In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against Jay A. Rosenberg, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0397875. ...

CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 12, 2025
DocketA240670
StatusPublished

This text of In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against Jay A. Rosenberg, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0397875. ... (In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against Jay A. Rosenberg, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0397875. ...) 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 Petition for Disciplinary Action against Jay A. Rosenberg, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0397875. ..., (Mich. 2025).

Opinion

STATE OF MINNESOTA

IN SUPREME COURT

A24-0670

Original Jurisdiction Per Curiam

In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against Jay A. Rosenberg, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0397875.

Filed: March 12, 2025 Office of Appellate Courts

________________________

Susan M. Humiston, Director, Binh T. Tuong, Deputy Director, Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility, Saint Paul, Minnesota, for petitioner.

Jay A. Rosenberg, Libertyville, Illinois, pro se.

SYLLABUS

Reciprocal discipline of disbarment under Rule 12(d), Rules on Lawyers

Professional Responsibility, is appropriate where an attorney practiced for eight years

without being licensed in the original jurisdiction, failed to exercise proper competence or

diligence in preparing thousands of pre-drafted deeds, and failed to respond to the original

jurisdiction’s request for information during the disciplinary process.

1 OPINION

PER CURIAM.

The Director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility (Director) filed

a petition for disciplinary action under Rule 12(d) of the Rules on Lawyers Professional

Responsibility (RLPR) requesting that we impose reciprocal discipline of disbarment on

Jay Rosenberg. Rosenberg was excluded from the practice of law in the Commonwealth

of Virginia for yearslong unauthorized practice of law, incompetence, lack of diligence in

preparing over 14,000 deeds, and lack of cooperation with Virginia’s disciplinary

proceedings. Because we conclude that the Virginia disciplinary proceedings were fair and

that disbarment is neither unjust nor substantially different from the discipline warranted

in Minnesota, we disbar Rosenberg.

FACTS

Rosenberg has had law licenses for nearly sixty years in various jurisdictions

without any disciplinary issues. He was admitted to practice in Minnesota in 2016. His

license in Minnesota became inactive in 2022 and his status is currently listed as

“voluntarily restricted” and “retired.” Before this disciplinary action, Rosenberg was

licensed to practice law in 15 jurisdictions: Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri,

North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas,

Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.

In 2014, Rosenberg opened a law practice in Virginia that specialized in high-

volume, low-cost real estate deeds. He was not licensed, nor did he have authorization to

practice, in Virginia. There was no Virginia-licensed attorney in Rosenberg’s firm from

2 2014 to 2021. Instead, the name of a Virginia lawyer who was not affiliated with

Rosenberg’s firm, B. Wesley Barger, Jr., was put on the prepared deeds in exchange for a

$300 monthly retainer fee. Barger rarely reviewed the deeds. Rosenberg estimates his

firm produced 2,000–2,200 deeds per year, meaning he generated more than 14,000 real

estate deeds from 2014 to 2021.

In June 2020, a Virginia-licensed attorney filed a complaint against Rosenberg after

noticing a deed he had prepared contained several errors, was the wrong type of deed, and

had not been reviewed by a Virginia-licensed attorney. The Virginia Bar (Bar) launched a

disciplinary investigation. 1 During this investigation, Bar counsel issued two subpoenas.

Rosenberg failed to comply with either. Instead, Rosenberg produced an untimely written

proffer in response to each, which the Bar accepted. Rosenberg also sat for an interview

with an investigator, but he refused to provide names of his clients or details of his

agreements with other entities. The Bar determined Rosenberg’s failure to provide

necessary information and comply with the investigation violated Virginia Rules of

Professional Conduct (VRPC) 8.1(c) and (d). 2

1 The Virginia State Bar, as an agency of the Virginia Supreme Court, oversees attorney conduct and discipline in the state. It has the authority to investigate complaints, issue charges, and conduct hearings as needed. Va. Code Ann. § 54.1-3910. 2 Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct 8.1(c) and (d) state:

An applicant for admission to the bar, or a lawyer already admitted to the bar, in connection with a bar admission application, any certification required to be filed as a condition of maintaining or renewing a license to practice law, or in connection with a disciplinary matter, shall not:

...

3 The Bar further determined that Rosenberg’s production of real estate deeds in

Virginia without a license constituted the unauthorized practice of law in violation of

VRPC 5.5(c) and (d). 3 As part of the investigation, the Bar reviewed a random sample of

seven of Rosenberg’s deeds. All of them had grammatical errors, while a few contained

substantive mistakes. Rosenberg disclosed that his firm’s deeds were pre-drafted by a

(c) fail to respond to a lawful demand for information from an admissions or disciplinary authority, except that this Rule does not require disclosure of information otherwise protected by Rule 1.6; or

(d) obstruct a lawful investigation by an admissions or disciplinary authority.

VRPC 8.1(c), (d). While not worded identically, RLPR 8.1 is similar to VRPC 8.1. 3 Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct 5.5(c) and (d) provide:

(c) A lawyer shall not practice law in a jurisdiction in violation of the regulation of the legal profession in that jurisdiction, or assist another in doing so.

(d) Foreign Lawyers: (1) “Foreign Lawyer” is a person authorized to practice law by the duly constituted and authorized governmental body of any State or Territory of the United States or the District of Columbia, or a foreign nation, but is neither licensed by the Supreme Court of Virginia or authorized under its rules to practice law generally in the Commonwealth of Virginia, nor disbarred or suspended from practice in any jurisdiction. (2) A Foreign Lawyer shall not, except as authorized by these Rules or other law: (i) establish an office or other systematic and continuous presence in Virginia for the practice of law, which may occur even if the Foreign Lawyer is not physically present in Virginia . . ..

VRPC 5.5(c), (d). Rules of Lawyers Professional Responsibility 5.5(a) and (b)(1) provide similar limitations on the practice of law in Minnesota.

4 separate law firm in India. Rosenberg prevented the investigator from examining a second

random sample. The Bar determined that Rosenberg’s failure to properly review and

prepare the deeds violated VRPC 1.1 (competence) and 1.3 (diligence). 4

On July 5, 2022, Rosenberg signed an affidavit agreeing to the facts laid out above

and that his conduct violated VRPC 1.1 (competence), 1.3 (diligence), 5.5 (unauthorized

practice of law), and 8.1 (compliance with disciplinary investigations), and consenting to

a revocation of practice sanction in Virginia. In his affidavit consenting to revocation,

Rosenberg asserted without further explanation that he “had reason to believe that

involvement of a Virginia based/licensed lawyer” was all that was required to practice in

Virginia as a “foreign lawyer” as defined in VRPC 5.5(d). The next day, a circuit court

panel of three judges accepted Rosenberg’s consent to revocation and “excluded [him]

from seeking admission, or exercising any privilege, to practice law in the Commonwealth

4 Rules 1.1 and 1.3 of the VRPC and RLPR are identical. Rule 1.1, VRPC, states:

A lawyer shall provide competent representation to a client.

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In Re Disciplinary Action Against Walker
461 N.W.2d 219 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1990)
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In Re Petition for Disciplinary Action Against Hunter
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In re Disciplinary Action Against Wolff
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In re Petition for Disciplinary Action against Jay A. Rosenberg, a Minnesota Attorney, Registration No. 0397875. ..., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petition-for-disciplinary-action-against-jay-a-rosenberg-a-minn-2025.