Disciplinary Proceedings Against Hooker

2010 WI 13, 779 N.W.2d 419, 322 Wis. 2d 552, 2010 Wisc. LEXIS 13
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 2010
Docket2009AP1099-D
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2010 WI 13 (Disciplinary Proceedings Against Hooker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Disciplinary Proceedings Against Hooker, 2010 WI 13, 779 N.W.2d 419, 322 Wis. 2d 552, 2010 Wisc. LEXIS 13 (Wis. 2010).

Opinion

*553 PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. On April 29, 2009, the Office of Lawyer Regulation (OLR) filed a disciplinary complaint *554 against Attorney Daynel L. Hooker seeking the imposition of discipline identical to that imposed by the Supreme Court of Colorado. Effective February 8, 2009, that court suspended Attorney Hooker's privilege to practice law in Colorado for one year and one day, with six months and one day stayed, upon the successful completion of a two-year period of probation. Upon our review of the matter, we conclude identical discipline is warranted. We order Attorney Hooker's license to practice law in Wisconsin shall be suspended for six months effective February 8, 2009, and that Attorney Hooker shall be required to successfully complete the two-year period of probation imposed by the Supreme Court of Colorado.

¶ 2. Attorney Hooker was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 2001 and is not licensed to practice law in the State of Colorado. She has maintained an office in Aurora, Colorado, and has practiced in the areas of federal immigration, bankruptcy, and intellectual property law.

¶ 3. The OLR has filed certified copies of the stipulation, agreement, and affidavit in the case of The People of the State of Colorado v. Daynel L. Hooker, Case No. 08PDJ106, filed in the Supreme Court of Colorado. Attorney Hooker and her attorney have signed the documents, which state that pursuant to Colorado Rules of Professional Conduct 8.5, effective January 1, 2008, a lawyer who is not admitted in Colorado is subject to the disciplinary authority in Colorado if the lawyer provides or offers to provide any legal services in Colorado. Attorney Hooker stipulated she was subject to the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Colorado in the disciplinary proceeding and subject to suspension of her privilege to practice law in Colorado, although she was not licensed to practice law in Colorado.

*555 ¶ 4. Attorney Hooker's stipulation, agreement, and affidavit admit the following misconduct. Colorado's Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel (OARC) received two notifications from Attorney Hooker's trust account bank that she had written checks without sufficient funds to cover them. On January 15, 2008, Attorney Hooker and her then associate, Tina Diaz, jointly sent letters to clients stating that Ms. Diaz would no longer be working with the firm and requesting that clients designate an attorney for continued representation. Several clients, who elected to have Ms. Diaz represent them, were entitled to reimbursement of their unearned fees from Attorney Hooker.

¶ 5. On February 1, 2008, Attorney Hooker's assistant sent Ms. Diaz a letter enclosing copies of documents transferring several client files, along with copies of cover letters to each client acknowledging selection of Ms. Diaz and copies of trust account refund checks payable to the clients, all dated January 25, 2008. Attorney Hooker did not, however, actually send the refund checks to at least four clients. She alleged that she did not know whether Ms. Diaz was entitled to the funds. According to an accounting Attorney Hooker performed at that time, however, the clients were entitled to the unearned portion of the trust account funds. Therefore, there was no justification for failing to send the checks to the former clients. Attorney Hooker failed to tell Ms. Diaz that she had decided not to send the checks to her former clients. Ms. Diaz learned of Attorney Hooker's decision only when the clients contacted Ms. Diaz regarding the non-receipt of their refund checks.

¶ 6. Based upon Attorney Hooker's records and correspondence sent to former clients, she should have had at least $8,344.32 in her trust account in late January 2008 to cover client advances. Instead, she had *556 an ending balance of $20.59. Attorney Hooker had converted advanced fees and costs to her use or to the use of her firm. Eventually, by the end of April 2008, Attorney Hooker sent out the refund checks.

¶ 7. Attorney Hooker made deposits to her trust account to cover the client refund checks. She subsequently transferred money from her trust account to her business account. Nonetheless, due to a shortfall in her business account, the bank withdrew funds from her trust account to cover her business account. When the refund checks were presented to the bank, insufficient funds remained in the trust account to cover them. The bank paid the checks, leaving a negative balance in the trust account. The bank sent insufficient funds notices to the OARC.

¶ 8. By failing to keep client funds in her trust account, by not timely returning client funds, by misleading Ms. Diaz about the return of client funds, and by converting unearned fees and costs to her own use, Attorney Hooker violated the Colorado Rules of Professional Conduct. Attorney Hooker has agreed that she put some of her former clients in the position of possibly being seriously harmed by withholding money owed to them, which may have precluded them from hiring another attorney in the event of deportation or other important matters. Attorney Hooker agreed she acted recklessly and should have known that she was dealing improperly with client funds. She conceded she acted with a selfish motive and that the victims of her misconduct were vulnerable. She has demonstrated remorse, has not been subject to previous discipline, and has attended trust account training. She has also engaged the services of an accountant who is knowledgeable of Colorado lawyer trust account practices. She consented to the imposition of discipline by the Supreme Court of Colorado.

*557 ¶ 9. As discipline identical to that imposed in Colorado, the OLR moves this court to suspend Attorney Hooker's law license for six months and to require Attorney Hooker's compliance with and successful completion of Colorado's two-year period of probation. This court ordered Attorney Hooker to show cause why the imposition of discipline identical to that imposed by the Colorado Supreme Court would be unwarranted. Attorney Hooker did not file a timely response to the orders to show cause. We deny her motion to file a belated response.

¶ 10. Pursuant to SCR 22.22, this court shall impose identical discipline when an attorney has been disciplined in another jurisdiction and no exceptions apply. See SCR 22.22. 1 Neither the OLR nor Attorney *558 Hooker contends, nor does this court find, that any exception exists to the imposition of identical discipline. This case, however, presents a unique circumstance in which Attorney Hooker has been disciplined in a jurisdiction where she is not licensed to practice law. To order her Wisconsin license suspension effective the date of this decision would in effect increase the length of Attorney Hooker's Colorado suspension, which would not result in an identical sanction. This unique circumstance requires the six-month license suspension in Wisconsin to be effective the same date as the Colorado suspension, February 8, 2009.

¶ 11.

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Bluebook (online)
2010 WI 13, 779 N.W.2d 419, 322 Wis. 2d 552, 2010 Wisc. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disciplinary-proceedings-against-hooker-wis-2010.