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CLE Discount Sale

Posted on 12/07/2020 by beverlym
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Starting today through December 31 get 50% off all CLEs by entering the code SAVE50 at checkout! Visit Oregon Law Practice Management On Demand CLE and choose from any of these programs:

Oregon-Specific Ethics Credits

  • Abandoned Funds: Trust Account Dilemmas
  • Advanced Trust Accounting
  • Trust Accounting Fundamentals

General Ethics Credits

  • Ethical Guidelines for Client Files
  • Fee Agreements – Ethical Dos and Don’ts
  • Effective Conflict Systems

Practical Skills/General Credits

  • 7 Steps to Building Better Client Relationships
  • Best Practices for Client Intake, Engagement, and Workflow
  • Best Practices for Docketing, Conflicts, Disengagement, and File Retention
  • eCourt Malpractice Traps
  • Getting Paid
  • Oregon eService
  • Technology Tips for the Busy Legal Professional

Personal Management Assistance Credits

  • Practical Time Management

Use the SAVE50 discount

Browse the CLEs, select your programs, then click the shopping cart icon at the top right of your screen. Choose Checkout, enter SAVE50 in the discount field, and click Apply.

Instant digital delivery with options to save to the cloud or your mobile device

Links to digital files are delivered instantly at checkout with your purchase confirmation email. Download, stream, save to Dropbox, or send files to your mobile device or desktop computer.

Add credits now to your MCLE transcript

After you screen a program, you can add it immediately to your online Oregon State Bar MCLE transcript record. Download the instructions here.

Your on demand CLE purchase includes

  • MP4 download (combined audio and video file)
  • M4a download (audio only)
  • Written program materials, including presentation slides and resources
  • Answers to polling questions asked during the live CLE
  • MCLE information

Free eBook!

If you visit my online store, be sure to download your free copy of Tips for Improving Client Relationships.

Secure payment processing

All transactions are handled by Selz and protected with encryption. Selz is SSL secure and PCI compliant. Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover accepted. Click here to buy CLEs and save money!

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Posted in Client Relations, Collections, Confidentiality, Conflicts, Court Procedure, Credit Cards, E-Court, E-Mail, eBooks, Ethics, Fees, Financial Management, Fraud Prevention, IOLTA, Malpractice Avoidance, Marketing, Office Systems, Resources, Social Media, Solo Practice, Staff, Technology | Tagged abandoned funds, Apps, Automation, Beverly Michaelis, Billing, CLE, Client Intake, Client Relations, client screening, cloud computing, Collections, confidentiality, conflicts, conflicts of interest, Credit Cards, Deadlines, disengagement, Docketing, ecourt, efiling, email, eservice, ethical, Ethics, fee agreement, fee agreements, Fees, file retention, Finances, Financial Management, fraud, IOLTA, law, Law Practice Management, lawyer trust account, legal, Malpractice, Marketing, Metadata, Office Systems, Oregon, Oregon law practice management, Oregon Rules of Professional Conduct, organization, paperless, privacy, productivity, security, Social Media, social networking, Solo Practice, Staff, Technology, theft, time management, trust accounting, unclaimed funds, UTCR, withdrawal, workflow | Leave a reply

Last Call for Abandoned Funds – October 16 CLE Event

Posted on 10/14/2019 by beverlym
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Do you have mystery money in your lawyer trust account? Uncashed checks? Funds you can’t return to clients? Join me on Wednesday, October 16 for Abandoned Funds: Trust Account Dilemmas and learn how to address these issues. This CLE is designed for lawyers, legal staff, bookkeepers, or office administrators – anyone interested in proper handling of abandoned IOLTA funds. Approved for .50 ethics credits (Oregon-specific) and .75 practical skills.  OSB ID 59273.

When and Where

Wednesday, October 16, 2019 from 10:00 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. Pacific Time. This is a live, online webinar.

How to Register

Register here, choose the image above, or visit the Upcoming CLE page. Secure payment processing powered by Eventbrite. Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express accepted. Program materials included in the $25 registration price. Group discounts available to firms who wish to register 5 or more attendees. Contact me for more information.

Topics include

    • Identifying abandoned funds
    • Determining ownership and residence
    • Remitting funds
    • Exercising due diligence: statutory and ethical duties
    • Assessing the legal, practical, and and ethical implications of using stop payments, closing your IOLTA account, using stale dates, purchasing cashier’s checks to replace funds in IOLTA, and writing off leftover balances
    • Avoiding abandoned funds
    • Reporting and remitting abandoned funds outside the statutory deadline

Can’t Attend?

