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Subchapter B. RULES FOR INTEREST
ON LAWYERS TRUST ACCOUNTS
Sec.
81.101. Definitions.
81.102. Scope.
81.103. Lawyers.
81.104. Rule 1.15 Funds.
81.105. Approved Financial Institutions.
81.106. Interest on IOLTA Accounts.
81.107. Service Charges on IOLTA Accounts.
81.108. Exclusion and Exemptions from IOLTA Participation.
81.109. Requests for Exemptions and Reconsideration.
81.110. Annual Certification of Compliance with Pa.R.P.C. 1.15.
81.111. Refunds.
81.112. Violations.
Source The provisions of this Subchapter B adopted May 9, 1997, effective May 10, 1997, 27 Pa.B. 2285; amended November 21, 2005, effective immediately, 35 Pa.B. 6640, unless otherwise noted. Immediately preceding text appears at serial pages (311374) and (309483) to (309491).
Preamble: Statement of Purpose Rule 1.15 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct (Pa.R.P.C.) has, since the adoption of the Rules of Professional Conduct, required lawyers to segregate property of clients and third persons from the lawyers own property, and by extension, not to profit by use of property belonging to clients or third persons. This provision of the Pa.R.P.C. for the protection of the client or third person, is designed to ensure the ethical conduct of lawyers, and may not be waived by the client or third person. Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 mandates the maintenance of IOLTA Accounts for certain funds received by a lawyer in connection with a client-lawyer relationship. In addition, Pa.R.P.C. mandates the maintenance of Trust Accounts (including IOLTA Accounts for Qualified Funds) if, under Pa.R.P.C. 5.7, the lawyer is subject to the Pa.R.P.C. and the lawyer receives funds in connection with services (legal or nonlegal) to the recipient of those services. IOLTA generates income where formerly there was none; this income will aid the citizens of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by improving access to the civil legal system by those who otherwise could not afford legal representation, improving the legal educational system in Pennsylvania via funding for legal clinical programs and internships, and assisting in the general administration of justice in Pennsylvania.
§ 81.101. Definitions.
The following words and phrases when used in these regulations shall have the meanings given to them in this section unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
BoardThe Pennsylvania Interest on Lawyer Trust Account Board.
Financial institutionA financial institution approved by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania pursuant to Rule 221 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement (Pa.R.D.E.). A financial institution will be a bank, bank and trust company, trust company, savings and loan association, credit union, savings bank or foreign banking institution authorized to do business in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, whose deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or an alternate share insurer, and who has been specifically approved as a financial institution within the meaning of Pa.R.D.E. 221.
Good faithHonesty in fact in the conduct or transaction concerned.
Interest on Lawyer Trust Account or IOLTA AccountAn unsegregated Trust Account with an approved financial institution for the deposit of Qualified Funds by a lawyer.
LawyerA member in good standing of the bar of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, who is not an active or senior member of the judiciary. The term lawyer also includes a partnership of lawyers, a professional association of lawyers, and a professional corporation or other organization whose members or shareholders are engaged in the practice of law.
Member of the JudiciaryAn individual who has been admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar and who has been appointed or elected and is serving as a judicial official of any state or of the United States of America and whose position prohibits the individual from the practice of law within the territorial jurisdiction when the individual serves as a judge. This term shall not include a lawyer who is permitted to and who voluntarily chooses to maintain active lawyer status in Pennsylvania so long as the judicial position does not prevent him or her from practicing law in Pennsylvania.
Nonqualified FundsRule 1.15 Funds, whether cash, check, money order, or other negotiable instrument received by a lawyer in a representative capacity, and which are not Qualified Funds.
Qualified FundsRule 1.15 Funds, whether cash, check, money order, or other negotiable instrument received by a lawyer in a representative capacity which, in the good faith judgment of the lawyer, are nominal in amount or are reasonably expected to be held for such a short period of time that sufficient interest income will not be generated to justify the expense of earning interest to benefit the client or third person owner of the funds. See Regulation Section 81.104(c) for further guidance.
RegulationsThese regulations adopted by the Board, and approved by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, as they may be amended from time to time.
