When you are entrusted with a client’s funds you are obligated under Massachusetts Rules of Professional Conduct 1.15 to hold it in trust. Money which is received from a client that has not been earned must be placed in either an IOLTA account or, depending on the amount held and the time held, a separate trust account. (However, note that Rule 1.15 does not require flat fees to be deposited into an IOLTA account. RPC 1.15, Cmt. 2A.) If you plan to hold client funds, open an account as soon as possible and certainly before you receive any money from a client.
You can find a list of approved banks on the Mass IOLTA Committee website. An appropriate name for the account must be selected. The naming convention is governed by Mass. R. Prof. C. 1.15(e) which requires words such as “trust account”, “escrow account”, “client funds account”, “conveyance account”, or “IOLTA Account”. When opening an account, complete this form and send it to the Massachusetts IOLTA Committee along with a deposit slip or voided check. It is also helpful to: (1) order checks which are a different color from your operating account and (2) keep approximately $150.00 in the account for bank charges. This will keep you from inadvertently using client funds to pay for firm expenses.
For additional help with IOLTA, attend a free one-hour training run each month by the Board of Bar Overseers with participating bar associations. Advance registration is required. Just call the Office of Bar Counsel at (617) 728-8750 and ask for “trust account program registration.”
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS
Massachusetts IOLTA Committee Attorney Resources
We are Reconciled: IOLTA Accounts
Step Up to the Plate and Learn to Do Your IOLTA Trust Accounting
Attorney Funds May be Deposited into IOLTA Account to Cover Bank Charges
IOLTA Accounting: Part One (The Legal Toolkit Podcast)
IOLTA Accounting: Part Two (The Legal Toolkit Podcast)
IOLTA and Accepting Credit Cards (ABA Law Technology Today)
THREE-WAY RECONCILIATION
Uh Oh!! IOLTA Accounts and Escrow Accounts (James Bolan, Esq.)
Three-Way Reconciliation Sample Forms
Minnesota State Bar Association IOLTA Guides for QuickBooks and GnuCash
Two-Minute Tips: How to Reconcile Your Trust Account [Video] (Beverly Michaelis)
BOARD OF BAR OVERSEERS ARTICLES
RECORD TIME: Countdown to the New Rule on Trust Accounting
Records for Other People’s Money
Lost and Found – What To Do With Missing Clients’ Funds
Clients’ Funds – No Casual Matter
More Dishonored in the Breach: Bounced Checks and Bad Bookkeeping
Working with Clients’ Trust Accounts
FURTHER READING FROM OUR LENDING LIBRARY
Law Practice Accounting Using QuickBooks (PC and Mac) (Lynette Benton, Forthcoming)
QuickBooks in One Hour for Lawyers (Lynette Benton, American Bar Association)