Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. Wanek

589 N.W.2d 265, 1999 WL 80786
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 8, 1999
Docket98-1423
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 589 N.W.2d 265 (Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. Wanek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics & Conduct v. Wanek, 589 N.W.2d 265, 1999 WL 80786 (iowa 1999).

Opinion

*266 NEUMAN, Justice.

Acting on questionable — if not plainly invalid — notice by ordinary mail, Iowa lawyer Jerrold Wanek secured $1.1 million judgments against the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and Investor’s Business Daily of Los Angeles (IBD). The judgments stemmed from sanctions imposed against the corporations in a discovery dispute. Wanek managed to tie up the Tribune’s and IBD’s bank accounts before the process was brought to a halt by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court sitting in Des Moines. The judgments were ultimately vacated and Wanek’s role in the matter was referred by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Lee Jaekwig to the Iowa Supreme Court Board of Professional Ethics and Conduct for its review and action.

The board charged Wanek with misrepresenting facts to the federal court and asserting unwarranted legal positions, all in violation of the Iowa Code of Professional Responsibility for Lawyers. A grievance commission convened to hear the matter concluded that the record supported only a finding that Wanek engaged in conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice. See Iowa Code of Professional Responsibility for Lawyers DR 1-102(A)(5). It determined Wanek should be privately admonished, rather than more severely sanctioned, for his conduct. See Committee on Prof'l Ethics & Conduct v. Liles, 430 N.W.2d 111, 113 (Iowa 1988) (“We view admonitions as considerably less severe than reprimands, and consider them to be something less than actual discipline.”).

In accordance with Iowa Supreme Court rale 118.11, we granted the board’s request for discretionary appeal. Our review is de novo. Iowa Supreme Ct. Bd. of Profl Ethics & Conduct v. Hoffman, 572 N.W.2d 904, 907 (Iowa 1997). As always, we are indebted to the commission for its work and give its findings and recommendation respectful consideration. See id. In this case, however, we think a suspension is demanded. The record demonstrates that Wanek crossed the line dividing zealous advocacy from sharp — and unethical — practice.

I. Background.

' Attorney Jerrold Wanek graduated from law school in 1983. He practices with a small firm in Des Moines, specializing in collections and bankruptcy. By all accounts he is knowledgeable in his field and respected by his peers.

If Wanek has any faults, one character witness observed, it is that he tends to take on “difficult” clients whom other lawyers “aren’t willing to touch.” Tim and Shirley Gerk were evidently such clients. They were referred to Wanek in 1994 by attorney Burns Mossman who was representing them in a dispute with the Internal Revenue Service. The Gerks were in the wholesale newspaper business, buying newspapers at cost and selling them retail at stands and in grocery stores. It seems that for the tax years 1987 through 1991, the IRS had disallowed the Gerks’ claimed deductions for cost of goods sold, resulting in substantial tax liability. By filing bankruptcy, Mossman believed, the Gerks could stay an imminent tax sale of their residence and, at the same time, pursue discovery against nonparty newspapers with whom they had done business in order to verify the expenses disallowed by the IRS.

In June 1994, Wanek filed a chapter 13 reorganization petition on Gerks’ behalf. Pertinent to this appeal, he wrote to the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and Investor’s Business Daily requesting production within ten days of information concerning Gerks’ payments for newspapers purchased from January 1987 through December 1991. He sent the letters by ordinary mail, using addresses furnished by the Gerks. As it turns out, all the addresses were either incomplete or totally inaccurate. For example, the letter mailed to the Chicago Tribune had no street address or zip code. The street addresses used for the New York Times and IBD (in Los Angeles) were just plain wrong. None of the letters was directed to a named individual, or even the legal department, at the corporate entity.

A month later, after Wanek had received no response to his informal requests, he sought an order to compel production from the bankruptcy court. His application recited that good-faith attempts at informal dis- *267 eovery had failed. The notices of intent to file such motion, and the motion itself, were mailed to the three newspapers at the same incorrect addresses. The court’s order compelling discovery, obtained in mid-September 1994, was likewise mailed to the incorrect addresses. Wanek had evidently learned by this time that the address for IBD was not good because he wrote to Mossman telling him so. The record contains no documentation to verify Wanek’s claim, however, that he remailed his informal request or the court documents to a corrected address.

In early October 1994, the IRS filed a proof of claim for $1,151,036.68 against the Gerks. The size of the creditors’ claims in the chapter 13 proceeding made dismissal inevitable. Thus Wanek felt pressured to promptly secure the needed proof to dispute the IRS claim. What he did not know, at least at this point, was that Gerks’ business with the Times, Tribune, and IBD represented only a fraction of the Gerks’ tax liability.

On December 27, 1994, Wanek moved for sanctions against all three newspapers, alleging that each

has received an informal request under the local rules, copy of the motion to compel production of documents, a copy of the order compelling them to produce documents, and a follow-up letter requesting that compliance be made with the order.

The notice of motion for sanctions gave each newspaper eight business days in which to respond. At the same time — in accordance with local rules — Wanek prepared sanction orders for the court’s signature. Each order contained a finding that the named newspaper had been properly served, had “ignored” the court’s earlier order compelling production, failed to object to the motion for sanctions by the bar date, and

[a]s a result of the order being ignored the debtors are potentially damaged or injured to the extent of $1,151,036.68 plus interest from and after June 6,1994, at the Federal rate.

Adam Liptak, counsel for the New York Times in New York City, testified that he first learned of these discovery proceedings when the order for sanctions landed on his desk on January 12, 1995. The bar date, of course, had already passed. Liptak called Wanek immediately, explaining the misaddressed mail but agreeing to search for the needed records at once. Given the mailing error, Liptak asked that Wanek’s motion for sanctions be withdrawn. Wanek declined but advised Liptak that if an objection were filed the matter would be set for hearing. Wanek wanted to keep the pressure on to be sure the needed documents were produced.

Within twenty-four hours Liptak wrote to Wanek, confirming that his document request would receive “prompt attention” and enclosing a copy of a written objection to the motion for sanctions. By this time Wanek had also heard from Paulette Dodson, counsel for the Chicago Tribune.

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