Representative capacityReceived by a lawyer in connection with a client-lawyer relationship, or under circumstances such that the lawyer is subject to the obligations of Rule 1.15 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct and these Regulations as if a client-lawyer relationship existed. See Regulation Section 81.104. A lawyer who receives funds while acting as a fiduciary for an estate, trust, guardianship, or conservatorship does not receive those funds in a representative capacity.
Rule 1.15 FundsFunds which the lawyer receives in connection with a client-lawyer relationship, or under circumstances described in Pa.R.P.C. 5.7(a), (b), or (c), excluding funds which the lawyer receives while acting as fiduciary for an estate, trust, guardianship or conservatorship. Rule 1.15 Funds include all funds of a client or third person received by a lawyer, in a representative capacity, from any person.
Third Party OwnerThe client or third person whose funds are in the custody of a lawyer.
Trust AccountAn interest-bearing account maintained in a financial institution, as defined in Rule of Disciplinary Enforcement 221, in which or with respect to which a lawyer holds Rule 1.15 Funds, including but not limited to an IOLTA Account.§ 81.102. Scope.
(a) All lawyers who maintain a place of practice in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and who receive Qualified Funds must comply with the requirement that Qualified Funds be placed in an IOLTA Account as provided in Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 unless and to the extent an exemption is granted pursuant to Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(h) and Section 81.108 of these regulations.
(b) Each lawyer must register his or her IOLTA Account with the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania annually.
§ 81.103. Lawyers.
(a) If a lawyer is required to maintain a Trust Account, the lawyer shall comply with these regulations and participate in IOLTA if the lawyer meets either of the circumstances set forth in (i) or (ii):
(i) Practices law in Pennsylvania: The lawyer practices law from an office within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
(ii) Practices law in and out of Pennsylvania: If a lawyer primarily practices outside of Pennsylvania but also has an office within the Commonwealth, then the lawyer must deposit Qualified Funds generated in Pennsylvania in a Pennsylvania IOLTA Account.
(b) Nothing herein shall be construed to require a lawyer who does not receive funds of a Third Party Owner to maintain an IOLTA Account.
(c) Law Firm Compliance: A lawyer may use an IOLTA Account in common with other lawyers in his or her firm, whether organized as a partnership, professional association, professional corporation, limited liability company or partnership, or other form of organization. However, each lawyer has an individual duty to comply with Pa.R.P.C. and these regulations.
(i) A law firm may register its IOLTA account and submit a list of all lawyers in the firm who use the IOLTA Account for the maintenance of all Qualified Funds received by the lawyer.
(ii) Each lawyer using the IOLTA Account for the deposit of all Qualified Funds received by him or her will be in compliance with IOLTA.
(d) Newly admitted lawyer: A lawyer newly admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania must comply with these regulations within sixty (60) days of admission to the bar.
(e) Change of employment: A lawyer who changes employment status must comply with these regulations within sixty (60) days of the change, unless the lawyer no longer meets the requirements of subsections (a)(i)(ii) of this Section 81.103 or is no longer required to maintain a Trust Account.
(f) Subsequent eligibility: Any lawyer not having met the requirements of subsections (a)(i)(ii) of this Section 81.103, who subsequently meets the requirements of subsections (a)(i)(ii) and who must maintain a Trust Account must comply with these regulations within sixty (60) days of subsequent eligibility.
§ 81.104. Rule 1.15 Funds.
(a) Rule 1.15 Funds are funds received by a lawyer in a representative capacity from or on behalf of a Third Party Owner. Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 requires the lawyer to maintain funds of a Third Party Owner separate from the lawyers own property, and to safeguard the funds appropriately. A lawyer may not personally profit from Rule 1.15 Funds.
(i) Received in connection with a client-lawyer relationship: Rule 1.15 Funds are funds received in connection with a client-lawyer relationship.
(ii) Funds received while acting as a fiduciary: Pa.R.P.C.1.15(d) specifically excludes from its application funds received by the lawyer while acting as fiduciary for an estate, trust, guardianship, or conservatorship. However, if these funds are nominal in amount or reasonably expected to be held for such a short period that sufficient interest will not be generated to justify maintaining a segregated account, these funds may be deposited in an IOLTA Account.
