The First Department appeals panel
granted an attorney grievance committee’s motion to suspend the lawyer
based on his failure to cooperate with an investigation into
professional misconduct allegations against him.
Photo:roberthyrons |
A New York lawyer has been suspended from
practicing law after not answering at least five grievance committee
letters regarding a guardianship-related complaint that said he never
appeared for court proceedings aimed at discharging him as the guardian
for an incapacitated person who had died.
Kavin L. Edwards—who according to Avvo.com
practices real estate law, apparently as a solo practitioner—has been
suspended pending further court order by an Appellate Division, First
Department panel.
The panel, in a unanimous decision,
granted the First Department attorney grievance committee’s motion to
suspend Edwards based on his failure to cooperate with the committee’s
investigation into professional misconduct allegations against him.
Edwards did not submit a response to the grievance committee’s motion, the panel noted.
Attempts to reach Edwards for comment Tuesday were not successful.
In reciting facts in the opinion, which it
appears were conveyed by the grievance committee, the First Department
panel pointed out that the committee has also become aware of “a second
guardianship matter in which [Edwards] failed to file a final accounting
pursuant to court rules, and he repeatedly failed to appear for
scheduled compliance dates.”
In addition, the panel explained, again
reciting committee-presented facts, that although Edwards did appear at
an August 2018 deposition before the committee, he failed in November
and December 2018 to show up for a deposition continuation.
He also has allegedly still not answered the
original guardianship complaint made in January 2018 by Bronx Supreme
Court guardianship department compliance referee John D’Alessandro, the
panel wrote. The panel noted that as of the grievance committee’s
January 29, 2019 motion date, the committee still hadn’t heard from
Edwards.
D’Alessandro’s complaint kicked off the
grievance committee’s 2018 efforts to reach Edwards for answers, the
panel’s opinion said.
The panel of Justices John Sweeny, Sallie
Manzanet-Daniels, Cynthia Kern, Jeffrey Oing and Anil Singh also
noted—while again citing the presented facts—that Edwards had been
appointed as the guardian for the incapacitated person in June 2015.
In January 2018, D’Alessandro sent the
committee a complaint saying the client had passed away, and Edwards
“had repeatedly failed to appear in court in connection with proceedings
to discharge him as her guardian even though he was notified by letter,
telephone and court order,” the panel wrote citing presented facts.
The next month, the committee asked Edwards
by letter to respond to the complaint. It used an Office of Court
Administration-listed address for him, the panel said, citing the facts.
That first letter was returned as
undeliverable, but then the committee discovered a new address for
Edwards, on Seventh Avenue, the panel said.
In April and May, the committee sent
additional letters and in one advised Edwards “of 22 NYCRR 1240.9(a) and
citing precedent that provided for suspension of attorneys who failed
to cooperate with the Committee,” the panel wrote, still citing the
presented facts.
In July 2018, the committee subpoenaed
Edwards for a deposition. He later appeared pro se and was directed
again “to provide an answer to D’Alessandro’s complaint and reminded …
that, if he was needed to appear for a subsequent examination under
oath, the subpoena remained in effect throughout the duration of the
case,” the panel also wrote.
In suspending Edwards, the panel wrote that
he “has repeatedly failed to submit an answer to the [compliance
referee’s] complaint and has not appeared for a continuation of his
deposition, even though he was advised of the possible need for a
subsequent deposition under this Court’s subpoena.”
“Additionally, he has defaulted on this
motion seeking his interim suspension,” the panel continued, adding that
“such conduct demonstrates a willful noncompliance with a Committee
investigation and warrants his immediate suspension,” citing Matter of Matic, 165 AD3d 45; Matter of Morgado, 159 AD3d 50; Matter of Spencer, 148 AD3d 223; and Matter of Raum, 141 AD3d 198.
Full Article & Source:
No Answer to Grievance Committee Letters on Failure to Appear at Guardianship Proceedings Gets Lawyer Suspended
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