Stock Markets
Daily Stock Markets News

Ruling lengthens attorney’s suspension over handling of 91-year-old woman’s


The Vermont Supreme Court in March 2020. Photo by Mike Dougherty/VTDigger

After reviewing a disciplinary board’s suspension of a White River Junction attorney’s law license, the Vermont Supreme Court increased it from five months to one year. 

C. Robert Manby received the initial five-month suspension from a Vermont Professional Responsibility Board disciplinary hearing panel in October 2022, based on what the panel found to be ethical violations in Manby’s estate planning on behalf of a 91-year-old client.  

However, the Vermont Supreme Court, which can review such decisions, ruled that a longer suspension was warranted.

“Not for punishment, but to protect the public and maintain confidence in the bar, we conclude that a one-year suspension is appropriate,” the court’s ruling stated. 

The Vermont Supreme Court handed down its decision in August but the suspension did not go into effect until last month. The U.S. District Court in Vermont received notice of it this week.

The decision cited the “flagrance” of Manby’s alleged violations and the “completeness of his failure to even maintain anything close to a normal attorney-client relationship” with the woman, identified in filings in the case only by the initials E.M.

At issue were risky transactions that were directed “exclusively” by the woman’s son, according to the ruling, which “effectively overhauled” the woman’s existing estate planning at the expense of her and her daughters at a time when she was too frail to advocate for herself.

Manby, according to the ruling, “ignored numerous red flags” concerning the woman’s competency and the “riskiness or the unfairness of the transactions” that her son directed Manby to arrange. 

“E.M. was obviously not competent at any point during respondent’s representation of her,” the decision stated. “E.M. was ninety-one years old, physically frail, and could neither identify her own children nor hold a conversation.” 

Despite making several transactions over more than a year, Manby never met privately with E.M. and never asked what assets she had or who she wanted to give them to, according to the decision.

At one point, according to court filings, Manby drove from White River Junction to Burlington and met with E.M. and her son in a supermarket parking lot of a highway to notarize a deed. 

“This was the first time respondent met or spoke with E.M.,” the filing stated.

The filing described Manby getting in a car with the woman and her son before riding with them to the parking lot of a nearby church. Manby then got out of the car and crouched down near the passenger side of the vehicle where E.M. was seated, “physically feeble to the point…



Read More: Ruling lengthens attorney’s suspension over handling of 91-year-old woman’s

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.