(iii) Received in connection with nonlegal services: Under Rule 5.7 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct, there are three situations involving the provision of nonlegal services by a lawyer which trigger the applicability of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct. These include: (A) if a lawyer provides nonlegal services that are not distinct from legal services, (B) if the lawyer provides nonlegal services that are distinct from legal services, but the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the recipient might believe that the recipient of the services is receiving the protection of a client-lawyer relationship, and (C) if the lawyer is a owner, controlling party, employee, agent, or is otherwise affiliated with an entity providing nonlegal services and the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the recipient of the service might believe that the recipient is receiving the protection of a client-lawyer relationship. In each of these three cases, the lawyer will be subject to the obligations of Rule 1.15 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct and these Regulations as if a client-lawyer relationship existed with the recipient of the services. If a lawyer receives funds in connection with a relationship described in any of these situations, the funds are Rule 1.15 Funds and must be deposited either in an IOLTA Account or in a Trust Account for the benefit of the Third Party Owner.
Factors which should be used to determine whether, under the tests of Pa.R.P.C. 5.7, the nonlegal services (and funds received in connection therewith) are subject to the Pa.R.P.C. include:
(1) whether funds received in connection with the nonlegal services are maintained completely separate from funds received in connection with legal services;
(2) whether the lawyer has advised the Third Party Owner in clear, unambiguous terms that the lawyer is acting in a nonlegal capacity, and is not receiving funds in connection with a client-lawyer relationship;
(3) whether the Third Party Owner can reasonably expect to have the protection of the client-lawyer relationship cover the entire matter;
(4) whether the lawyer performs both legal and nonlegal services from the same office; and
(5) whether the lawyer uses different letterhead in connection with legal and nonlegal services.
(iv) Certain funds handled routinely by a lawyer may not be Rule 1.15 Funds. Rule 1.15 Funds are received by the lawyer in connection with a client-lawyer relationship. Rule 1.15 Funds are also funds received by the lawyer in connection with the provision of nonlegal services under any of the circumstances described in Section 81.104(a)(iii) of these Regulations. These Rule 1.15 Funds must be deposited in an IOLTA Account or a Trust Account for the benefit of the Third Party Owner.
For example, if the lawyer as an agent for a title insurance company handles title insurance and real estate matters in connection with a client-lawyer relationship, or if the provision of title insurance and other services in connection with the real estate matter is not distinct from legal services provided to that recipient, or if the lawyer knows or has reason to know that the recipient of the services believes the relationship to be that of client-lawyer, funds received by the lawyer in connection with the relationship are Rule 1.15 Funds and must be placed in a Trust Account. If the Rule 1.15 Funds are Qualified Funds, the funds must be deposited in an IOLTA Account. The lawyer as title insurance agent may be required to maintain a separate settlement account for each underwriter to process funds handled by that lawyer in connection with acting as a title insurance agent. If the funds deposited in the settlement account are Qualified Funds, each settlement account must be an IOLTA Account.
(b) Subaccounting refers to a process whereby Nonqualified Funds are segregated by the lawyer or the lawyers financial institution by Third Party Owner, and interest on each subaccount is separately calculated, reported, and paid to the Third Party Owner. Subaccounting attributes all of the interest earned on the Rule 1.15 Funds to the Third Party Owner.
(i) Nothing in these regulations shall be construed to prohibit a lawyer from maintaining and administering a separate subaccount for each Third Party Owner from whom Rule 1.15 Funds are received.
(ii) A lawyer who directly maintains a subaccounting system for Rule 1.15 Funds must comply not only with Pa.R.P.C. regarding such funds, but must also comply with applicable laws and regulations of the United States and of the Internal Revenue Service in particular.
(iii) Nothing in these regulations shall be construed to prohibit a lawyer from delegating to a financial institution the responsibility for maintaining and administering a separate subaccount for each Third Party Owner from whom the lawyer receives Rule 1.15 Funds.
(c) Qualified Funds: The lawyer should apply an economic benefits test to determine whether Rule 1.15 Funds are Qualified Funds. Rule 1.15 Funds are not Qualified Funds if the lawyer will hold the funds for such a length of time, or if the Rule 1.15 Funds are of sufficient amount that the interest generated on the funds will exceed the cost of earning and conveying the interest to Third Party Owner.