Video and audio recordings will be available to download along with the program materials shortly after the live program event.  Price: $25. Contact me or visit my online CLE store to place an order.

Don’t Miss Out!

Procedures have changed since I last offered a CLE on abandoned funds. Get straightforward, up-to-date information on all aspects of proper reporting and remitting.

All Rights Reserved 2019 Beverly Michaelis

 

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Posted in Collections, Ethics, Fees, Financial Management, IOLTA, Office Systems, Staff | Tagged abandoned funds, accounts receivable, balance write offs, Beverly Michaelis, cashiers checks, client balances, closing IOLTA account, Collections, Department of State Lands, ethical duties, Fees, Finances, invoicing, IOLTA, IOTA, lawyer trust account, Oregon law practice management, stale dates, unclaimed funds | Leave a reply

Abandoned Funds: Trust Account Dilemmas

Posted on 09/16/2019 by beverlym
1

Do you have mystery money in your lawyer trust account? Uncashed checks? Funds you can’t return to clients? Join me on Wednesday, October 16 for Abandoned Funds: Trust Account Dilemmas and learn how to address these issues. This CLE is designed for lawyers, legal staff, bookkeepers, or office administrators – anyone interested in proper handling of abandoned funds and lawyer trust accounts.

Topics include

  • Identifying abandoned funds
  • Determining ownership and residence
  • Remitting funds
  • Exercising due diligence: statutory and ethical duties
  • Assessing the legal, practical, and and ethical implications of using stop payments, closing your IOLTA account, using stale dates, purchasing cashier’s checks to replace funds in IOLTA, and writing off leftover balances
  • Avoiding abandoned funds
  • Reporting and remitting abandoned funds outside the statutory deadline

When & Where: Wednesday, October 16, 2019 from 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Pacific Time. This is a live, online webinar.

Group Discounts: Available to firms who wish to register 5 or more attendees. Contact me for more information.

Participate in Polling & Ask Questions: Questions are welcome during the live event. Attendees are also encouraged to participate in live, anonymous polling.

How to Register

Register here, choose the image above, or visit the Upcoming CLE page. Secure payment processing powered by Eventbrite. Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express accepted. Program materials included in the $25 registration price.

Can’t Attend?

Video and audio recordings will be available to download along with the program materials shortly after the live program event.  Price: $25. Contact me or visit my online CLE store to place an order.

Register Now!

All Rights Reserved 2019 Beverly Michaelis

 

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Posted in Collections, Ethics, Fees, Financial Management, IOLTA, Staff | Tagged abandoned funds, accounts receivable, Automation, Beverly Michaelis, Billing, client balances, close IOLTA account, close lawyer trust account, Collections, failure to report unclaimed funds, Fees, Finances, IOLTA, IOLTA recordkeeping, IOTA, lawyer trust account, lawyer trust accounting, Oregon law practice management, Stop Payment, unclaimed funds | 1 Reply

June is the Time to Identify Abandoned Funds

Posted on 06/17/2019 by beverlym
1

moneyFunds held in your IOLTA account are deemed abandoned if the owner has not accepted payment of the funds, corresponded in writing about the funds, or otherwise indicated interest in the funds within two years after the funds are payable or distributable to the owner. See ORS 98.332.

June is the time to identify abandoned funds

The normal cycle for assessing, reporting, and remitting abandoned funds occurs annually in June and October. Go through your records now to determine if you are potentially holding unclaimed funds. As noted in The Ethics of Unclaimed Lawyer Trust Account Funds: Mystery Money, “Disputed funds are not abandoned funds. Instead, lawyers are obligated to maintain the disputed funds in trust until the dispute is resolved.” Oregon RPC 1.15-1(e).

October is the time to remit and report abandoned funds

Funds that are unclaimed as of June 30 of each year are reported and remitted during the month of October.  The Department of State Lands receives the original paperwork. The Oregon State Bar receives the funds and a copy of the reports. This assumes the owner’s last known address is in Oregon, or a state with whom we have a reciprocal arrangement. Reporting forms may be found here.

