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NEW YORK STATE BAR ASSOCIATION
Committee on Professional Ethics
Opinion #693 - 08/22/1997
(68-96)
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Topic: Nonlawyer Employees; Escrow Accounts; Attorney’s
Signature
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Digest: Attorney may allow paralegal to use attorney’s signature
stamp to execute escrow checks under certain circumstances
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Code: DR 1-104; DR 9-102(A), (B); DR 9-102(E); EC 3-6
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QUESTION
May a lawyer allow a paralegal to use a stamp bearing the
lawyer’s signature to execute checks drawn on a client escrow
account?
OPINION
This Committee and others have frequently addressed issues
arising from a lawyer’s delegation of tasks to a nonlawyer
employee. See, e.g., N.Y.
State 677 (1995); N.Y. State 255 (1972); N.Y. State 44 (1967); N.Y. City 1995-11
(1995); N.Y. City 666 (1985); Nassau County 90-13; ABA 316
(1967). The question in this inquiry is
whether, consistent with DR 9-102(E), a lawyer may allow a nonlawyer
employee to use a signature stamp to execute checks drawn on the
lawyer’s client escrow account. See DR 9-102(B). The inquirer notes that the
purpose of the signature stamp is to facilitate procedures at the
closings of real estate transactions.
The New York Lawyer’s Code of Professional Responsibility
contemplates that lawyers will delegate tasks to
nonlawyers. DR 1-104; EC
3-6; See N.Y. City
1995-11. We have recently opined that it is permissible for lawyers to
delegate attendance at a real estate closing to a paralegal, where the
delegating lawyer is available by telephone as necessary, the particular
closing is “ministerial” and several other conditions are
satisfied. N.Y. State 677
(1995). In our opinion we noted that
all tasks assigned to a paralegal must be “within the limits
prescribed by law” and “clearly limited to those functions
not involving independent discretion or
judgment.” N.Y. State
677; see ABA 316 (1967); N.Y. State 255
(1972); N.Y. City 666 (1985). We acknowledged that many
real estate and mortgage closings do not require the paralegal to
exercise independent discretion or judgment. N.Y. State 677.
It is the attorney or a member of the attorney’s firm who
is the custodian of the funds of the client. DR 9-102; N.Y. State 570 (1985); Nassau County
88-31. DR 9-102(A) and (B) generally
require that a lawyer deposit client funds in identifiable bank accounts
within the state and segregate such funds from the lawyer’s
general funds. N.Y. State 570
(1985). An attorney is personally and
professionally liable for funds and property entrusted to him or her by
a client and must exercise the highest degree of care in preserving and
protecting such funds and property. Nassau County 88-31. Consistent with these principles, DR 9-102(E) provides
that “[o]nly an attorney admitted to practice law in New York
State shall be an authorized signatory of a special
account.” A nonlawyer may not be
a signatory on a special account and a lawyer may not give such a person
signatory power on such account. In re
Gambino, 205 A.D.2d 212, 619 N.Y.S. 2d 305,
(2d Dep’t 1994) (lawyer violated DR 9-102(E) by permitting
nonlawyer daughter to be signatory on special
account); In re Stenstrom, 194
A.D.2d 277, 605 N.Y.S. 2d 603 (4th Dep’t 1993) (lawyer violated DR
9-102(E) by permitting nonlawyer ex-wife to be signatory on special
account).
Although it is clear that only a lawyer may control the
lawyer’s client escrow account and be a signatory of it, the Rule
does not address whether a lawyer may delegate the task of signing his
or her name to escrow account checks to others, and if so whether a
signature stamp can be used for that purpose. Based on the analysis of proper delegation in our previous
opinions, we believe that it is ethically permissible for a lawyer to
authorize a paralegal to make use of the lawyer’s signature stamp
on checks drawn from a special account at closings under certain
conditions and with proper controls. As
with the rest of a paralegal’s duties at a real estate closing,
N.Y. State 677, the lawyer must consider in advance how the paralegal
will use the signature stamp – including approving the purpose of
the anticipated payments to be made by such checks, the nature of the
payee and the authorized dollar amount range for each check to be issued
– and review afterwards what actually happened to assure that the
delegation of authority has been utilized
properly. As a practical matter,
compliance with these restrictions will limit the use of the signature
stamp by a paralegal to those circumstances in which the lawyer can
reliably forecast events at the closing.
Attorneys must be aware that responsibility for client funds
may not be delegated, and attorneys authorizing paralegals to use
signature stamps on checks drawn from escrow accounts are
“completely responsible” to the client for any errors or
misuse of the stamp. N.Y. State 677; DR
1-104. Attorneys must take steps to
safeguard the use of the signature stamp to avoid any misappropriation
of client funds.
CONCLUSION
A lawyer may allow a paralegal to use a signature stamp to
execute escrow checks from a client trust account so long as the lawyer
supervises the delegated work closely as provided in this Opinion and
exercises complete professional responsibility for the acts of the
paralegal.
Related Files
Opinion 693 (Adobe PDF File)
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