(i) Law firm compliance v. lawyer responsibility: A lawyer who is an employee or member of a law firm that maintains an IOLTA Account is presumed to be in compliance with IOLTA regulations when the lawyer uses only the law firm approved IOLTA Account for the deposit of all Qualified Funds entrusted to him or her. However, the lawyer is ultimately responsible to assure that he or she is in compliance with Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 and these regulations.
(ii) Good faith judgment: A lawyer must use good faith judgment in determining whether Rule 1.15 Funds are Qualified Funds. A lawyer will not be liable for damages or be held to have breached a fiduciary duty or responsibility because the lawyer deposited funds into an IOLTA Account pursuant to the lawyers judgment in good faith that the funds were Qualified Funds.
(iii) Nominal Rule 1.15 Funds: Funds that when considered alone are not large enough to earn net interest for the Third Party Owner thereof are Qualified Funds.
(iv) Funds held for a short time: Funds which are not expected to be held for sufficient time to provide net interest for the Third Party Owner are Qualified Funds.
(v) Factors which should be used to determine whether funds can reasonably be expected to generate net interest for the Third Party Owner include:
(1) the cost to the lawyer of establishing and maintaining account(s) benefiting Third Party Owners;
(2) the account and service charges of the financial institution in which the account is maintained;
(3) the minimum deposit requirements of the financial institution in which the account is maintained;
(4) accounting fees likely to be incurred by the lawyer in connection with the funds;
(5) the lawyers anticipated tax reporting requirement costs incurred in connection with the funds;
(6) the nature of the transaction(s) or proceeding(s) involved; and
(7) the likelihood of delay in the relevant transaction(s) or proceeding(s).
(d) Examples of Rule 1.15 Funds and Qualified Funds:
(i) Estates, trusts, guardianships, etc.: Funds held by a lawyer as a personal representative, trustee, guardian, attorney-in-fact or the like are specifically excluded from the definition of Rule 1.15 Funds. However, if these funds are nominal in amount or reasonably expected to be held for such a short period that sufficient interest will not be generated to justify the expense of earning interest for the client or third person, these funds may be deposited in an IOLTA Account.
(ii) Conveying accounts/real estate closings: Funds generated from real estate closings will be Qualified Funds, if the lawyer receives the funds in connection with a client-lawyer relationship or if Pa.R.P.C. 5.7(a), (b), or (c) apply. Generally, these funds are held for a short period of time and are not expected to provide interest for the Third Party Owner.
(iii) Advanced costs, fees, and refundable retainer accounts: Such advances are Qualified Funds when they are nominal or held for a short period of time, and will remain Qualified Funds until earned/expended by the lawyer and thereby removed from the IOLTA Account.
(iv) Proceeds from dispute settlements/lawsuits: Generally settlement funds are Qualified Funds if the settlement proceeds are nominal in amount or held for a short period of time. If settlement proceeds are not Qualified Funds, they must be placed in a Trust Account or other investment vehicle specifically agreed upon by the lawyer and the Third Party Owner.
§ 81.105. Approved Financial Institutions.
(a) The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania approves financial institutions in which a lawyer may maintain a Trust Account. This list of approved financial institutions is published from time to time pursuant to Pa.R.D.E. 221.
(b) All lawyers must deposit Rule 1.15 Funds which are not Qualified Funds in a Trust Account with an approved financial institution, unless an agreement exists between the Third Party Owner and the lawyer to use another investment vehicle.
(c) All lawyers must deposit Rule 1.15 Funds which are Qualified Funds in an IOLTA Account with an approved financial institution. Moreover, each financial institution must send a report to the lawyer showing the interest and account service charges concerning the IOLTA Account. The financial institution must report this same information to the IOLTA Board, and must also report the average daily balance in the account during the remittance period, if that information is available.
(d) Acceptable account title: The lawyer must specifically identify an IOLTA account with the words IOLTA Trust Account or IOLTA Escrow Account and the name of the lawyer or the law firm who maintains the account in the main title of the account.
(e) Acceptable title on checks/deposit slips: The word IOLTA need not be placed on checks or deposit slips.
(f) Credit unions: IOLTA Accounts maintained in credit unions may not be insured. Therefore, IOLTA Accounts must not be established in a credit union unless only Rule 1.15 Funds of owners who are or are eligible to be members of the credit union are deposited into the account.
§ 81.106. Interest on IOLTA Accounts.
