In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Lesperance

478 N.W.2d 587, 165 Wis. 2d 723, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 7
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1992
DocketNo. 91-2106-D
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 478 N.W.2d 587 (In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Lesperance) 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 Lesperance, 478 N.W.2d 587, 165 Wis. 2d 723, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 7 (Wis. 1992).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license revoked.

We review the report of the referee recommending that the license of Russel J. Lesperance to practice law in Wisconsin be revoked as discipline for numerous acts of professional misconduct. That misconduct includes failure to provide competent representation to clients, conversion of client funds to his own use, contacting directly persons he knew to be represented by counsel, entering into agreements with clients to prospectively limit his liability for malpractice, accepting and continu[724]*724ing employment in the presence of a conflict of interest and withdrawing from representation without protecting his clients' interests.

Because of the egregious nature and numerous instances of his professional misconduct, we revoke Attorney Lesperance's license to practice law. By that misconduct, he has demonstrated that he is not fit to represent the interests of others in legal matters.

Attorney Lesperance was licensed to practice law in Wisconsin in 1951 and practiced in Milwaukee. He currently is suspended from practice for failure to pay assessments to the court's Board of Bar Examiners and Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility. He has not previously been the subject of a disciplinary proceeding. The referee in this proceeding is Attorney Charles Herró.

Although personally served with the complaint of the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) in this proceeding, Attorney Lesperance did not file an answer or otherwise appear, notwithstanding numerous letters sent to him by Board counsel and by the referee. Accordingly, the referee granted the Board's motion for default judgment and made conclusions of law based on the allegations of the Board's complaint.

In 1988, a woman pursuing an increase in child support and maintenance retained Attorney Lesperance to represent her in the matter and enforce a $125,000 judgment against her former husband, which was secured by a lien against his real estate. When he undertook that representation, Attorney Lesperance was representing another person having a lien against the same property. Although the client's former husband had told Attorney Lesperance that he had retained counsel and asked him to communicate directly with that attorney, Attorney [725]*725Lesperance on several occasions wrote directly to the former spouse, sending copies to his attorney.

Several fee agreements were executed by the client and Attorney Lesperance and one of them required the client to obtain a $7,500 mortgage loan to finance the contemplated litigation. That agreement also engaged her to sell homes on behalf of a management company owned by Attorney Lesperance's brother, providing that a portion of her compensation would be applied to her legal fees. Attorney Lesperance threatened to withdraw from the client's case if she had refused to sign the fee agreement.

After the client's former husband sold his interest in the real estate, Attorney Lesperance asked his client to post a $10,000 bond to enable him to have the former spouse temporarily enjoined from disbursing any of the sale proceeds. The client refused, telling Attorney Les-perance that there was a lien on the property and an injunction was unnecessary. Nevertheless, Attorney Les-perance filed a motion for temporary injunction and asked his client to sign an agreement to provide the $10,000 cash bond, which the client refused. Then, without his client's knowledge or consent, Attorney Lesperance had another person post the cash bond. Although a hearing on the temporary injunction motion was never held and the bond was returned to the person who had provided it, Attorney Lesperance told his client to pay that person $5,000, which she did. The client stated that Attorney Lesperance told her that if she did not do so, the person who had posted the bond would cause her bodily harm.

In the course of this client's legal action, Attorney Lesperance filed numerous motions, some of which the court found without basis, ordering the client to pay $10,000 in attorney fees. When the client terminated his [726]*726representation in February, 1989, Attorney Lesperance wrote to the client asking to continue to represent her and stating his intention to continue as attorney of record. He then wrote to the court stating that his client wanted him to prepare a motion for reconsideration of an order and filed an unsigned motion for the client, purportedly pro se.

The referee concluded that Attorney Lesperance's conduct in this matter violated the following rules of professional conduct: SCR 20:3.11 — advancing frivolous claims; SCR 20:1.12 — failing to provide competent representation; SCR 20:1.15(a)3 — failing to deposit client [727]*727funds in a trust account; SCR 20:8.4(c)4 — converting client funds to his own use; SCR 20:8.4(c) — improperly billing a client for costs; SCR 20:1.8(h)5 — entering into an agreement with a client prospectively limiting his liability for malpractice; SCR 20:1.16(a) (3)6 — failing to [728]*728withdraw from representation after being discharged by his client; SCR 20:1.2(1)7 — failing to abide by his client's decisions concerning objectives of his representation; SCR 20.7.3(a)8 — initiating telephone contact with a person known to be in need of legal services in a particular matter; SCR 20:1.7(a)9 — undertaking the representation [729]*729of a client which would be directly adverse to his representation of another client; SCR 20:4.210 — communicating on the subject of his representation with a party he knew was represented by counsel in the matter, without that counsel's authorization.

In a second matter, a man retained Attorney Les-perance in April, 1986 to obtain title to a parcel of real estate, including a house intended to be the client's homestead. When he advised the client that it was necessary to form a corporation to purchase that property as a means of protecting the client from creditors, Attorney Lesperance ignored the client's request for an explanation.

The following year, Attorney Lesperance formed a corporation, with the client as president and himself as sole director, secretary and corporate agent. He prepared a certificate placing the corporate stock in trust for the client's family, with himself as trustee but the client did not know the stock was to be put in trust and never signed a certificate doing so. Attorney Lesperance never prepared any trust documents, tax documents or tax returns or opened a checking account in the name of the trust. The corporation then purchased the real estate.

When Attorney Lesperance commenced an eviction action against holdover tenants on the property, he told his client that in order to succeed in that action, it would be necessary to lease the property to another corporation with an option to purchase. The client gave an option to purchase to the other corporation, which was in fact [730]*730owned by Attorney Lesperance's son. Attorney Lesperance represented that corporation and was one of its principal officers.

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Bluebook (online)
478 N.W.2d 587, 165 Wis. 2d 723, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-proceedings-against-lesperance-wis-1992.