In Re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Caldwell

432 N.W.2d 98, 146 Wis. 2d 715, 1988 Wisc. LEXIS 89
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1988
Docket87-0741-D
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 432 N.W.2d 98 (In Re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Caldwell) 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
In Re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Caldwell, 432 N.W.2d 98, 146 Wis. 2d 715, 1988 Wisc. LEXIS 89 (Wis. 1988).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney publicly reprimanded.

*716 The Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility appealed from the recommendation of the referee in this disciplinary proceeding that Attorney James Caldwell be privately reprimanded for professional misconduct. We determine that the recommended discipline is insufficient and we impose a public reprimand on Attorney Caldwell in response to the seriousness of the misconduct and to inform other attorneys of the need to avoid engaging in like misconduct.

Attorney Caldwell’s misconduct consisted of the following: he entered into a business transaction with a client in which they had differing interests and in which the client expected him to exercise his professional judgment for the client’s protection, thus violating SCR 20.27(1) (1986); he refused to return client files unless the client signed a general release of any liability Attorney Caldwell might have to the client, in violation of SCR 20.33 (1986); he failed to fully respond to Board requests for information in the course of its investigation of grievances against him, in violation of SCR 21.03(4) and 22.07(2); he failed to produce trust account records in response to Board requests, in violation of SCR 11.05(2).

Attorney Caldwell was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1956 and practices in Waukesha. He has not previously been the subject of a disciplinary proceeding. The referee is Attorney William G. Bunk.

The parties stipulated to the following facts and Attorney Caldwell admitted that his conduct violated the rules set forth above. In the early 1970’s, Attorney Caldwell represented a client in a dispute with Clarence Beierle, who operated a business making videotape depositions for lawyers. After that dispute was resolved, Attorney Caldwell and Mr. Beierle became *717 friends. On one occasion, Mr. Beierle loaned Attorney Caldwell $14,000, and Attorney Caldwell timely repaid the loan. Over the next 10 years, Mr. Beierle and Attorney Caldwell were in constant communication, although not in an attorney-client relationship.

In the late 1970’s, Mr. Beierle, Attorney Caldwell and another person formed a corporation to conduct a videotape deposition business, each of them owning one-third of the corporation’s stock. In connection with that business, Mr. Beierle formed a corporation of which he was sole stockholder for the leasing of videotape equipment. To do so, he borrowed $10,000 from a bank, and the other two shareholders in the videotape deposition corporation guaranteed that loan but had no interest in the corporation itself. As the lender was the bank where he maintained both his personal checking account and his attorney trust account, Attorney Caldwell told the bank it could, if necessary, withdraw funds from his personal account to make loan payments in the event Mr. Beierle failed to do so.

Subsequently, the videotape business failed. Later, when Mr. Beierle did not timely make payments on the note Attorney Caldwell had guaranteed, the bank withdrew funds from Attorney Caldwell’s trust account, not his personal account, to pay the indebtedness. This was done without Attorney Caldwell’s knowledge or consent. When Attorney Caldwell learned of it, he withdrew all client funds, as well as his own funds, from that bank. Ultimately, he and Mr. Beierle paid the indebtedness.

In March, 1981, Mr. Beierle and his wife retained Attorney Caldwell to commence an action on their behalf and Attorney Caldwell did so. On September 2, 1981, while that action remained pending, Mr. Beierle *718 loaned Attorney Caldwell $5,000. Attorney Caldwell agreed that he would draw a note to evidence the loan, but he did not do it. He also agreed to assign to Mr. Beierle a lease option he had in his residence as security for the loan and he did so. On the day after the loan was made, Mr. Beierle retained Attorney Caldwell to represent him in action to collect on a debt.

Several years later, in February of 1985, Mr. Beierle asked Attorney Caldwell to return the files of the two actions he had retained him to bring. Attorney Caldwell told him he would return the files only upon the condition that Mr. Beierle first sign a general release agreement in which each would release the other "from any and all obligations, one to the other, including, but not limited to causes of action, work to be performed and accomplished, notes, evidences of indebtedness or choses in action, from the beginning of time until the present date.” Mr. Beierle refused to sign that release and filed a grievance with the Board concerning Attorney Caldwell’s conduct.

In the course of the Board’s investigation of that grievance, Attorney Caldwell responded to some but not all of the requests for information, and he gave Mr. Beierle’s files to the Board. When the Board directed Attorney Caldwell to produce his trust account records, apparently in connection with its investigation of the bank’s withdrawal of funds from his trust account to make loan payments, Attorney Caldwell filed a motion to quash that request. The referee never decided that motion, and the Board’s counsel served Attorney Caldwell with a request to produce the records. He again failed to produce them but they were eventually subpoenaed from the bank during the course of the disciplinary proceeding.

*719 The referee accepted Attorney Caldwell’s admission and the parties’ stipulation and concluded that Attorney Caldwell’s conduct violated the rules cited above. In addition, the referee noted factors he considered as mitigating the seriousness of those violations. Concerning the loan transaction with the client, while Attorney Caldwell did not advise his client to have another person draw up the note to evidence the $5,000 loan, the referee found it clear that he did not seek to avoid that debt in light of the fact that he did prepare the assignment of his leasehold interest as security. With respect to the demand that the client sign a release in order to obtain his files, the referee found no clear and convincing evidence of any malpractice on Attorney Caldwell’s part in his professional relationship with Mr. Beierle and, thus, no malpractice liability from which to be released. Regarding the failure to respond to the Board’s inquiries and produce trust account records, the referee found that Attorney Caldwell did cooperate, although not as fully as he might have; he considered the failure to produce trust account records "minimized” by the fact that counsel for the Board did not seek to compel their production by motion pursuant to statute during the disciplinary proceeding and by the fact that there was no showing of any fraud, deceit or dishonesty on Attorney Caldwell’s part toward his client.

In its appeal from the referee’s recommendation of a private reprimand, the Board argued that the matters the referee considered to mitigate the seriousness of Attorney Caldwell’s misconduct and attenuate the severity of the discipline to be imposed for it were irrelevant. In the matter of the client’s loan, the Board contended that the fact that Attorney Caldwell might not have sought to avoid liability on the debt had no *720

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Related

Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Caldwell
491 N.W.2d 482 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
432 N.W.2d 98, 146 Wis. 2d 715, 1988 Wisc. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-proceedings-against-caldwell-wis-1988.