In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Hinners

470 N.W.2d 309, 162 Wis. 2d 728, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 475
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1991
DocketNo. 90-0366-D
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 470 N.W.2d 309 (In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Hinners) 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 Hinners, 470 N.W.2d 309, 162 Wis. 2d 728, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 475 (Wis. 1991).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license revoked.

We review the recommendation of the referee that the license of Thomas G. Hinners to practice law in Wisconsin be revoked as discipline for professional mis[729]*729conduct in his dealings with partnerships and other businesses in which he acted as general partner and counsel and in which his clients invested. In those dealings, Attorney Hinners made misrepresentations to clients investing in his partnership, used client funds from the sale of partnership property to make loans to himself and other businesses in which he had an interest, made unauthorized disbursements of partnership funds to one of his partners, made preferential disbursements of partnership funds to others, failed to provide accountings to clients regarding their funds and engaged in a conflict of interest.

We determine that license revocation is appropriate discipline. Attorney Hinners' misrepresentations to clients and use of partnership property and funds were in furtherance of his own financial gain and for the benefit of businesses in which he had an interest. Attorney Hin-ners thus violated his fundamental duty of honesty to his clients and placed his financial interest over their interests to their detriment.

Attorney Hinners was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1963 and currently resides in Florida. He was suspended from the practice of law in Wisconsin in May, 1988 for failure to comply with continuing legal education requirements.

During the course of this proceeding, Attorney Hin-ners filed a petition for the voluntary revocation of his license to practice law together with a stipulation of facts. Subsequently, however, he asked to withdraw the petition and requested a hearing on contested facts that were not part of the stipulation. The referee, Attorney Linda S. Balisle, denied his motion, having concluded that there was not a sufficient basis to set aside the stipulation, which contained sufficient facts to warrant revocation of his license. Accordingly, the referee did not [730]*730recommend that the court accept the voluntary revocation petition; she recommended that the court revoke Attorney Hinners' license as discipline for misconduct.

On the basis of the stipulation of facts, the referee made the following findings. In 1977, Attorney Hinners and Jerome Schwellinger formed two partnerships to construct and operate apartment complexes in Madison. Attorney Hinners was general partner in and sole legal counsel for each of the partnerships, one of which was a general partnership and the other a limited partnership.

In April, 1977, a couple who had retained Attorney Hinners for estate planning and an incorporation matter agreed to purchase a five percent interest in the limited partnership for $50,000. Another couple who were clients of Attorney Hinners purchased a 25 percent interest in the general partnership for $100,000. Attorney Hinners gave the second couple a nine-page investment report identifying the partnership as a limited partnership, even though the subscription agreement they signed made them general partners. When they made that investment, Attorney Hinners told them there was a second mortgage on the partnership property in the amount of $385,000. In fact, there was no second mortgage; the $385,000 was the amount Attorney Hinners believed was due him and Mr. Schwellinger from the partnership.

In May, 1981, the real estate of both partnerships was sold on land contract but the buyer subsequently defaulted and the partnerships foreclosed. The buyer subsequently redeemed the properties and, at the closing, Attorney Hinners received $1,057,000, of which $510,700 was due the general partnership and $546,800 was due the limited partnership. He deposited those funds into his client trust account and within a month issued two checks from that account to Mr. Schwellinger [731]*731totaling $182,800. He then issued trust account checks to the general partnership in the amount of $436,000 and to the limited partnership in the amount of $438,700. He also issued numerous checks from the general partnership bank account totaling more than $200,000 to and for the benefit of other partnerships in which he had an interest and for which he was legal counsel and disbursed funds from the limited partnership account to one of those partnerships which was suffering financial problems. Moreover, he paid himself $100,000 from the general partnership account, a significant portion of which was denominated a loan, although he did not prepare or execute any documents to evidence the "loan" or give any security for the benefit of the partners.

Thus, Attorney Hinners disbursed partnership funds to some but not all of the partners in the general partnership, notwithstanding the partnership agreement's provision that no partner could withdraw funds unless all partners withdrew funds in proportion to their interest. He did likewise with funds of the limited partnership. In November, 1984, two of the partners in the general partnership who had been Attorney Hinners' clients when they invested filed an action to obtain an accounting of partnership funds, later amending their complaint to include allegations of fraud. In September, 1987, they obtained a default judgment against Attorney Hinners in the amount of $229,000.

Five months after the sale of the partnership property Attorney Hinners told some, but not all, of the partners in the limited partnership of the sale. He also told two of the partners, who were former clients, of an investment opportunity in Florida but did not tell them that he had already acquired an interest in that property with funds of the limited partnership.

[732]*732Two months later Attorney Hinners provided the limited partnership investors an accounting, advised them that the proceeds of the sale of partnership property had been reinvested and told them he would pay off any partner by the end of 1984 who elected to terminate his or her partnership interest. Some of the partners requested all funds to which they were entitled but when they did not receive them by the end of 1984 they made repeated demands for payment. Attorney Hinners began making payments to two of them in March of 1985 with funds that came from loan repayments and his own personal funds. Those two then joined others in an action against Attorney Hinners seeking recovery of their funds. Twenty-one months after the closing on the sale of partnership property, most of the partners were still waiting for their funds, totaling $292,600.

In another matter, in February, 1979, Roderick Hubbard and seven others purchased the entire interest in a real estate partnership from Attorney Hinners, Jerome Schwellinger and another for $1,550,000. At the time of the sale, there were two mortgages on the partnership property: the first mortgagee was American Equity Investment Trust; the second mortgagee was Marine National Bank of Neenah. Pursuant to the purchase agreement, the buyers agreed to pay $175,000 at the time of sale and the balance in monthly installments through March, 1987. In addition, they were required to make a $241,787 payment of principal on February 20, 1983. All payments were to be made to Attorney Hinners.

On February 10, 1983, Attorney Hinners' law firm told Mr. Hubbard that the lump sum payment of principal would be applied to the second mortgage. Although he received that payment timely, Attorney Hinners did not apply those funds to the second mortgage; instead,

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470 N.W.2d 309, 162 Wis. 2d 728, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-proceedings-against-hinners-wis-1991.