In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Sheehan

588 N.W.2d 624, 224 Wis. 2d 44, 1999 Wisc. LEXIS 11
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1999
Docket97-1824-D
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 588 N.W.2d 624 (In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Sheehan) 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 Sheehan, 588 N.W.2d 624, 224 Wis. 2d 44, 1999 Wisc. LEXIS 11 (Wis. 1999).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. Attorney Patrick B. Sheehan appealed from the report of the referee concluding that he engaged in professional misconduct in his representation of three clients and recommending that his license to practice law in Wisconsin be revoked as discipline for that misconduct. However, at oral argument, Attorney Sheehan withdrew his contention that he had been denied due process by not being able to call witnesses to testify at the disciplinary hearing regarding mitigating circumstances surrounding his conduct, and he stated that he did not object to the referee's recommendations that his license be revoked and that he be required to pay the costs of the disciplinary proceeding. He also accepted that the issue of restitution to the clients harmed by his misconduct be considered at such time as he seeks reinstatement of his license to practice law. Consequently, Attorney Sheehan's appeal effectively was withdrawn, and the matter has proceeded as a review of the referee's report.

¶ 2. Based on the stipulation of the parties to the facts and the violations of the Rules of Professional *46 Conduct for Attorneys those facts constituted, the referee, Attorney Judith Sperling Newton, concluded as follows. Attorney Sheehan engaged in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation in three client matters, commingled his own funds with funds of clients, failed to hold client property in trust and keep requisite trust account records, represented multiple clients having different interests, failed to provide competent representation and act with reasonable diligence and promptness, and represented a client in a personal injury matter on a contingent fee basis without having obtained a written fee agreement.

¶ 3. We determine that the seriousness and extent of Attorney Sheehan's professional misconduct warrant the revocation of his license to practice law. Among other things, he knowingly used a forged document to obtain money from a client and used funds belonging to clients for his own purposes. He thus has demonstrated a willingness to place his own pecuniary interests over the interests, financial and otherwise, of clients whose representation he had undertaken and has established that he cannot be trusted to act on behalf of others in the legal system.

¶ 4. Attorney Sheehan was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1968 and practiced in Beloit. On October 20, 1997, the court suspended his license to practice law pending disposition of this disciplinary proceeding, as the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) had requested, based on allegations that he had commingled and misappropriated funds belonging to clients. In addition, he had been suspended from the practice of law June 3, 1997, for failure to comply with continuing legal education requirements and has not been reinstated from that suspension.

*47 ¶ 5. The facts concerning the first client matter to which the parties stipulated involve Attorney Sheehan's representation in the summer of 1994 to pursue the sale of the business of a client he previously had represented in various legal matters. The client offered Attorney Sheehan a commission if he could locate a buyer, and another client of Attorney Sheehan's, together with one of that client's business associates, expressed interest in purchasing the business. Attorney Sheehan undertook to represent both the client selling the business and the client interested in buying it, despite the fact that he was aware that there could be no sale because the owner's permit to operate the business could not be transferred.

¶ 6. Attorney Sheehan prepared what purported to be an offer to purchase at a price of $800,000 and witnessed the purported signature of the buyer, knowing that the signature was not that of the person who signed the offer. Attorney Sheehan then gave the offer to his client, who accepted it, and received from that client $8,000 as partial payment of the commission. Attorney Sheehan deposited that money into his client trust account.

¶ 7. Over the next several months, Attorney Sheehan led his client to believe that there would be a closing on the sale, knowing all the while that the signature on the offer to purchase was a forgery and that the document did not constitute a bona fide offer. In February 1995 he told his client, who was vacationing in Florida, that he should return to Wisconsin immediately to sign the necessary documents to close the sale. The client shortened his vacation by a month and returned to Wisconsin, whereupon he learned that there would be no sale. When he demanded the return of the $8,000 commission, Attorney Sheehan paid him *48 by means of a $2,000 check drawn on his client trust account and $6,000 in cash payments.

¶ 8. Bank records of Attorney Sheehan's client trust account disclosed that Attorney Sheehan had used the $8,000 he had received from the client to pay other clients whose funds were no longer in his client trust account and to pay one of his employees. Attorney Sheehan was unable to produce copies of a client ledger sheet for the client in this matter or any other trust account documentation concerning the $8,000 he had been paid.

¶ 9. Attorney Sheehan asserted that he had hoped to be able to repay the $8,000 and tell the client there was no financing available for the sale to be accomplished. He did not intend to tell the client what he had done, namely, take the $8,000 under false pretenses and use it to cover other expenses. The referee found that the client was greatly embarrassed by the "scam" he had been involved in and was forced to retract statements he had made to his friends and business associates regarding the sale of his business and his plans for investing the proceeds.

¶ 10. The second matter to which the parties stipulated and for which the referee made appropriate findings concerned Attorney Sheehan's representation of a couple who retained him in December of 1994 to complete the sale of their business and dissolve their corporation. Attorney Sheehan told the clients they were going to incur a large tax liability and said he could save them a substantial amount of money by preparing their tax returns. In late December 1994 he asked the clients for and received from them a check for $15,400 to cover estimated federal and state taxes relating to their personal returns, fees to an accountant for preparation of the federal and state corporate *49 returns and estimated taxes related to them, and fees and costs to himself for preparing the clients' personal returns and for services to be performed in connection with the dissolution of the corporation.

¶ 11. On the same day he received that payment and in the presence of his clients, Attorney Sheehan wrote out seven checks on one of his client trust accounts totaling $15,400, including a $4,000 payment to the Internal Revenue Service for the federal corporate return, $1,900 to the Wisconsin Department of Revenue for the state corporate return, $3,000 to the IRS for the federal personal return, $1,500 to the Wisconsin Department of Revenue for the state personal return, $3,400 to the accountant, and two checks to himself, one for $1,200 and the other for $300. He placed five of those seven checks in the clients' file, but they were never sent to the payees.

¶ 12.

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Bluebook (online)
588 N.W.2d 624, 224 Wis. 2d 44, 1999 Wisc. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-sheehan-wis-1999.