(affirming). Respondent contests the State Bar Grievance Board’s affirmance of an order suspending him from the practice of law for one year. Respondent contends that the facts do not support the findings and that the suspension constitutes cruel and unusual punishment.
FACTS
Proceedings were initiated by a formal complaint of the State Bar Grievance Administrator alleging, in two counts, that respondent was guilty of misconduct. The first count concerned respondent’s dilatory probating of an estate and his representation of a claim against the estate of which he was a coexecutor. The second count alleged that respondent failed to deliver, as promised, certain deeds to the grantees, failed to take prompt action to deliver the deeds or settle title and failed to segregate and account for monies received on behalf of a client.
A hearing was held April 25, 1973. Findings of fact were made June 7, 1973 and the following conclusion drawn:
1. As to count one, respondent’s conduct was said to be "detrimental to and directly opposed to the interests of the estate and the beneficiaries * * * and constituted in the judgment of the Panel a conflict of interest.”
2. Concerning the deeds discussed in count two, the panel said respondent "failed to take prompt and affirmative action to make delivery”, failed to promptly notify "the grantees that the deeds were *649lost or mislaid, or misplaced” and failed "to take prompt action in locating them and/or attempting to quiet title to the premises in question, based on his knowledge of the transaction”.
3. As to the monies collected, the panel said respondent failed "to properly account”, failed "to segregate said funds” and failed "to transmit funds to the client”.
Based on their findings and conclusions, the panel ordered respondent suspended for one year on each count, the suspensions to run concurrently. Pursuant to respondent’s petition for review, the State Bar Grievance Board heard arguments of counsel. On November 29,1973, the board affirmed the panel’s report and order.
DISCUSSION
Since respondent’s contentions concern the findings of fact, a standard of review must be established. Recently, this Court affirmed a previous suspension received by respondent. In State Bar Grievance Administrator v Estes, 390 Mich 585; 212 NW2d 903 (1973), we retained the standard of review established by case law.1 We must "determine whether the Board’s findings have proper evidentiary support on the whole record.”
In that decision the Court felt "there was sufficient testimony and factual support on the record to enable the hearing panel and the Board to conclude as they did”. We declined to substitute our judgment "for that of the panel below which had an opportunity and a mandate not only to garner evidence of misconduct but to observe and *650assess the demeanor and credibility of the witnesses.”2
Three justices concurred in the result but felt that the adopted standard of review improperly reduced the Court’s reviewing responsibility. They would "closely scrutinize their records to determine whether the record support is convincing and persuasive.”
No matter what standard is applied, respondent’s suspension must be affirmed. The record is replete with support for the conclusions drawn and the discipline imposed.
COUNT I
Respondent drafted and witnessed the will of Edith Hanks. The instrument named respondent and a daughter of Edith Hanks as coexecutors. Mrs. Hanks died July 13,1965.
The will was not offered for probate until July 1967 and then only at the insistence of an attorney retained by the beneficiaries. Respondent and his coexecutor did not file an inventory until April 1968. Certain securities distributed by the will were not listed. Apparently, subsequent to drafting the will, the testatrix had sought to make the coexecutor daughter a joint owner of the securities.
The beneficiaries objected to the inventory. A hearing was held on the question of Mrs. Hank’s competency at the time of the changing of title to the securities. Respondent represented the daughter against the estate at the hearing contending *651that the securities were her property and did not belong in the estate.
The probate court ruled that Mrs. Hanks was not legally competent at the time of the change in title. The securities were to remain in the estate. Respondent appealed this decision on behalf of the daughter and again against the estate of which he was coexecutor.
The parties eventually settled the dispute. A final accounting was not filed until February, 1972. The estate was finally closed in May, 1972 — seven years after the testatrix’s death.'
Respondent’s conduct clearly warranted disciplinary action. We are not dealing in a gray or undefined area of professional conduct. Although named and appointed coexecutor of the estate, respondent represented a client whose claim was contrary to the provisions of the will and was antithetical to the best interests of the estate and beneficiaries. This is a self-evident basis for discipline.
COUNTII
Respondent had agreed, upon the death of the grantor, to deliver certain executed deeds. Respondent retained possession of the deeds. The grantor died in March, 1971.
Respondent was unable to deliver the deeds as they had been misplaced. The grantees communicated with respondent concerning delivery and he informed them that the deeds had been lost. The deeds were not located until shortly after respondent received notice that he was the subject of a formal complaint. This was two years after the grantor’s death.
Respondent took no action to settle title to the *652lands in question. One grantee was to receive land upon which there was a land contract. In the two years the deeds were misplaced, payments on the contract went to the grantee’s stepmother, who retained them. A house deeded to the same grantee was damaged by fire. The grantee had no opportunity to insure the building. What insurance there was had been obtained by another and the company was contesting the claim.
