In Re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Leaf

476 N.W.2d 13, 164 Wis. 2d 458, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 645
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1991
Docket89-2062-D
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 476 N.W.2d 13 (In Re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Leaf) 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 Leaf, 476 N.W.2d 13, 164 Wis. 2d 458, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 645 (Wis. 1991).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license suspended.

Attorney Linda Leaf appealed from the referee's *459 findings of fact and conclusions of law that she engaged in professional misconduct. She also appealed from the referee's recommendation that the court suspend her license to practice for six months as discipline for that misconduct. The misconduct consisted of Attorney Leafs entering into business relationships with clients in which she had a conflict of interest without making appropriate disclosure, assisting a nonlawyer in the unauthorized practice of law in respect to her clients, making misrepresentations to a circuit court and to the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) concerning the business relationship between her and the nonlawyer, making misrepresentations to the court concerning communications she had had with a former client in the course of professional representation and failing to cooperate with the Board's investigation of her conduct.

The referee's findings are supported by the evidence in the record and, as they are not clearly erroneous, we adopt them. We reject Attorney Leafs contention that each of those findings is contrary to the evidence and that the conclusions of misconduct based on those findings are unsupported. Thus, we adopt the referee's conclusions that Attorney Leaf's conduct violated the court's rules governing the professional conduct of attorneys.

By her misconduct, Attorney Leaf violated her basic duty to pursue her clients' interests without regard to her own, as well as a lawyer's fundamental duty of honesty to the courts. Further, she permitted and encouraged her clients to deal with a nonlawyer associate in legal matters for which they had retained her. The seriousness of those violations in the context of the facts before us warrants the six-month license suspension recommended by the referee.

*460 Attorney Leaf was licensed to practice law in Wisconsin in 1975 and practices in Milwaukee. She has not previously been the subject of an attorney disciplinary proceeding. The referee is Attorney Rudolph P. Regez.

Following six days of testimony, including that of four of Attorney Leafs former clients, the referee found that Attorney Leaf permitted a nonlawyer business associate, Dr. Haynes, to have unsupervised and unrestricted access to her clients and the confidential legal matters she was handling for them, allowed him to act as their principal counselor and advisor, encouraged them to enter into business relationships with him and referred them to him for counseling through a business she, Dr. Haynes and his wife owned. That business was engaged in counseling persons and entering into so-called "life style management contracts" with them, offering to develop a plan for success, with emphasis on financial, social and sexual matters. In exchange, the business would receive 30 percent of all money the persons derived from the personal management plans. Between 1982 and 1986, the business operated from Attorney Leafs law office or from the suite adjacent to it and at times Dr. Haynes' bills for services were sent out through Attorney Leafs office.

In her professional relationship with four women clients, Attorney Leaf represented to them that Dr. Haynes was her legal assistant, her assistant or her legal associate, although there was no employer-employee relationship between the two. Attorney Leaf and Dr. Haynes, who has advanced degrees in several fields and is a licensed divorce mediator, engaged in a number of businesses together, including the counseling business. During the time relevant to this proceeding, Dr. Haynes answered Attorney Leafs law office telephone when her *461 secretary was absent and for these four clients was their initial contact with her law firm.

The first of these women called Attorney Leafs office in the fall of 1983 concerning a proposed paternity action and Dr. Haynes answered the telephone. Attorney Leaf undertook to represent the woman and during the ensuing paternity action, Dr. Haynes solicited intimate details from the client about her sexual practices with the alleged father, attempted to give the woman sexual counseling and advised her to perform sexual favors for the father. He also represented to the father and his attorney that he was a qualified mediator and, without having been asked to do so, attempted to mediate the matter.

At one point, when the client was confronted by social service authorities and asked to turn her child over to them, she telephoned Attorney Leafs office for advice. Dr. Haynes answered the telephone and, without consulting Attorney Leaf, told the woman to surrender the child.

The second client telephoned Attorney Leafs office in the summer of 1984 seeking advice concerning a contemplated divorce. Attorney Leaf was not in and, after leaving her name and number, the woman received a return call from Dr. Haynes, with whom she discussed the legal matter. Attorney Leaf subsequently referred the woman to the counseling business and Dr. Haynes counseled her concerning personal, sexual and financial matters. He also prepared and obtained from her an unlimited power of attorney and entered into a life style management contract under which he collected a fee of 30 percent of all income she received by virtue of that contract.

Dr. Haynes persuaded this client to have another of Attorney Leafs clients move into her residence as a *462 roommate. The roommate paid rent directly to the counseling business, which deducted 30 percent as its fee. She also paid the client for baby-sitting and sent the money directly to the counseling business, which deducted 30 percent. Dr. Haynes, without the client's knowledge or consent, paid some of the money to which the client was entitled to Attorney Leaf in partial payment of the client's legal fees. The referee found that Attorney Leaf received a direct financial benefit from all of this client's dealings with the counseling business and Dr. Haynes.

The third woman retained Attorney Leaf in September, 1984 to obtain a divorce. During the divorce action, Dr. Haynes served as her principal advisor and counselor, giving her legal advice concerning setting up residence in Milwaukee county to establish venue. Attorney Leaf referred this client to her counseling business and the client entered into a management contract after Dr. Haynes told her he would establish her in a commercial art business.

The fourth woman contacted Attorney Leafs office in the summer of 1985 concerning a contemplated divorce. Attorney Leaf was not in and Dr. Haynes returned her call. During the ensuing divorce action, Dr. Haynes gave the client legal advice, including to deduct household expenses from income and to disguise her income so she would not have to account for it in the divorce proceeding. He also spoke directly to the attorney for the client's husband concerning a proposed property settlement and advised the client how to deal with her husband's proposals for property division. He discussed and developed with her financial statements for the divorce, advised her concerning asset valuation and the use of mediation as an alternative to court action and developed a legal strategy in the action itself.

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476 N.W.2d 13, 164 Wis. 2d 458, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-proceedings-against-leaf-wis-1991.