In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Clark

445 N.W.2d 143, 154 Wis. 2d 525, 1990 Wisc. LEXIS 107
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1990
DocketNo. 88-1846-D
StatusPublished

This text of 445 N.W.2d 143 (In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Clark) 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 Clark, 445 N.W.2d 143, 154 Wis. 2d 525, 1990 Wisc. LEXIS 107 (Wis. 1990).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license suspended.

[526]*526The Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) appealed from the referee's recommendation that the license of Attorney Donald Clark, Jr. be suspended for six months as discipline for numerous acts of professional misconduct. The Board contended that the nature and extent of Attorney Clark's misconduct warrants the suspension of his license to practice law for at least one year. As neither the Board nor Attorney Clark appealed from the referee's findings of fact and conclusions of law, the only issue before us is the discipline to be imposed.

We determine that Attorney Clark's professional misconduct in 11 separate client matters over a five-year period, together with his failure to respond to initial inquiries from the Board during its investigation into those and other matters and his failure to attend an investigative meeting scheduled by the district professional responsibility committee, constitutes a pattern of misconduct sufficiently serious to warrant a two-year suspension of his license to practice law. That misconduct consisted of Attorney Clark's neglect of the legal matters he was retained to pursue on behalf of his clients, many of them incarcerated; it also included withdrawal from employment without promptly refunding fees paid in advance which he had not earned, failing to keep his clients informed of the status of their legal matters and failing to respond to their requests for information, failing to act with diligence and promptness in representing them and failing to cooperate with the disciplinary authorities in the investigations of grievances filed by his clients and failing to provide information and furnish documents in the course of those investigations.

Attorney Clark was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1976 and practices in Milwaukee. This is the [527]*527first disciplinary action brought against him. In it, the referee, Attorney Charles Herró, made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law on the basis of testimony presented at a disciplinary hearing.

(1) After being appointed by the state public defender to represent a man on several criminal charges and following the client's conviction and sentence to 103 years' imprisonment, Attorney Clark was appointed by the state public defender in June, 1984 to represent the man in an appeal. Attorney Clark filed a motion for new trial and, alternatively, for sentence modification and when the motion was denied, he filed a notice of appeal in June, 1985.

In the appeal, the court of appeals extended the time for Attorney Clark to file his brief and, when the brief was not filed within that time, it granted him five days to file the brief or request an extension, failing which the appeal would be dismissed. Attorney Clark did not file a brief of request an extension and the appeal was dismissed in January, 1986.

After September, 1985, the client never heard from Attorney Clark, although he telephoned him numerous times and wrote him 10 letters. Attorney Clark did not respond to his client's inquiries, nor did he advise his client that the appeal had been dismissed. The state public defender wrote to Attorney Clark three times in the spring and summer of 1986 inquiring into the status of the case and ultimately appointed another attorney to represent the man.

(2) In late 1984, a man serving a 12-year sentence for armed robbery and false imprisonment retained Attorney Clark to bring a sentence modification motion. Attorney Clark met with the cliént and obtained the trial transcripts but never met with his client again. The sentence modification motion was denied when Attorney [528]*528Clark failed to appear for a hearing on the motion. Attorney Clark never told his client he had filed the motion or that it had been dismissed.

Attorney Clark then filed a second motion for sentence modification. After a hearing on it had been adjourned four times, the motion was denied for lack of prosecution. Thereafter, Attorney Clark made no attempt to reopen or refile the motion.

(3) In February, 1985, the mother of a man convicted of first-degree murder, retained Attorney Clark to take an appeal from the conviction. Attorney Clark requested a fee of $3,500 and when he was paid $2,800, he told the woman she could take her time paying the balance. Attorney Clark never met with the son and never filed the appeal. He also failed to return telephone calls from the mother.

During this time, Attorney Clark represented another member of the same family on a separate legal matter, for which he was separately paid. Attorney Clark claimed he applied the fees he received from the mother for her son's appeal to that other legal matter but he had never told the family he was using those fees for any matter other than the son's appeal.

In October, 1988, the mother asked for the return of the fees she had paid. Attorney Clark told her to come to his office at a specified time to get them but when she arrived, his office was locked. The fees were never returned.

(4) In May, 1985, a man who had been convicted of assault and battery and given 60 days to pay a fine, retained Attorney Clark and paid him $500 to represent him in that matter and in a civil action brought against him by the victim. Attorney Clark said he would attempt to have the assault and battery case reopened but did not [529]*529do so. As a result, the man was arrested for failure to pay the fine.

In the civil action, Attorney Clark filed an answer but failed to comply with the court's scheduling order and as a result was barred from calling any witnesses at trial. Prior to trial, Attorney Clark reached an agreement with the plaintiffs attorney to settle the case for $2,000 and advised his client to pay that amount but he failed to appear at a hearing and, as a consequence, judgment was entered against his client in the amount of $7,000. Attorney Clark did not respond to inquiries from his client regarding the status of that case and the man retained other counsel, who ultimately settled the matter.

(5) In June, 1985, a man who had been sentenced to six years' imprisonment and ten years' probation and fined $1,500 following conviction of forgery arid possession of stolen credit cards retained Attorney Clark to take an appeal or seek sentence modification, for which he paid him a retainer of $1,365 toward a total fee of between $2,500 and $3,500. In September, 1985, Attorney Clark received trial transcripts, reviewed them and told his client he had meritorious issues. He filed a sentence modification motion, which was denied, and then filed an appeal from both the conviction and the modification motion denial.

In March, 1986, Attorney Clark wrote to his client that he had filed an appeal, was reviewing information the client had sent and would meet with him the following month. Thereafter, however, the client did not hear from Attorney Clark, even though he wrote him four letters and made some 15 telephone calls to his office to learn the status of his case.

In the appeal, the court of appeals asked for briefs on the issue of jurisdiction concerning the denial of the [530]*530modification motion. Attorney Clark did not file a brief, being of the opinion that the court lacked jurisdiction.

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445 N.W.2d 143, 154 Wis. 2d 525, 1990 Wisc. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-proceedings-against-clark-wis-1990.