In Re Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Stein

486 N.W.2d 526, 170 Wis. 2d 112, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 337
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1992
Docket91-1825-D
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 486 N.W.2d 526 (In Re Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Stein) 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 Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Stein, 486 N.W.2d 526, 170 Wis. 2d 112, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 337 (Wis. 1992).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license suspended.

We review the recommendation of the referee that the court suspend the license of Martin R. Stein to practice law in Wisconsin for one year as discipline for professional misconduct. That misconduct consisted of Attorney Stein's participation in a scheme to obtain money through the lending of a union's pension fund in real estate transactions and, in so doing, engaging in a criminal conspiracy. As Attorney Stein pleaded no contest to the allegations of misconduct set forth in the complaint of the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility, we adopt the referee's findings of fact based on those allegations. We also adopt the referee's conclusions of law concerning Attorney Stein's viola *113 tions of the rules governing professional conduct of attorneys.

We determine that the one-year license suspension recommended by the referee is insufficient when measured against the seriousness of Attorney Stein's misconduct. On the basis of the ongoing nature of and the substantial amounts of money involved in the scheme in which Attorney Stein participated, the recommended one-year license suspension is disproportionately lenient. We suspend Attorney Stein's license to practice law for two years.

Attorney Stein was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1963 and practices in Milwaukee. He has not previously been the subject of an attorney disciplinary proceeding. The referee is Attorney John R. Decker.

In the summer of 1981, a vice-president of a Milwaukee bank approached Attorney Stein seeking his participation in a scheme to obtain money through the lending of a union's pension funds in real estate transactions. The banker was acquainted with Attorney Stein for many years, beginning when the banker was a lending officer at a predecessor bank, and Attorney Stein had done legal work for the banker from time to time.

The banker told Attorney Stein that the trustees of a union pension fund had committed $10,000,000 to a real estate loan program. Those funds would be available for real estate mortgage loans at an interest rate of 13 percent, approximately 7 percent lower than the then prevailing rate charged for similar loans in the Milwaukee area. The banker knew that Attorney Stein represented a number of clients who participated in real estate developments and who might be interested in borrowing those funds at the low rate.

The banker suggested that Attorney Stein contact some of his clients to see if they wished to apply for a *114 loan and told him that any person whose loan application was approved would have to pay the banker, immediately and in cash, a commission of three percent of the amount of the loan. The banker told Attorney Stein that he was working with the secretary-treasurer of the pension fund and that the two of them had agreed to split that commission between them. Further, he said that written loan commitments would not be issued unless and until the banker received the cash commission.

Although the banker told Attorney Stein that the pension fund had authorized payment of a three percent finder's fee to its secretary-treasurer and to the banker, Attorney Stein understood that the banker wanted payment in cash to avoid written evidence that could lead to him. The referee found that Attorney Stein knew or should have known that the cash payments were in fact "kickbacks" and that neither the banker's bank nor the pension fund had authorized or was aware of them.

After agreeing to facilitate loans and to transfer the cash payments from the loan applicants to the banker, Attorney Stein contacted several of his clients and others to inform them of the availability of real estate loans at the favorable rate. From September, 1981 through November, 1982, Attorney Stein facilitated seven loans in the aggregate principal amount of $3,063,400, in connection with which he personally gave the banker approximately $92,000 in cash commissions.

The loans facilitated by Attorney Stein were all for real estate projects. In one of those loans, upon examining the loan commitment, Attorney Stein discovered that no interest was required by the lender during the period of construction of the real estate project. Not only was this highly unusual, but it was highly advantageous to the borrower. When he informed the borrowers, who had been referred to him by a long time client, Attorney *115 Stein proposed that they make him a personal loan of $10,000, without interest and without the loan being evidenced by a note. The $10,000 represented approximately one-third of the amount of interest that would have been payable on the loan from the pension fund had interest been charged during the period of construction. The borrowers and Attorney Stein agreed that if the lender did not revise the loan agreement to require payment of interest during construction, they would not call the loan made to Attorney Stein; if the lender did, Attorney Stein would repay the $10,000 to the borrowers. The lender never sought payment of construction interest.

In connection with another loan, the long time client of Attorney Stein balked at paying the three percent commission in cash because cash payments of that type were not normal in his business. Instead, he gave Attorney Stein a cashier's check payable to Attorney Stein in the amount of $10,272, representing three percent of the loan sought from the pension fund. Attorney Stein took the cashier's check to the banker, who would not let him endorse the check to him but instead escorted Attorney Stein to a teller's window at his bank where he had him cash the check. The two then returned to the banker's office where Attorney Stein handed him the cash in exchange for the loan commitment for his client.

During the late fall of 1981, Attorney Stein was approached by a man who had been introduced to him through a local appraiser of Attorney Stein's acquaintance. The appraiser had already informed the man of the availability of the pension fund loans and the man was in desperate need of a loan to refinance an existing project. The appraiser told Attorney Stein of that situation and suggested they charge the man an additional two percent fee, which they would split equally. The *116 appraiser apparently had already told the man that a five percent fee in cash was required to obtain the loan, rather than the three percent fee other borrowers had been paying.

Attorney Stein met with the man and told him a five percent "origination fee" was required: $16,500 in cash and two checks each in the amount of $5,500, one payable to Attorney Stein and the other to his trust account. The man gave Attorney Stein $16,500 in currency in a bag at Attorney Stein's office and a check for $5,500 payable to Attorney Stein, which he deposited in his personal bank account and used for his own purposes, and a $5,500 check payable to Attorney Stein's trust account. The latter check was deposited in the trust account and a check was drawn on that account in the same amount made payable to the appraiser.

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Related

Disciplinary Proceedings Against Hausmann
2005 WI 131 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2005)
In re the Reinstatement of the License of Stein
527 N.W.2d 332 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
486 N.W.2d 526, 170 Wis. 2d 112, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-stein-wis-1992.