Respondent also represented the same grantee in a collection suit and received a favorable judgment. Respondent collected $45 which he intended to retain for expenses and fees. There was no formal fee arrangement nor did respondent ever submit a bill for services rendered or otherwise communicate with his clients. When notified of the filing of a complaint, respondent sent the complainant a check for $22.50.
In both instances respondent’s conduct merits discipline. It was his duty to take immediate action either to deliver the deeds as promised or move to quiet title in the grantees. This duty was not fulfilled. Respondent’s failure to segregate and account for monies collected for a client cannot lightly be passed over, although the sum involved is small.
CONCLUSION
There is adequate convincing and persuasive evidentiary support in the record to affirm the conclusions of the State Bar Grievance Board.
Further, this is the third disciplinary action against Mr. Estes to be affirmed by this Court.
Unfortunately, practicing lawyers and the judiciary, as well as the court system itself, suffers a *653loss of confidence through acts and failures to act such as those evidenced herein. Each lawyer bears a large measure of responsibility to every other lawyer. A lawyer who also is a fiduciary bears a doubly high degree of responsibility and accountability.
Based upon a consideration of the facts of this matter and the number of meritorious past grievances against Mr. Estes, the discipline imposed is found not be be "cruel and unusual”.
Affirm.
T. M. Kavanagh, C. J., and Swainson, Williams, and J. W. Fitzgerald, JJ., concurred with M. S. Coleman, J.
(for reversal). A lawyer may properly represent the interests of multiple clients if it is obvious that he can adequately represent the interest of each and if, after full disclosure, each consents. DR 5-105(C).
The interest of the grandchildren of the decedent, to whom stock certificates were bequeathed, was represented by a lawyer retained by them. Walter Estes, lawyer for Margaret Pemberton both in her fiduciary capacity as executrix of the estate of the decedent and in her individual capacity as the inter vivos donee of the stock certificates, did not purport to represent the nominal interest of the estate in the litigation between Pemberton and the grandchildren; the lawyer who represented the grandchildren advanced whatever interest the estate had in that litigation. It is not claimed that Estes’ "representation” of the estate conflicted with any duty to Pemberton. There was, in substance, no conflict. The other issues are insubstantial.
*654I
Edith Hanks died on July 13, 1965. Walter Estes had represented her for several years. He drafted her will which named Estes and Margaret Pemberton, Hanks’ daughter, coexecutors, named Pemberton as a beneficiary and provided that Hanks’ grandchildren were to receive certain stock certificates.
A month before Hanks died, while she was in the hospital, she made Pemberton a joint owner of the stock certificates. Neithér Pemberton nor Estes was present when Hanks signed over the certificates. Hanks died of malacia, a degenerative disease of the brain.
Pemberton notified Estes of her mother’s death and told him there was nothing to probate because all the assets had been made joint with her.
Estes did not present the will for probate. A granddaughter communicated with him regarding the will. Estes told her that it was not necessary to probate the will as all assets had been made joint with Pemberton. Some of the grandchildren then hired a lawyer who demanded that the will be probated.
The will was admitted to probate in July, 1967. Estes and Pemberton qualified as coexecutors. They filed an inventory in April, 1968. The stock certificates were listed as having been made joint with Pemberton shortly before Hanks’ death. There was no effort to conceal the existence or value of the certificates.
The grandchildren filed objections to the invent tory. A hearing was held in the probate court to determine whether Hanks was competent at the time the securities were made joint. Pemberton claimed ownership of the securities. Estes repre*655sented her at the hearing; he also testified for her concerning Hanks’ competency. The probate court found that Hanks lacked the requisite competency. at the time of the transfer and that the certificates should go to the estate, not to Pemberton. Estes, on behalf of Pemberton, appealed this decision to the circuit court.
The grandchildren then, for the first time, made demand in the probate court that Estes and Pemberton resign because of an alleged conflict of interest. Before a hearing was held, Estes and Pemberton told the probate judge they would resign if he felt there was a conflict. The judge apparently so felt; Estes and Pemberton resigned.
A settlement was negotiated and the litigation terminated before decision in the circuit court. Pemberton and Estes were then reinstated as coexecutors. The final account was filed in February, 1972.
II
Estes was not charged with failure to proffer the will or failure to bring the possible interests of the grandchildren to their attention. Nor was he charged with “dilatory probating of an estate.” See State Bar Grievance Administrator v Jackson, 390 Mich 147, 155; 211 NW2d 38 (1973). There is no allegation that Estes’ actions resulted in prejudice to the grandchildren or loss to them or the estate.
Estes was disciplined because he represented Pemberton in her controversy with the grandchildren while he was the lawyer for the estate.
