FILED: January 22, 2010
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON
In re Complaint as to the Conduct of

LAUREN J. PAULSON,
Accused.
(OSB 05-187, 06-05,
07-19, 07-20, 07-21, 07-22; SC S055610)
En Banc
On the court's own motion for recall of appellate
judgment and reconsideration.* 
PER CURIAM
The appellate judgment
is recalled and our former opinion is reconsidered.  The former opinion is
modified and adhered to as modified.  Appellate judgment to issue forthwith.
*346 Or 676, 216 P3d 859 (2009).
PER CURIAM
On the court's own motion, the court recalls the
appellate judgment and allows reconsideration in this case to modify a portion
of our prior opinion, In re Paulson, 346 Or 676, 216 P3d 859 (2009).  In
that opinion, we concluded, as had the trial panel, that the accused had violated
DR 2-106(a) by charging an excessive fee in connection with the Brady-Aiello
small estate matter.  After describing the pertinent facts and quoting relevant
portions of the trial panel opinion, we explained:

"DR 2-106(A) prohibits a lawyer from
charging an illegal or clearly excessive fee.  The Bar alleged and the trial
panel found that the accused, by comingling his billings as personal representative
with those for his work as trustee in connection with the Brady-Aiello estate
matter, double-charged for certain services and collected $14,000 without the
statutorily required permission of the court.  See ORS 116.173(1)
(setting out fees to which a personal representative, '[u]pon application to
the court[,]' may seek for services).  On review, the accused does not address
the trial panel's findings or conclusions with regard to the violations of DR
2-106(A).  Having reviewed the record as it pertains to that cause of
complaint, together with the findings and conclusions of the trial panel, we
conclude that the Bar has proved that the accused violated DR 2-106(A) in this
matter.  See In re Knappenberger, 344 Or 559, 564, 186 P3d 282 (2008)
(accused violated rule when he charged a fee that, by law, required
authorization by Social Security Administration without obtaining that
authorization)."

Id. at 686-87 (brackets in original).  
We modify the above statement by
removing the citation to In re Knappenberger, which involved an illegal
fee, rather than an excessive fee.  We also remove the citation to ORS
116.173(1), a statute that the accused had cited in claiming entitlement to certain
of his fees.  The trial panel found that the accused, in collecting the $14,000
in fees, did so "without court approval," which we understood to be a
reference the statutory procedure set out in ORS 116.173(1).  That statute,
however, may have no application to small estate matters and, in all events,
was unnecessary to our conclusion.  The Bar's only theory for that particular violation
was that the fees charged and collected by the accused were excessive, because
he charged attorney fees for work that he performed in his capacity as a
personal representative and comingled his billings in such a way as to bill
multiple times for the same work.  As we concluded in our former opinion,
consistent with the trial panel's findings, the accused handled his billings as
the Bar had alleged.  As a result, the circuit court had removed him as
personal representative and ordered him to repay the fees he had collected.  Paulson,
346 Or at 681-82.  We therefore modify our former opinion by removing the
citations as noted above and by clarifying that we concluded that the accused
charged an excessive fee, not an illegal fee.  
Our reconsideration in this matter
has no effect on the date of the accused's disbarment.
The appellate judgment is recalled
and our former opinion is reconsidered.  The former opinion is modified and adhered
to as modified.  Appellate judgment to issue forthwith.