Steps to take now

  1. Make a reasonably diligent effort to locate the person entitled to the funds.
  2. Google the person and his/her contact information.
  3. If you subscribe to a people search service such as Accurint, use it to locate a current address.
  4. If you have an investigator on retainer, ask him/her to run a skip trace. Hiring an investigator is probably not necessary, although the scope of making “a reasonably diligent effort” is not defined.
    Use your common sense. If a large sum of money is involved, an investigator may be warranted.
  5. Attempt to communicate by writing to the last known address and calling the last known telephone number. Explain the consequences if the person fails to respond.
  6. If letters, emails or texts are returned undelivered, retain proof. Document attempts to call the person.
  7. If you have emergency contacts for the person, reach out to them. If your contact efforts are unproductive or the emergency contacts have also gone missing, keep a record of your efforts.

Even if you have tried these steps in the past, “… Make a last attempt to communicate with the owner of the funds before reporting them as abandoned.”

All Rights Reserved 2019 Beverly Michaelis

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Posted in Ethics, Financial Management, IOLTA | Tagged abandoned funds, Beverly Michaelis, IOLTA, lawyer trust account, LTA, Oregon law practice management, Oregon RPC 1.15-2(e), ORS 98.332, ORS 98.992, OSB Formal Opinion 2005-48, unclaimed funds | 1 Reply

Report and Remit Abandoned Funds in October

Posted on 10/01/2018 by beverlym
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moneyFunds held in your IOLTA account are deemed abandoned (unclaimed) if the owner has not accepted payment of the funds, corresponded in writing about the funds, or otherwise indicated interest in the funds within two years after the funds are payable or distributable to the owner.

Assess in June – Report and Remit in October

The normal cycle for assessing, reporting, and remitting unclaimed funds occurs annually in June and October.  Funds that are unclaimed as of June 30 of each year are reported and remitted during the month of October.  The Department of State Lands receives the original paperwork.  The Oregon State Bar receives the funds and a copy of the reports.  [Assuming the owner’s last known address is in Oregon, or a state with whom we have a reciprocal arrangement.]  Reporting forms may be found here.

What If I Am Not in Compliance?

The DSL offers an extension request form, but before you fill it out, call the OSB. Previously, lawyers requesting an extension to report and remit abandoned IOLTA funds were told to contact the bar at its mailing address:

Oregon State Bar
P.O. Box 231935
Tigard, OR  97281-1935

Unfortunately, the DSL redesigned its website and this language disappeared. This may (or may not) be the current procedure. To be safe, speak with OSB General Counsel.

Will I Get in Trouble If I Don’t Report and Remit Unclaimed Funds?

A civil penalty is possible, but unlikely.  ORS 98.992 provides:

A person who willfully fails to render any report, to pay or deliver property or to perform other duties required may be required to pay a civil penalty.

  • This penalty shall be assessed only after at least one reporting cycle
  • Only after the department has provided the person with written instructions, including copies of applicable laws and policies.
  • The department may waive any penalty due under this section with appropriate justification.

Bar discipline?  Probably so.

OSB Formal Opinion 2005-48 makes clear that lawyers “must comply” with the provisions of the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act.  Given the ethical duty to safeguard client funds, this makes sense: obeying the statute is the highest level of protection you can offer once a client has walked away from his money.

Additionally, Oregon RPC 1.15-2(e) provides “The lawyer or law firm shall review the IOLTA account at reasonable intervals to determine whether circumstances have changed that require further action with respect to the funds of a particular client.”

If you are fulfilling this responsibility, you should notice whether you are holding funds that are abandoned and take appropriate action.  (In this case, report and remit on a timely basis.)

What Should I Do Now?

I am a believer that it is never too late to do the right thing.

  • If you previously failed to report and remit funds, contact the bar. This will take some courage – no doubt.  However, continuing to put the task off will only make the situation worse.
  • If you are concerned about the consequences of your noncompliance, get help. The names of top-notch lawyers who specialize in ethics defense are readily available. These specialists regularly write and speak on ethics topics.
  • If you are distressed by the potential of disciplinary action, contact the confidential Oregon Attorney Assistance Program.  OAAP attorney counselors can be a resource and know of ethics attorneys who are available on a pro bono basis if you cannot afford to hire private counsel.

Don’t let allow a misunderstanding or mistake to become an insurmountable burden. Pick up the phone, get help, and make a plan to move forward.

All Rights Reserved 2018 Beverly Michaelis

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Posted in Ethics, Financial Management, IOLTA | Tagged abandoned funds, Beverly Michaelis, IOLTA, lawyer trust account, LTA, OAAP, OAAP attorney counselors, Oregon Attorney Assistance Program, Oregon law practice management, Oregon RPC 1.15-2(e), ORS 98.332, ORS 98.992, OSB Formal Opinion 2005-48, unclaimed funds | Leave a reply

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