At the grievance hearing, Estes maintained that the interest of Pemberton and the interest of the estate were the same. The State Bar Grievance *656Board was troubled by Estes’ failure to even perceive a potential conflict.
The board thought that the conflict was obvious; both Pemberton and the estate claimed the stock certificates. If Pemberton won, the certificates would become her individual property. If she lost, they would go to the estate and be distributed to the grandchildren according to the provisions of Hanks’ will.
The board’s reasoning fails to distinguish between the "estate” and the "legatees”. The real adversaries were not the estate and Pemberton but the grandchildren and Pemberton. The estate had no substantial interest in the outcome of the controversy. The certificates would go either to Pemberton or to the grandchildren. The estate’s interest was nominal. In substance it had none.
In his representation of Pemberton in her controversy with the grandchildren, Estes did not espouse a position for or undertake to represent the estate.
Lawyers often and properly represent conflicting interests after full disclosure and with the consent of all concerned:
"[A] lawyer may represent multiple clients if it is obvious that he can adequately represent the interest of each and if each consents to the representation after full disclosure of the possible effect of such representation on the exercise of his independent professional judgment on behalf of each.” DR 5-105(C).
Estes did not purport to represent the estate in the Pemberton-grandchildren litigation. Whatever interest the estate had in the matter was advanced by the lawyer for the grandchildren. Under those circumstances, even if it is thought that Estes represented the nominal interest of the estate, it *657appears “obvious” that he could "adequately” represent that nominal interest although at the time he was representing the interest of Margaret Pemberton. We exalt form over substance in finding that Estes represented conflicting interests.
Ill
Logan v Logan, 97 Ind App 209; 180 NE 32 (1932), presents a situation much like the instant case. Attorneys who had represented the decedent for a long time prior to his death accepted employment as attorneys for the administratrix of his estate. The. administratrix and her children claimed that certain property had been given to them by the deceased. An heir brought suit against the administratrix in the name of the estate claiming that the property belonged to the estate. The Court held that it was not improper for the attorneys to represent her in this action. It rejected arguments that the attorneys had accepted “inconsistent employment”, and that it was “unfair and contrary to law and good ethics” for them to appear for the administratrix and represent her “in defeating the claim” of the estate against her.
In In re Estate of Wright, 165 Ohio St 15, 23; 133 NE2d 350, 356 (1956), the lawyer-administrator contracted to represent a claimant against the estate for a percentage of the proceeds the claimant would realize. The Supreme Court of Ohio held that failure to disclose this arrangement to the Court and all interested parties was a fraud upon the Court:
"It is a fundamental principle of law that, where parties having different interests are involved, no lawyer can represent or receive compensation from such *658parties without a full disclosure, to all the parties involved, of his dual representation and the arrangements as to the compensation to be received therefrom.
"Every lawyer worthy of the name learns this principle ab initio. In fact, it is indicated in the oath of office lie takes upon his admission to the bar. It follows that, where one is acting as an administrator of an estate, his sole duty is to its proper administration, and he can not properly have an arrangement to represent a claimant against the estate without a full disclosure of such arrangement to the court and to all persons concerned in the estate, not only as to the terms of the arrangement but as to the compensation he . is to receive therefrom.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The lawyer was subsequently disciplined by the Ohio Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline; the Ohio Supreme Court upheld the finding of unprofessional conduct and the discipline imposed. Cleveland Bar Association v Pleasant, 167 Ohio 325; 148 NE2d 493; 4 Ohio Op 2d 433 (1958).
In the instant case, the probate court was fully informed of the facts and when, ultimately, the grandchildren sought to have Estes and Pemberton removed, they resigned. They were reinstated by the court after the controversy over the stock certificates was settled. There was no fraud upon or failure to disclose the relevant facts to the court or imposition upon anyone.
I would reverse the finding of unprofessional conduct under Count I.
IV
The first charge under Count II concerns misplaced deeds. Estes was disciplined for failing either to promptly locate the deeds or to bring an action to quiet title to the property involved. The *659deeds were ultimately found by Estes in a closed file of a totally unrelated matter and turned over to the owner.
This appears on this record as an isolated incident of carelessness and is not the sort of conduct which warrants discipline by the State Bar Grievance Board.
Not only was Estes under no duty to bring an action to quiet title to the property in question, he could not properly have commenced litigation without being retained for that purpose.
The. second charge under Count II concerns the collection of money for a client. It would have been better if Estes had communicated with his client and disclosed the collection of $45. At the time, however, the client owed Estes at least that amount for services rendered and expenses advanced. There was' no misappropriation of a client’s money, only a relatively minor failure of communication.
I would, thus, also reverse the finding of unprofessional conduct under Count II for the reason that neither charge warrants disciplinary action.
T. G. Kavanagh, J., concurred with Levin, J.