(a) The rate of interest paid on IOLTA Accounts shall be not less than the highest rate of interest generally available from the financial institution to depositors generally for accounts with the same minimum balance and other account eligibility requirements.
(b) A financial institution shall be deemed to have satisfied the requirements of subsection (a) of this regulation if the rate of interest offered by the financial institution on IOLTA Accounts is not less than the rate of interest identified from time to time by the Board as the safe harbor rate in the Boards Guidelines for Financial Institutions.
(c) Under no circumstances may the rate of interest payable on an IOLTA Account be less than the rate paid by the depository institution on negotiable order of withdrawal accounts or super negotiable order of withdrawal accounts.
(d) Remittance of interest: Any interest earned under the IOLTA program must be remitted to the Board at least every quarter. The following information must be provided to the Board and to the lawyer who maintains the IOLTA Account at the time of each remittance:
(i) The name of the account;
(ii) The service charges or fees deducted, if any;
(iii) The amount of interest remitted from the account; and
(iv) If available, the average daily balance in the IOLTA Account.
§ 81.107. Service Charges on IOLTA Accounts.
(a) Financial institutions may impose reasonable service charges for the administration of IOLTA Accounts. A financial institution may not deduct service charges from the principal balance in an IOLTA Account. Reasonable service charges, as well as regular account maintenance fees and transaction charges, can be deducted against the total amount of interest to be paid on the IOLTA Account to which the service charges apply.
(b) All costs associated with check printing, overdraft charges, charges for a temporary extension of credit and similar bank charges shall not be assessed against the principal balance in or interest earned on any accrued interest earned on an IOLTA Account. The lawyer maintaining the account shall be responsible for these costs.
(c) Costs for services such as overdrafts on deposited items, stopped payments, certified checks, and wire transfers at the request of the lawyer or a beneficial owner shall not be assessed against principal balance in or interest earned on an IOLTA Account. The lawyer or the beneficial owner shall be responsible for these costs.
§ 81.108. Exclusion and Exemptions from IOLTA Participation.
(a) Certain lawyers, because of their employment, are excluded from Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(g). A lawyer who does not receive Rule 1.15 Funds is excluded from IOLTA. Examples include lawyers employed full time in a corporate capacity, by local, state or federal government, as a law clerk, professor, or as a member of the judiciary. A lawyer who does not have an office in Pennsylvania, does not receive Rule 1.15 Funds in a representative capacity from Third Party Owners in the Commonwealth, and who is not otherwise required to maintain Rule 1.15 Funds in a Trust Account in the Commonwealth is excluded from Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(g). A lawyer who is retired or no longer practices law need not maintain an IOLTA account.
(b) Pa.R.P.C. 1.15(h) permits limited exemptions from the requirement that all Qualified Funds must be maintained in an IOLTA Account. No exemption is automatic, although exemptions will be routinely granted under specified circumstances. The Board may declare a lawyer exempt from the requirement of maintaining an IOLTA Account; alternatively, a lawyer may submit a written request for exemption.
(c) Nonqualified Funds are to be deposited in a Trust Account or in another investment vehicle specifically agreed upon by the lawyer and Third Party Owner, and the Board is without power to grant an exemption from this requirement. If a lawyer is exempt from the requirement of maintaining an IOLTA Account, the lawyer must still deposit Qualified Funds in a Trust Account.
(d) Under the following circumstances, the Board will routinely grant an exemption from the requirement that a lawyer maintains all Qualified Funds in an IOLTA Account:
(i) Low balance account: Any Trust Account which historically, generally based upon 12 consecutive months of activity, has an average daily balance of Three Thousand Five Hundred ($3,500) Dollars or less (or such other amount as the Board announces from time to time) will be exempt from being an IOLTA Account. The Board may exempt from IOLTA, without application, a low balance account. A lawyer requesting an exemption based on a low balance account must, as a part of the written request for exemption, include an account analysis or written statement that demonstrates the amount of the average daily balance.
(ii) Account service charges routinely exceed interest: Some Trust Accounts may have an average daily balance of more than $3,500, but because of the account service charges or the interest rates of the financial institution, the charges would routinely exceed interest earned on the Trust Account. In these cases, an exemption may be requested. A lawyer requesting an exemption based on these circumstances must, as part of the written request for exemption, include an account analysis or written statement that clearly shows the interest earned, or the interest that would have been earned, on the account each month for the past 12 months, plus the account service charges imposed on the account for each of the last 12 months.
