Current through August 12, 2025 (2026 Practice Book edition) · Last verified July 9, 2026
In one sentenceSpells out which claims the client security fund can reimburse, requiring dishonest conduct by a practicing Connecticut attorney, a triggering event like disbarment or death, a timely filing, and excludes certain losses such as those to family members or insured losses.
(a)A claim for reimbursement of a loss must be based upon the dishonest conduct of an attorney who, in connection with the defalcation upon which the claim is based, was a member of the Connecticut bar and engaged in the practice of law in this state.
(b)The claim shall not be eligible for reimbursement unless:
(1)the attorney was acting as an attorney or fiduciary in the matter in which the loss arose;
(2)the attorney has died, been adjudged incapable, not competent or insane, been disbarred or suspended from the practice of law in Connecticut, been placed on probation or inactive status by a Connecticut court, resigned from the Connecticut bar, or become the judgment debtor of the claimant with respect to such claim; and
(3)the claim is presented within four years of the time when the claimant discovered or first reasonably should have discovered the dishonest acts and the resulting losses or the claim was pending before the Connecticut Bar Association’s client security fund committee as of the effective date of this rule.
(c)Except as provided by subsection (d) of this section, the following losses shall not be eligible for reimbursement:
(1)losses incurred by spouses, children, parents, grandparents, siblings, partners, associates and employees of the attorney causing the losses;
(2)losses covered by any bond, surety agreement, or insurance contract to the extent covered thereby, including any loss to which any bonding agent, surety or insurer is subrogated, to the extent of that subrogated interest;
(3)losses incurred by any financial institution which are recoverable under a ‘‘banker’s blanket bond’’ or similar commonly available insurance or surety contract;
(4)losses incurred by any business entity controlled by the attorney, any person or entity described in subdivisions (c) (1), (2), or (3) herein;
(5)losses incurred by any governmental entity or agency.
(d)In cases of extreme hardship or special and unusual circumstances, the client security fund committee may, in its discretion, consider a claim eligible for reimbursement which would otherwise be excluded under these rules.
(e)In cases where it appears that there will be unjust enrichment, or the claimant unreasonably or knowingly contributed to the loss, the client security fund committee may, in its discretion, deny the claim.
Amendment History
(Adopted June 29, 1998, to take effect Jan. 1, 1999.)
Plain-English Summary
This rule sets the eligibility rules for client security fund claims. A claim must rest on the dishonest conduct of an attorney who, at the time of the defalcation, was a member of the Connecticut bar and engaged in practicing law in the state.
Beyond that, a claim is eligible only if three things are true: the attorney was acting as an attorney or fiduciary in the matter where the loss arose; the attorney has died, been adjudged incapable or insane, been disbarred or suspended, been placed on probation or inactive status, resigned from the bar, or become a judgment debtor to the claimant on the claim; and the claim is presented within four years of when the claimant discovered or reasonably should have discovered the dishonest acts and losses, or was already pending before the Connecticut Bar Association’s client security fund committee when this rule took effect.
Certain losses are not eligible for reimbursement unless the hardship exception applies: losses to the attorney’s spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings, partners, associates, and employees; losses covered by a bond, surety agreement, or insurance contract, to the extent covered; losses to financial institutions recoverable under a banker’s blanket bond or similar coverage; losses to any business entity controlled by the attorney or by those excluded family members and associates; and losses to any governmental entity or agency.
The client security fund committee can still consider an otherwise-excluded claim eligible in cases of extreme hardship or special and unusual circumstances. And the committee may deny a claim, in its discretion, where it appears there would be unjust enrichment or where the claimant unreasonably or knowingly contributed to the loss.
Frequently Asked Questions
What must a claimant show to file a client security fund claim?
The claim must be based on the dishonest conduct of an attorney who was a Connecticut bar member practicing law in the state, who was acting as attorney or fiduciary in the matter, and who has since died, been disbarred or suspended, resigned, been adjudged incapable, or become a judgment debtor to the claimant.
How long do I have to file a client security fund claim?
The claim must be presented within four years of when the claimant discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, the dishonest acts and the resulting losses.
Can family members of the dishonest attorney recover from the fund?
Generally no. Losses incurred by the attorney’s spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings, partners, associates, and employees are excluded, unless the committee applies the extreme hardship or special circumstances exception.
Are losses already covered by insurance eligible for reimbursement?
No. Losses covered by a bond, surety agreement, or insurance contract are excluded from reimbursement to the extent they are covered by that bond, surety, or insurance.
Source & verification. The section text is reproduced verbatim from the
official Connecticut Practice Book (Conn. Practice Book § 2-71). Prescribed by the Judges of the Superior Court of Connecticut (Conn. Gen. Stat. Section 51-14). The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 9, 2026. ·
Official source
Also known as:client security fund eligible claimshow to file client security fund claimtime limit for security fund claimexcluded losses client security fundfour year deadline dishonest attorney claim