In Re Fagre-Stroetz

710 N.W.2d 783
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 16, 2006
DocketA05-718
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 710 N.W.2d 783 (In Re Fagre-Stroetz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Fagre-Stroetz, 710 N.W.2d 783 (Mich. 2006).

Opinion

710 N.W.2d 783 (2006)

In re Petition for DISCIPLINARY ACTION AGAINST Vicki Lynn FAGRE-STROETZ, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 180701.

No. A05-718.

Supreme Court of Minnesota.

March 16, 2006.

*785 Cassie Hanson, Assistant Director, Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility, St. Paul, MN, for petitioner Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility.

Vicki Lynn Fagre-Stroetz, Stacy, MN, pro se respondent.

Heard, considered, and decided by the court en banc.

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This attorney discipline matter arose from a petition filed by the Director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility alleging that attorney Vicki Lynn Fagre-Stroetz neglected and failed to effectively communicate with a client, practiced law while fee suspended, and failed to cooperate with the disciplinary process. Fagre-Stroetz failed to answer the petition within 20 days as required. The director moved for summary relief, and on June 16, 2005, we issued an order deeming the allegations in the petition admitted[1] and scheduling a hearing to determine the appropriate discipline to be imposed. The director argues that Fagre-Stroetz's misconduct merits indefinite suspension with no right to petition for reinstatement for one year. We agree.

The now-admitted allegations are described by the director under three counts of misconduct:

Client neglect

M.W. retained Fagre-Stroetz to represent her in a dissolution matter in 2003. Initially Fagre-Stroetz was diligent and kept M.W. informed. But in the summer of 2003, Fagre-Stroetz stopped responding to M.W.'s requests for information. After discovering that Fagre-Stroetz had seemingly shut down her office at 333 Washington Avenue North in Minneapolis, M.W. was able to contact Fagre-Stroetz at her home in Eden Prairie. After an October 2003 meeting in which Fagre-Stroetz promised to communicate, M.W. agreed to have Fagre-Stroetz continue to represent her. Fagre-Stroetz gave M.W. her cell phone number. In the following weeks M.W. was unable to contact Fagre-Stroetz at her home or office, or via the cell phone number. M.W. sent a letter to Fagre-Stroetz's home address, informing Fagre-Stroetz that M.W. had been unable to contact her and asking Fagre-Stroetz to return her client file. Fagre-Stroetz did not respond.

M.W. filed a complaint with the director's office on November 7, 2003. A notice of investigation was sent to Fagre-Stroetz's Washington Avenue office. M.W. was able to reach Fagre-Stroetz in December 2003 and asked Fagre-Stroetz to continue to represent her. Fagre-Stroetz indicated that she could not do so because *786 of the complaint M.W. had filed, and M.W. agreed to withdraw the complaint. Fagre-Stroetz effectively saw M.W.'s divorce through to finalization in May 2004. But M.W. was not able to contact Fagre-Stroetz concerning several post-dissolution matters. M.W. has had no contact with Fagre-Stroetz since August 2004, despite numerous calls to Fagre-Stroetz's various numbers.

The director contends that Fagre-Stroetz's conduct in the M.W. matter constitutes neglect of a client matter in violation of the rules requiring a lawyer to be reasonably diligent[2] and to effectively communicate with a client.[3]

Unauthorized practice of law while suspended

Fagre-Stroetz failed to pay her attorney registration fee when it was due April 1, 2004, automatically resulting in suspension.[4] On September 7, 2004, Fagre-Stroetz appeared on behalf of a client for a hearing in Ramsey County before Referee William H. Muske, Jr., who informed her that she was fee suspended and could not appear.[5] The matter was continued to allow the client to obtain new counsel.

The director reports that Fagre-Stroetz has neither paid her fee nor responded to the director's request for an affidavit concerning her practice of law since she was fee suspended. The director maintains that Fagre-Stroetz's practice of law while fee suspended constitutes a violation of the rule prohibiting the unauthorized practice of law.[6]

Noncooperation

The director's allegation of noncooperation against Fagre-Stroetz relates to the investigation of the M.W. complaint. The director asserts that Fagre-Stroetz failed to respond in writing, as required, to both the notice of investigation issued in response to M.W.'s November 7, 2003, complaint and a followup letter sent by the district ethics committee (DEC) investigator assigned to the matter. Fagre-Stroetz sent a fax and mailed a letter to the DEC investigator on December 19, 2003, stating that M.W. wished to withdraw the complaint and therefore Fagre-Stroetz need not respond. The investigator called Fagre-Stroetz the same day and left a message stating that M.W. was not permitted to withdraw the complaint and that Fagre-Stroetz still must respond in writing. Fagre-Stroetz did not respond to the call or to two subsequent letters sent by the investigator.[7]

Fagre-Stroetz did not appear at a March 31, 2004, hearing before an investigative review committee on the complaint. Fagre-Stroetz did not respond to the director's June 16, 2004, letter sent to Fagre-Stroetz's Washington Avenue office requesting, within seven days, a written response to the complaint and explanation for her noncooperation. A second such request, sent to her home on July 26, 2004, *787 also produced no response from Fagre-Stroetz. Further efforts by the director to evoke a response from Fagre-Stroetz — by phone and letter to her Eden Prairie home on August 5, 2004, and by certified mail to her home on September 8, 2004 — were unsuccessful.[8] Fagre-Stroetz did not attend either of two meetings scheduled by the director. But she sent notification of a change of home address when she moved from Eden Prairie to Stacy, Minnesota, subsequent to the director's issuance of charges of unprofessional conduct.

The director asserts that Fagre-Stroetz's noncooperation in the investigation of the M.W. matter violated the rules prohibiting a lawyer from knowingly failing to respond to a disciplinary authority's demand for information in connection with a disciplinary matter,[9] and requiring a lawyer to cooperate with a disciplinary investigation.[10]

Because Fagre-Stroetz failed to answer the petition, we deemed the director's allegations admitted and asked the parties to propose discipline to be imposed. The director recommended indefinite suspension with no right to seek reinstatement for one year. Fagre-Stroetz did not respond, nor did she appear at oral argument.

The purposes of imposing sanctions on attorneys found to have committed misconduct are to protect the public, to protect the judicial system, and to deter future misconduct. In re Oberhauser, 679 N.W.2d 153, 159 (Minn.2004) (citing In re Daffer, 344 N.W.2d 382, 385 (Minn.1984)). In determining the appropriate sanction to impose, we consider the nature of the misconduct, the cumulative weight of the violations of the rules of professional conduct, the harm to the public, and the harm to the legal profession. Id. at 159 (citing In re Singer,

Related

In re Disciplinary Action Against Jaeger
834 N.W.2d 705 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2013)
In Re Disciplinary Action Against Karlsen
778 N.W.2d 307 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
710 N.W.2d 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fagre-stroetz-minn-2006.