In Re Leising

4 P.3d 586, 269 Kan. 162, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 364
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 21, 2000
Docket84,188
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 P.3d 586 (In Re Leising) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Leising, 4 P.3d 586, 269 Kan. 162, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 364 (kan 2000).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is an original proceeding in discipline filed by the office of the Disciplinary Administrator against Thomas J. Leis-ing of Topeka, an attorney who has been admitted to the practice of law in Kansas. The formal complaint concerns respondent’s service as guardian and conservator of an incapacitated person. The matter was heard by the panel on stipulated facts and exhibits. Evidence was presented as to the existence of aggravating and mitigating circumstances. The panel concluded respondent had violated KRPC 1.14 (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 341) (client under a disability) and KRPC 8.4(c), (d), and (g) (1999 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 399) (misconduct). The panel recommended the discipline of indefinite suspension.

Respondent has filed exceptions, and his purpose therein is stated in his brief as follows:

“While Respondent has stipulated to the violations alleged by the Disciplinary Administrator’s Office in its Formal Complaint, Respondent submits that there are some factual errors in the Final Hearing Report which are significant enough to warrant correction when considering the appropriate discipline in this matter.”

FACTS

As these exceptions do not challenge the facts underlying the specific violations, we need not recite herein the full factual details found by the panel. The facts may be summarized as follows. W.T., born January 29, 1948, has a long history of mental illness. In 1979, on petition filed by his mother, W.T. was found to be an incapac *163 itated person, and a Topeka attorney, Ira Dennis Hawver, was appointed his guardian and conservator. The ward’s annual income was less than $500. In April 1985, two matters of significance occurred: respondent was appointed successor guardian and conservator; and the ward became the beneficiary of a substantial family trust.

The annual accounting filed by respondent for the period June 20, 1996, through June 16, 1997, gave rise to the proceedings herein. The district judge reviewed the accounting and held two hearings. In the second hearing, the examination was conducted by an assistant attorney general. Improper expenditures from the ward’s funds were found to have been made by the respondent, and he was removed as guardian and conservator. Respondent was ordered to pay $60,000 (double the amount of the loss) to the conservatorship. This sum has been paid. Respondent reimbursed the bonding company the $30,000 it had paid into court. The remaining $30,000 was paid by the ward’s mother pursuant to a private agreement between respondent and the ward’s mother under which respondent is to work it off by continuing to provide personal services to the ward.

The expenditures found to be improper may be summarized as follows:

1. Trip to New York by respondent and the ward costing in excess of $6,774.65, including airline tickets ($2,328), Plaza Hotel ($4,231), four Broadway shows, ground transportation ($215.65).

2. Meals in the amount of $948.32 for ward, respondent, respondent’s wife and/or respondent’s children: Annie’s Santa Fe ($49.69), ($42.79), ($57.09), ($38.59), ($53.69), Olive Garden ($35.78), ($35.66), J.J.’s Bistro ($152.87), Saguaro Grill ($43.80), Houlihans ($51.85), Teller’s ($54.44), Outback Steak House ($80.37), ($114.24), ($137.46).

3. Payment at $15 per hour to Gwen Prosser (respondent’s wife) to take the ward shopping. Annual accounting shows 49 separate entries of payments totalling $11,531.71

4. Two trips to Baby Dolls (referred to as a night club by the court) by respondent and ward on cash credit card advances *164 of $250 and $220, incurring a service charge ($65 cash returned to estate).

5. Houston trip for respondent and ward ($845 airfare).

6. Two trips to Cancún, Mexico, in the spring of 1997. Respondent and his wife and the ward went on the first trip. These three, plus respondent’s stepdaughter, went on the second trip. Costs were: airline tickets ($14,106.14) and hotel ($12,181.52).

7. Payment of $338.85 to Betty Jones, respondent’s legal secretary, for arranging medical appointments, for transporting ward thereto and waiting for him for return transportation.

8. April 1997 trip by respondent to Atlanta which respondent stated was to meet with trust officials. In a letter to the trust officials, however, he stated the trip was to “combine a bit of business with [a] baseball trip.”

9. Payment for numerous items of women’s clothing and footwear for members of respondent’s family, including The Limited ($136.50), Lady Footlocker ($127.36), ($49.87), ($146.47), and ($196.24), Courtney’s ($95.73), Dillards ($93.41), ($297.33), and ($235.65), and Jones Store ($106.13) and ($140.07). Total cost was in excess of $1,600.

10. Purchase of six tickets (unused) to I Hate Hamlet for ward, respondent, and four members of respondent’s family ($174). Purchase of six tickets to Forever Plaid ($96) for ward, respondent’s family, and friends.

11. Hosting a birthday party with his wife for the ward for which respondent reimbursed himself $615.38.

In connection with these expenditures respondent was charged in 1999 with a violation of K.S.A. 21-3437(a)(2) (mistreatment of a dependent adult) (a class A person misdemeanor). This case ended in a diversionary agreement in which respondent stipulated to the charge he had knowingly and intentionally taken unfair advantage of the ward, a dependent adult, by using or taking the physical or financial resources of the ward for his personal or financial advantage by use of undue influence, coercion, harassment, duress, deception, false representation, or false pretense.

*165 EXCEPTIONS

Respondent takes exception to the panel’s finding that when he became conservator, the ward’s estate was valued “in excess of $2,000,000”. He states that the figure for the value at that time was $465,000. This correction is made, although it is a tangential matter having no bearing on any issues herein.

Respondent filed exception to the panel’s findings that respondent’s expenditures for the New York and Houston trips and for the services of his secretary Betty Jones were not approved by the court. These exceptions are without merit. No court approval of these expenditures has been demonstrated. The accounting in which they are contained was disapproved.

In his final exception, respondent complains of the footnote in the Final Hearing Report, which states that a report on other con-servatorships of respondent’s revealed some “transgressions, but on a lesser scale.” This report was prepared by a Topeka attorney at the request of respondent’s attorney. The report is dated several months after the court hearings and court decision herein. In this exception respondent states:

“Respondent takes exception to this footnote as it indicates that Ken Carpenter’s report reveals minor ‘transgressions’ or ethical violations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Freed
279 P.3d 118 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2012)
In the Matter of Leising
175 P.3d 221 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 P.3d 586, 269 Kan. 162, 2000 Kan. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-leising-kan-2000.