In Re Disciplinary Action Against Fuller

621 N.W.2d 460, 2001 Minn. LEXIS 14, 2001 WL 85810
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 25, 2001
DocketCX-99-2061
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 621 N.W.2d 460 (In Re Disciplinary Action Against Fuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Disciplinary Action Against Fuller, 621 N.W.2d 460, 2001 Minn. LEXIS 14, 2001 WL 85810 (Mich. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In 1999, the Director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility requested that the Lawyers Professional Responsibility Board find that probable cause existed for either public discipline or a transfer to disability inactive status for attorney Donald Fuller. A Board panel found probable cause for public discipline, but declined to find probable cause for the transfer to disability inactive status. A petition for disciplinary action was then filed and we referred the matter to a referee for a hearing. The referee recommended that Fuller be suspended indefinitely from the practice of law for a minimum of one year, that he complete a psychological evaluation, and that he follow any recommendations of the evaluation. Fuller challenges the referee’s recommendations. We indefinitely suspend Fuller from the practice of law with no minimum term and place conditions on his reinstatement.

Donald Fuller has had a long legal career marked by many achievements. In 1971, Fuller graduated from the University of Illinois Law School and was admitted to the practice of law in Illinois. He entered the Marine Corps in 1972 and served on active duty until June 1976. In 1974, Fuller was certified as a military judge, which certification is still current. From 1976 through 1983, Fuller practiced law in Illinois and remained a reserve officer with the Marines. Fuller then re-entered the Marines on active duty until he was discharged in 1986. He remained in the Marine Reserves until he retired in 1994 as a full colonel. Fuller moved to Minnesota in 1987. He passed the Minnesota bar exam and was admitted to the practice of law in Minnesota in 1990. In addition to his Minnesota attorney license, Fuller is licensed to practice law in the state of Illinois, the Military Court of Appeals, and the United States District Courts for the Districts of Minnesota and Eastern Illinois.

Fuller’s prior disciplinary history consists of two admonitions. On April 12, 1993, he was admonished for violating Minn.R.Prof.Conduet 1.9 for filing a suit for a current client against a former client without obtaining the former client’s consent. On May 20, 1996, he was admonished for failing to pay bad faith attorney fees arising from a March 1995 district court order. In the memorandum issued with the admonition, the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility (OLPR) noted that Fuller had conducted a voluminous and irritating letter-writing campaign, which the OLPR stated illustrated poor judgment, but did not cross the line of proper conduct. Fuller disputes this second admonition, asserting that he had signed a note to pay the fees.

Fuller’s current disciplinary problems stem from his representation of Brett Hanson, Hanson’s businesses, and Hanson’s business associates. Fuller began representing Hanson and his businesses in bankruptcy and tax proceedings in 1990. In September 1995, Fuller prepared a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing for one of Hanson’s businesses, Imprint Technologies, Inc. 1 Fuller maintains that when he agreed to represent Imprint and Hanson *463 in the 1995 Chapter 11 filing, he conditioned his representation on Hanson receiving chemical dependency treatment.

Hanson paid Fuller weekly cash payments as compensation for his work on the Imprint bankruptcy. Fuller testified that before the establishment of this payment method, he learned that Hanson had paid Imprint’s former bankruptcy attorney cash and that the payments were not reported to or approved by the bankruptcy court. Fuller asserts that when he learned of this arrangement, he reported it to the supervising attorney in the U.S. Trustees’ Office and the OLPR, but neither of these entities took action or informed Fuller that the arrangement was illegal. The record is silent as to whether the Trustees’ Office or the OLPR received such a report. When Hanson’s filing check was not honored and Hanson threatened to bring a disciplinary action against Fuller, Fuller asserts that he agreed to accept $290 per week in cash from Hanson and not disclose the payments to the bankruptcy court. Hanson, however, testified that the cash payments were made at Fuller’s request.

In February 1996, at Hanson’s request, Fuller began representing Pamela Jordan in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding. Jordan was an employee of Imprint and a “partner” of J.D., Inc., Imprint’s predecessor company. The Chapter 13 bankruptcy was filed to protect Jordan from levies against her wages for unpaid withholding taxes due from J.D., Inc. during Jordan’s tenure as a “partner” of the corporation.

On May 2, 1996, the bankruptcy court issued an order confirming Imprint’s reorganization plan and requiring Imprint to file objections to proofs of claim within 30 days of the order date or of the date the claim was filed. In another order issued the same day, the court ordered Imprint to report within 10 days on payments to be made under the reorganization plan.

At this same time in 1996, Fuller was representing Imprint in an unlawful de-tainer action. Fuller had been negotiating with Imprint’s landlords for a number of months in an attempt to obtain a new lease for Imprint and to pay the debt owed for past rent. Despite these efforts, a district court hearing on the unlawful detainer action was scheduled for Tuesday, June 4, 1996. Fuller asserts that 6 days before this hearing, during a conversation with Imprint’s CPA, he learned that Hanson planned to take “up to the $40,000’s” out of Imprint, despite the bankruptcy proceedings. Two days later, on May 31, Jordan and another employee asked Fuller about receiving their payments from Imprint’s 401(k) plan. Fuller asserts that even though he knew some of Imprint’s 401(k) funds were missing, prior to this date he believed that all the money in the 401(k) plan was Hanson’s.

On Saturday, June 1, Fuller received a fax from Hanson essentially stating that Imprint’s landlords should “shove it.” On the next day, Sunday, June 2, Fuller wrote a letter to Hanson about the lease in which, despite the tone of Hanson’s fax, he “gave Imprint the benefit of the doubt.” In the letter, Fuller blamed the delay in obtaining a new lease on the landlords and their attorney. Fuller testified that he then met with Imprint’s CPA and Hanson on Monday, June 3, and learned that the company was moving and Imprint was not going to pay the landlords the money owed as rent. That same day, Fuller also confronted Hanson about the missing 401(k) funds. 2

On the evening of June 3, after numerous telephone conversations with Hanson, Fuller withdrew from representing Imprint on both the bankruptcy and the unlawful detainer matters. In a letter to Hanson dated June 3, Fuller stated that the reason for the withdrawal was Hanson’s refusal to seek chemical dependency treatment. Fuller did not attend the June 4 unlawful detainer hearing, nor did he file a motion to withdraw from the bankruptcy action. Fuller testified that he did not file *464 any of the required objections to proofs of claims in the bankruptcy proceedings, some of which were due on June 3, because Hanson ordered and threatened him not to do anything. Fuller also testified that he did not take certain other actions because he was afraid of Hanson.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In the Disciplinary Matter Involving Ivy
350 P.3d 758 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2015)
In Re Ivy
Alaska Supreme Court, 2015
Kentucky Bar Ass'n v. Blum
404 S.W.3d 841 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2013)
In re Disciplinary Action Against Ulanowski
800 N.W.2d 785 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2011)
In Re Petition for Disciplinary Action Against Grigsby
764 N.W.2d 54 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2009)
In Re Disciplinary Action Against Dedefo
752 N.W.2d 523 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2008)
In Re Petition for Disciplinary Action Against Westby
639 N.W.2d 358 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
621 N.W.2d 460, 2001 Minn. LEXIS 14, 2001 WL 85810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-action-against-fuller-minn-2001.