In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Raymonds

2000 WI 116, 618 N.W.2d 521, 238 Wis. 2d 846, 2000 Wisc. LEXIS 785
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 2000
Docket97-1440-D
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2000 WI 116 (In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Raymonds) 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 the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Raymonds, 2000 WI 116, 618 N.W.2d 521, 238 Wis. 2d 846, 2000 Wisc. LEXIS 785 (Wis. 2000).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. The Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) appealed from the recommendation of the referee that Attorney Daniel J. Raymonds receive a private reprimand and that his continued practice of law be conditioned for one year on his quarterly reporting to the Board of his handling of his client trust account in response to his professional misconduct. That misconduct consisted of overdrawing his client trust account, which resulted in at least one check written on it being dishonored when presented for payment, commingling personal funds in his trust account, failing to reconcile the trust account on a monthly basis, which resulted in an unexplained shortfall in the funds he held in trust, and misrepresenting to the Board the source and amount of funds he borrowed and deposited in the trust account in order to cover bank service charges that had been paid with funds held in trust and to cover the shortfall. The Board argued that the seriousness of Attorney Raymonds' misconduct warrants a 90-day suspension of ids license to practice law and the imposition of conditions in addition to that recommended by the referee in order to ensure Attorney Raymonds' compliance with the trust account rules.

¶ 2. We determine that the 90-day license suspension and imposition of the conditions urged by the *848 Board are the appropriate disciplinary response to the nature and extent of Attorney Raymonds' misconduct established in this proceeding. While not reaching the level of withdrawing funds of clients and others held in trust and converting them to personal use, Attorney Raymonds knowingly permitted his bank to deduct trust account funds belonging to clients and third persons in payment of bank service charges on that account over an extended period. His failure to maintain records of his trust account activity required by our rules resulted in overdrafts on that account and contributed to an unexplained $100,000 shortfall in the account, which he attempted to cover by depositing borrowed funds. His misrepresentation to the Board as to the source of those borrowed funds, while of little moment, was nonetheless misrepresentation to the body charged by this court with the responsibility of promoting and enforcing the high standards of professional conduct we require of those we license to represent others in our legal system.

¶ 3. Attorney Raymonds was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1981 and practices in Milwaukee. He has not been the subject of prior discipline other than the temporary license suspension we imposed in the course of the instant proceeding for his failure to comply with an order of the referee for an audit of his trust account to determine if harm to clients or his own personal gain had resulted from his commingling of funds in his trust account, the return of a trust account check for insufficient funds, and his failure to comply with trust account record-keeping requirements. We lifted that suspension after four months in response to the referee's recommendation, which was based on an agreement between Attorney Raymonds and the Board concerning action Attorney *849 Raymonds had taken to ensure compliance with the trust account rules.

¶ 4. The facts found by the referee in this proceeding, the Honorable Robert T. McGraw, Reserve Judge, as well as other facts of record, are not disputed by the parties in this appeal. Attorney Raymonds is a sole practitioner and employed two, sometimes three, secretaries. His practice consisted almost exclusively of the representation of parties in real estate transactions, particularly lenders. Tens of millions of dollars in closing proceeds went through his trust account, and thousands of checks were written on that account monthly.

¶ 5. In February 1995, despite having deposited sufficient funds from real estate closings to pay six separate disbursements by check from the trust account, there were insufficient funds in the account to pay those checks when they were presented for payment. The bank covered and honored five of those checks , but returned a $28,000 check with a notation that it be returned to the maker as a result of insufficient funds in the account.

¶ 6. During the Board's investigation, Attorney Raymonds asserted to Board staff that the reason for the shortfall was bank services charges and that the shortfall was in the amount of approximately $30,000. However, the service charges imposed between 1993 and 1995 accounted for only $30,000 of the shortfall; the $100,000 balance has never been explained. He also stated that no check written on his trust account ever had been returned because of insufficient funds.

¶ 7. Attorney Raymonds was aware since 1993 that the bank was imposing service charges and deducting them from his trust account, up to the time he moved it to another bank in May 1995. Thus, Attor *850 ney Raymonds allowed funds being held in trust to be used by the bank for payment of service charges for more than two years. The reason he gave for not moving the account sooner was his fear that the bank would demand payment of a $200,000 personal loan he had obtained from it.

¶ 8. After the shortfall was discovered, Attorney Raymonds borrowed $150,000 from his sister and deposited it into his trust account to cover the shortfall, thereby commingling his own funds with funds belonging to clients and third parties. It was from that deposit that the $28,000 check that had been dishonored ultimately was paid. That commingling continued when he closed the trust account in May 1995 and opened one in another bank, transferring to it the balance of approximately $21,000 of his personal funds that had not been disbursed to clients and third parties.

¶ 9. Although the referee did not cite in his report the specific Rules of Professional Conduct for Attorneys that Attorney Raymonds' misconduct violated, the Board correctly asserted that his allowing the trust account to become overdrawn on several occasions in February 1995 constituted a failure to hold property of clients or third persons in trust, thereby violating SCR 20:1.15(a). 1 His deposit of the $150,000 loan from his *851 sister into the trust account constituted a failure to hold property of clients or third persons separate from his own property, also in violation of SCR 20:1.15(a).

¶ 10. Attorney Raymonds' conduct also violated the following professional conduct rules. His failure to maintain complete records of trust account funds, including a monthly schedule of subsidiary client ledgers indicating the actual balance of each client's account, and his failure to reconcile his trust account checkbook with his monthly bank statements violated SCR 20:1.15(e). 2 His trust account typically handled *852 very large sums of money — as much as $51,600,000 in November 1993. Until 1991 or 1992, he maintained information as to amounts received from lenders and borrowers and amounts disbursed from those deposits on separate index cards for each real estate transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 WI 116, 618 N.W.2d 521, 238 Wis. 2d 846, 2000 Wisc. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-raymonds-wis-2000.