In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Wolf

2001 WI 4, 621 N.W.2d 624, 241 Wis. 2d 76
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2000
Docket00-2918-D
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2001 WI 4 (In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Wolf) 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 Wolf, 2001 WI 4, 621 N.W.2d 624, 241 Wis. 2d 76 (Wis. 2000).

Opinion

*77 PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. We review the comprehensive stipulation filed by Attorney M. Joanne Wolf and the Office of Lawyer Regulation (OLR) pursuant to SCR 22.12. 1 The stipulation sets forth findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning Attorney Wolfs professional misconduct including neglecting a case, making misrepresentations to both her client and the clerk of court's office, and altering a public document both fraudulently and criminally; all the stipulated misconduct occurred while Attorney Wolf was representing a client at the time when Attorney Wolf s law license remained under suspension for more than six years for her failure to pay bar dues. The parties also stipulated to a two-year suspension of Attorney Wolfs license to practice law as discipline for this misconduct.

¶ 2. We approve the stipulation and determine that the seriousness of Attorney Wolfs misconduct *78 warrants the suspension of her license to practice law for two years.

¶ 3. Attorney Wolf was admitted to the practice of law in Wisconsin in 1980. She previously served as district attorney in Crawford county and she currently resides in Prairie du Chien. In 1991 this court imposed medical conditions on Attorney Wolf s license. Disciplinary Proceedings Against Wolf, 165 Wis. 2d 1, 476 N.W.2d 878 (1991). Attorney Wolf was thereafter suspended from the practice of law for nonpayment of bar dues, effective November 2, 1992, and has remained under suspension since that date.

¶ 4. The specific facts giving rise to this current disciplinary action reflect that Attorney Wolf was retained in July 1997 to represent a client in a divorce action. That client and her husband had been separated for many years and the husband's whereabouts were unknown. Attorney Wolf was told by the client that she planned to marry her fiance on May 16, 1998, and she said she wanted to be certain that her divorce would be completed quickly enough so that it would not interfere with those plans. Attorney Wolf informed the client that she could not remarry until six months after the effective date of the divorce, and thus, the divorce would need to be final by mid-November 1997.

¶ 5. Attorney Wolf subsequently informed her client that the final hearing in the divorce action had been scheduled for November of 1997; later, Attorney Wolf reported that the hearing date had to be postponed. When the client expressed concern about the mandatory six-month waiting period before remarrying, Attorney Wolf said she would get the final hearing rescheduled and would ask the judge to waive the six-month requirement. In fact, Attorney Wolf had not at *79 that time filed the divorce petition and did not do so until March 31,1998.

¶ 6. On April 29, 1998, the circuit court granted Attorney Wolf s client a default divorce subject to submission of proof that the client's husband had been properly served with the divorce petition by publication. The judge reminded Attorney Wolfs client that she could not remarry until six months after the date of the divorce. When the client later expressed concern to Attorney Wolf about that warning, Attorney Wolf responded that she would have the judge backdate the divorce judgment.

¶ 7. On May 4, 1998, the client went to Attorney Wolf s office and requested and received a copy of the findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment of divorce that Attorney Wolf had filed with the Crawford county clerk of court's office on that date. That document bore an incorrect case number and reflected that the divorce judgment had been granted on October 29, 1997. The document was imprinted with the stamp of the Crawford county clerk of court's office showing that it had been filed on May 4, 1998, and it appeared to have been signed by the judge on that same date.

¶ 8. Attorney Wolf assured her client that the document had been approved by the judge and that it would be sufficient for the client to obtain a marriage license. Attorney Wolf, however, also instructed her client to destroy the document after the marriage license had been issued; in addition Attorney Wolf told her client that she would soon receive in the mail, a certified copy of the divorce judgment with the correct date on it.

¶ 9. The circuit court judge had not, in fact, approved the use of the incorrect date on the divorce judgment Attorney Wolf had given her client.

*80 ¶ 10. On May 8, 1998, the client took the copy of the divorce judgment she had received from Attorney Wolf to the county clerk's office to apply for a marriage license. When the client, returned after the five-day waiting period to pick up the license, she was informed by the clerk that a marriage license could not be issued because the copy of the divorce judgment that had been submitted bore a date different from that on the divorce judgment on file in the clerk's office.

¶ 11. On that same day — now only two days from the planned wedding — the client told Attorney Wolf that the marriage license could not be issued because the six-month waiting period had not yet expired. Attorney Wolf reassured the client that Attorney Wolf would take care of the problem. The next morning, Attorney Wolf went to the Crawford county clerk of court's office and attempted to persuade a deputy clerk to sign a statement to the effect that a divorce judgment is granted on the date of the hearing and entered on the date of the filing. The deputy clerk of court declined to sign that statement.

¶ 12. Attorney Wolf then went to the office of the county clerk with the purported divorce judgment bearing the incorrect date and presented it to a deputy county clerk. When the deputy clerk noted that the dates did Pot correspond to the dates shown in the file in the clerk of court's office, Attorney Wolf represented that the divorce had, in fact, been granted on October 29, 1997; Attorney Wolf stated that she would straighten the matter out with the clerk of court's office. The deputy county clerk then issued the marriage license and gave it to Attorney Wolf who delivered it to her client.

¶ 13. Later that afternoon, as the client and her fiance were on the way to their wedding rehearsal, they *81 were contacted by the police who informed them that the marriage license that had been issued was not valid. As a result, Attorney Wolf s client was unable to legally marry as she had planned on May 16, 1998, although the couple did participate in a non-binding ceremony and held the reception as planned.

¶ 14. Subsequently, Attorney Wolfs client discovered that as of May 16, 1998, there was no valid judgment of divorce because Attorney Wolf had not allowed for sufficient time between the date of publication and the date of the final hearing. Attorney Wolfs client later retained different counsel and then obtained a valid divorce. The client and her fiance were finally married in March of 2000.

¶ 15.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 WI 4, 621 N.W.2d 624, 241 Wis. 2d 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-wolf-wis-2000.