
Protection; for referral by the Lawyers' Fund to the proper attorney
grievance committee for such inquiry as the committee deems appropriate.
These bank notices are required
by the Appellate Divisions' Dishonored Check Reporting Rules. A
"dishonored" instrument is a check which the lawyer's bank refuses
to pay because there is insufficient funds in the lawyer's special,
trust, or escrow account.
The Lawyers' Fund will hold
each dishonored check notice for 10 days to permit the filing bank
to withdraw a report that was sent in error. However, the curing
of an insufficiency of funds by a lawyer or law firm will not constitute
reason for the withdrawal of a dishonored check notice.
Are there special banking rules for down payments?
Yes. A buyer's down payment,
entrusted with a seller's attorney pending a closing, generally
remains the property of the buyer until title passes. The lawyer-escrow
agent is serving as a fiduciary, and must safeguard and segregate
the buyer's down payment in a special trust account.
The purchase contract should
make provision for depositing the down payment in a bank account,
the disposition of interest, and other escrow responsibilities.
A 1991 statute codifies the
fiduciary obligations of lawyers and realtors who accept down payments
in residential purchases and sales, including condominium units
and cooperative apartments.
This statute requires that
the purchase contract identify: (1) the escrow agent; and (2) the
bank where the down payment will be deposited pending the closing.
There are also special rules,
promulgated by the New York State Department of Law, where escrow
accounts are established in connection with the conversion of buildings
into condominiums and cooperatives.
Are other bank accounts needed?
Yes. A practitioner needs
a business account as a depository for legal fees, and to pay operating
expenses. A typical designation is Attorney Business Account
. Lawyers also need special bank accounts when they serve
as fiduciaries for estates, trusts, guardianships, and the like.
Where are advance legal fees deposited?
This depends upon the lawyer's
fee agreement with the client. If the advance fee becomes the lawyer's
property when it is paid by the client, the fee should be deposited
in the business account, and not in the attorney trust account.
If, on the other hand, the
advance fee remains client property until it is earned by the lawyer,
it should be deposited in the attorney trust account, and withdrawn
by the lawyer or law firm as it is earned.
In either event, a lawyer
has a professional obligation to refund unearned legal fees to a
client whenever the lawyer completes or withdraws from a representation,
or the lawyer is discharged by the client.
And advances from clients for court fees and expenses?
This also depends upon the
lawyer's fee agreement with the client. If the money advanced by
the client is to remain client property until it is used for specific
litigation expenses, it should be segregated and safeguarded in
the attorney trust account, or in a similar special account.
How are unclaimed client funds handled?
If a lawyer cannot locate
a client or another person who is owed funds from the attorney trust
account, the lawyer is required to seek a judicial order to fix
the lawyer's fees and disbursements, and to deposit the client's
share with the Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection.
What happens when a sole signatory dies?
The Supreme Court has authority
to appoint a successor signatory for the attorney trust account.
The procedures are set forth in court rules adopted in 1994.
What accounting books are required?
No specific accounting system
is required by court rule, but a basic trust accounting system for
a law firm consists of a trust receipts journal, a trust disbursements
journal, and a trust ledger book containing the individual ledger
accounts for recording each financial transaction affecting that
client's funds.
At
a minimum, each client's ledger account should reflect the date,
source, and a description of each item of deposit, as well as the
date, payee, and purpose of each withdrawal.
Many
practitioners find that the so-called "one-write" or "pegboard"
manual systems provide an efficient and economical method of trust
accounting. There are also approved computer software packages for
law office trust accounting.
Whether
it be an attorney trust account or the lawyer's operating account,
each should be maintained daily and accurately to avoid error. All
source documents like duplicate deposit slips, bank statements,
canceled checks, checkbooks and check stubs must be preserved for
seven years.
Internal
office controls are essential. It is good business practice to prepare
a monthly reconciliation of the balances in the trust ledger book,
the trust receipts and disbursements journals, the bank account
checkbook, and bank statements.
What bookkeeping records must be maintained?
Every
lawyer and law firm must preserve, for seven years after the events
they record, copies of all:
- books
of account affecting all attorney trust and office operating accounts.
- checkbooks
and check stubs, bank statements, pre-numbered canceled checks
and duplicate deposit slips.
- client
retainer and fee agreements;
- statements
to clients showing disbursements of their funds;
- records
showing payments to other lawyers or non-employees for services
rendered; and
- retainer
and closing statements filed with the Office of Court Administration.
In
the event a law firm dissolves, appropriate arrangements must be
made for the maintenance of the firm's records, either by a former
partner or the successor law firm. In the absence of an agreement,
the local Appellate Division has the authority to impose an arrangement.
How are these rules enforced?
A
violation of a Disciplinary Rule constitutes grounds for professional
discipline under section 90 of the Judiciary Law. Also, the accounts
and records required of lawyers and law firms by court rule may
be subpoenaed in a disciplinary proceeding.
Lawyers
are also required to certify their familiarity and compliance with
Disciplinary Rule 9-102 in the biennial registration form which
is filed with the Office of Court Administration.
What losses are covered by the Lawyers' Fund?
The New York Lawyers' Fund
for Client Protection -- previously the Clients' Security Fund --
is financed by a $60 share of each lawyer's $300 biennial registration
fee. The Lawyers' Fund receives no revenues from the IOLA program,
or from tax revenues.
The Lawyers' Fund, established
in 1982, is administered pro bono publico by a Board of
Trustees appointed by the State Court of Appeals. Its Trustees provide
$8 million in reimbursement each year to victims of dishonest conduct
in the practice of law.
The Fund is authorized to
reimburse law clients for money or property that is misappropriated
by a member of the New York bar in the practice of law. Awards are
made after a lawyer's disbarment, and in situations where the lawyer
is unable to make restitution.
The Fund's current limit
on reimbursement is $100,000 for each client loss. Most clients
receive full reimbursement for their losses.
To qualify for reimbursement,
the loss must involve the misuse of law clients' money or property
in the practice of law. The Trustees cannot settle fee disputes,
nor compensate clients for a lawyer's malpractice or neglect.
Typical losses reimbursed
include the theft of estate and trust assets, down payments and
the proceeds in real property transactions, debt collection proceeds,
personal injury settlements, and money embezzled from clients in
investment transactions.
The Lawyers' Fund is located
at 119 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12210. Telephone (518)
434-1935, or 1-800-442-FUND.
March
1995: New
York Lawyers' Fund for Client Protection
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