(iii) Extreme impracticality or undue hardship: Under limited circumstances it would be unduly burdensome for a lawyer to maintain a Trust Account as an IOLTA Account. When claiming extreme impracticality or undue hardship, the lawyer should provide appropriate details demonstrating undue hardship. An example includes the lack of an approved financial institution that offers IOLTA Accounts in the lawyers geographical location.
(iv) Other compelling and necessitous reasons: There may be compelling and necessitous reasons justifying an exemption from the requirement that the lawyer maintain a Trust Account as an IOLTA Account. A lawyer who demonstrates a compelling and necessitous reason for not complying with IOLTA may request an exemption. A philosophical objection to IOLTA does not constitute a compelling and necessitous reason for an exemption.
(e) Interest waived by a Third Party Owner: An exemption from the requirement that a Trust Account be maintained as an IOLTA Account will not be granted based on an agreement between a lawyer and Third Party Owner purportedly waiving the Third Party Owners right to interest or granting the lawyer the power to direct interest earned on Rule 1.15 Funds to the lawyer or to another person of the lawyers choice.
§ 81.109. Requests for Exemptions and Reconsideration.
(a) If the Board denies a lawyers request for an exemption from maintenance of an IOLTA Account, the lawyer may, within 30 days of written notice of denial from the Board, request in writing a reconsideration of the Boards decision. All requests for reconsideration shall set forth in detail additional facts, if any, not brought before the Board in the request for exemption, as well as the reasons, if any, why an exemption should be granted.
(b) If the Board has determined that a lawyer is exempt from the requirement of maintaining an IOLTA Account, the lawyer may, within 30 days of written notice from the Board that the lawyer is exempt, request in writing a reconsideration of the Boards decision. All requests for reconsideration shall set forth in detail facts, if any, why the lawyer should maintain an IOLTA Account, and the manner, if any, in which the Board and the purposes of the IOLTA program will be furthered by the lawyers maintenance of an IOLTA Account.
(c) Notice shall be deemed to have been given to a lawyer under the provisions of subsections (a) and (b) of this Section 81.109 upon the deposit by the Board, postage prepaid, with the United States Postal Service of its written determination regarding the exemption, if any, of the lawyer from IOLTA.
(d) The Board may delegate to its staff or to a committee of the Board the authority to determine exemptions from IOLTA or to reconsider exemption denials or determinations.
§ 81.110. Annual Certification of Compliance with Pa.R.P.C. 1.15.
On or before July 1 of each year, each lawyer who is required by Pa.R.D.E. 219 to pay an annual fee must also file with the Administrative Office a signed statement on the prescribed form stating his or her familiarity and compliance with Pa.R.P.C. 1.15 in regards to handling funds, maintaining IOLTA Accounts and Pa.R.D.E. 221. Each lawyer is directed to Pa.R.D.E. 219(d).
§ 81.111. Refunds.
(a) The Board may return interest paid to IOLTA under certain circumstances. If a lawyer mistakenly places Nonqualified Funds in an IOLTA Account, or if the lawyer reasonably believed that Rule 1.15 Funds were Qualified Funds, but the Rule 1.15 Funds were in fact not Qualified Funds, then the lawyer may apply for a refund of interest paid to IOLTA.
(b) The following guidelines apply to applications for return of interest:
(i) The lawyer must make the application in writing on firm letterhead.
(ii) The application must be accompanied by verification from the financial institution in which the IOLTA Account is maintained of the interest earned on the Rule 1.15 Funds for which a refund is sought. As needed for auditing purposes, the Board may request additional documentation.
(iii) The application must be received by the Board within six months after the Rule 1.15 Funds have been disbursed from the IOLTA Account.
(iv) The refund will be remitted to the lawyer for his/her distribution to the Third Party Owner. The Board will issue an IRS (Internal Revenue Service) form 1099 to the lawyer who, in turn, is responsible for issuing an IRS form 1099 to the Third Party Owner.
(v) If the financial institution has imposed a service charge with respect to the deposit, only the net amount of interest paid to IOLTA (reduced by applicable service charges) will be refunded.