In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Schrinsky

469 N.W.2d 406, 162 Wis. 2d 173, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 316
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1991
DocketNo. 89-1727-D
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 469 N.W.2d 406 (In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Schrinsky) 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 Schrinsky, 469 N.W.2d 406, 162 Wis. 2d 173, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 316 (Wis. 1991).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license suspended.

We review the referee's recommendation that the license of Attorney Alan Schrinsky to practice law in Wisconsin be suspended for 60 days as discipline for professional misconduct consisting of neglect of client legal matters, failure to communicate with clients and respond to their inquiries, misrepresentations to clients and to the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibil[174]*174ity (Board) concerning the status of his clients' matters and failure to cooperate in the Board's investigation into his misconduct. The referee further recommended that the court impose conditions on his continued practice of law related to a medical condition he asserted in mitigation of the seriousness of his misconduct.

We determine that the license suspension recommended by the referee is appropriate discipline for Attorney Schrinsky's misconduct. By that misconduct, he has demonstrated a failure to promptly perform the duties of a lawyer and pursue the matters for which he had been retained, as well as a refusal to acknowledge that neglect, to the point of refusing to answer clients' questions concerning his representation of them and, when responding, misrepresenting what he had done on their behalf. Moreover, Attorney Schrinsky was previously disciplined for neglecting a client's legal matter.

Attorney Schrinsky was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1963 and practices in Milwaukee. In 1987, the court publicly reprimanded him for neglect of a client's legal matter. Disciplinary Proceedings Against Schrinsky, 136 Wis. 2d 89, 401 N.W.2d 169 (1987). The referee is Attorney S. Michael Wilk. The parties stipulated to the following facts and the referee made findings accordingly.

In March, 1986, Attorney Schrinsky was retained by a woman to probate her mother's estate. Following an initial delay caused by the refusal of the personal representative named in the will to act in that capacity, the woman who retained Attorney Schrinsky was appointed personal representative in October, 1986. Soon thereafter, Attorney Schrinsky contacted a number of financial institutions to determine the identity and balance of accounts the decedent held.

[175]*175In April, 1987, three of the heirs filed a grievance with the Board alleging that Attorney Schrinsky unduly delayed completing the estate and had failed to return a number of their telephone calls inquiring into the progress of the proceeding. In his response to that grievance, Attorney Schrinsky reported that on March 12, 1987, he filed a general inventory and final account, together with waivers, and that a hearing on the final account was held on that date. He also stated that all of the estate funds, except a small amount retained by the personal representative to pay potential tax liability, had been distributed to the heirs. However, a parcel of land remained to be distributed, as it had been selected by one of the heirs as a part of her share under the will.

In that response, Attorney Schrinsky also stated that in May, 1987 he forwarded a copy of the will, inventory, final account and inheritance tax return to each heir, together with a letter stating that the estate would be concluded as soon as the state tax closing certificate was received. However, he failed to state that he had not yet filed with the Department of Revenue the tax returns needed to obtain the closing certificate.

In March, 1988, the heir who had selected the real estate wrote to Attorney Schrinsky that she had not yet been listed as the owner of the parcel and that the county authorities had no notice that the prior owner was deceased. She asked him to let her know when he would transfer the property. When she received no reply, she wrote him in May, 1988, telling him that she was asking assistance from the Board and wrote to the Board on the same day stating that Attorney Schrinsky had delayed in transferring that property to her.

The Board wrote to Attorney Schrinsky asking for a written response within 20 days. When it received no reply, it sent a second letter and, when no reply was [176]*176received, sent a notice for him to appear at the Board's office in August, 1988. At that appearance, Attorney Schrinsky acknowledged receiving the two requests for a response and admitted that he failed to respond. He told the Board that usually real estate is awarded to heirs in the final judgment in probate rather than by deed. However, in this instance the final judgment had not been entered because he had not filed the required tax returns in order to obtain the necessary tax certificates but he did not so inform the Board. At the Board's request, he agreed to prepare a personal representative's deed and also produce his file in the estate later that month.

Attorney Schrinsky failed to produce either the deed or his file and the Board wrote to him requesting his appearance with those materials. On the day before the scheduled meeting, he sent the deed to the register of deeds for recording and wrote to the heir telling her of his action. He did not, however, appear at the Board's office on the following day but did appear in the probate court for a hearing on an order to show cause concerning his delay in closing the estate. When he told the court that only the closing certificate for fiduciaries was needed, the hearing was adjourned.

Later that month, Attorney Schrinsky submitted the fiduciary income tax returns and the inheritance tax return for the estate. He obtained the closing certificate the following month and no tax was due nor were penalties assessed. He filed the closing certificate with the court on the adjourned hearing date and the estate was closed on January 12, 1989.

The referee concluded that Attorney Schrinsky's conduct in this matter, including his failure to timely file state tax returns, constituted neglect of a legal matter, in [177]*177violation of SCR 20.32(3)1 and 20:1.3,2 that his statement to the Board that he was awaiting a closing certificate from the revenue department when he had not yet filed the required returns constituted a misrepresentation, in violation of SCR 20.04(4),3 and that his failure to provide a written response to two letters of inquiry from the Board and his failure to provide his file and to take actions requested by the Board constituted failure to cooperate in the Board's investigation, in violation of SCR 21.03(4)4 and 22.07(2).5

In October, 1986, a woman retained Attorney Schrinsky to represent her in a divorce but the following [178]*178month asked him to withhold action because she and her husband were in counseling. Attorney Schrinsky ultimately commenced the divorce proceeding on May 13, 1987.

On November 18,1987, Attorney Schrinsky advised his client to obtain reports on all benefits of her husband's various pension and retirement plans and sent her a release form to be signed by her husband to obtain that information. When the client met with Attorney Schrinsky on February 10, 1988 to discuss the proposed terms of a final stipulation, Attorney Schrinsky told her he would prepare and send her a draft of the stipulation within two months, provided the pension and retirement information releases were sent to him.

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469 N.W.2d 406, 162 Wis. 2d 173, 1991 Wisc. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disciplinary-proceedings-against-schrinsky-wis-1991.