Lawyer Cannot Discharge Client’s Claim Based on Funds Stolen by Lawyer
June 10, 2015
Publication| Bankruptcy & Corporate Restructuring
In a recent decision, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a debtor-attorney could not use the unclean hands doctrine to render dischargeable a former client’s claim based on the lawyer’s misappropriation of funds entrusted to him by the former client. See Northbay Wellness Group, Inc. v. Beyries, No. 13-17381 (9th Cir. June 5, 2015). The creditor was a medical marijuana dispensary, and the debtor acted as counsel to the creditor and served on its board of directors. In the ordinary course of its business, the creditor engaged in cash sales, including as depository institutions were not permitted to accept business from marijuana dispensaries under applicable federal regulations. The creditor entrusted certain cash funds to the lawyer, and the lawyer later diverted a portion of those funds to himself. The lawyer filed his bankruptcy petition after the creditor obtained a judgment against him for the amount of the diverted funds. The bankruptcy court (later affirmed by the district court) accepted that claims based on misappropriation ordinarily are not dischargeable. However, it also concluded that the creditor had engaged in the unlawful sale of marijuana, the doctrine of unclean hands therefore applied to preclude the creditor’s claim in the bankruptcy case and its debt was dischargeable.