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NEW YORK STATE BAR ASSOCIATIONProfessional
Ethics Committee Opinion Opinion #168 - 11/06/1970
(48-70)
Topic: Confidential Communications
Digest: Obligation of lawyer of executor-client misappropriating
estate assets depends on whether restitution is made
Code: Canon 4; EC 4-1, 4-2, 4-4; DR 4-101(B) and (C); DR 7-102 (B)
(1)
QUESTION
A lawyer is retained by an executor for an estate to handle the legal
work involved in administering the estate. While preparing the
accounting to be filed with the surrogate's court, the lawyer discovers
an apparent misappropriation of funds belonging to the estate. In
response to questions from the lawyer, the executor admits the
misappropriation. The lawyer advises the executor that he must reimburse
the estate. The executor agrees to do so and makes full restitution
before filing his accounting with the surrogate's court. Now that
restitution has been made, is the lawyer under any obligation to inform
the surrogate of the executor's wrongdoing?
OPINION
Once full restitution has been made, the obligation to preserve the
confidences and secrets of the client, imposed by Canon 4, EC 4-1 and
4-4, and DR 4-101(B), precludes the lawyer from revealing the executor's
wrongdoing. A lawyer may properly disclose confidences and secrets of a
client only under the mandate of a specific disciplinary rule, such as
DR 7-102 (B) (1) [refusal to rectify a fraud], or in the circumstances
specified in EC 4-2 [consent of client or required by law], and DR
4-101(C) [intention to commit a crime].
Related Files
Confidential Communications (Adobe PDF File)
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