Matter of Bar Admission of Martin

510 N.W.2d 687, 181 Wis. 2d 27, 1994 Wisc. LEXIS 13, 1994 WL 29832
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1994
Docket93-1762-BA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 510 N.W.2d 687 (Matter of Bar Admission of Martin) 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
Matter of Bar Admission of Martin, 510 N.W.2d 687, 181 Wis. 2d 27, 1994 Wisc. LEXIS 13, 1994 WL 29832 (Wis. 1994).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Review of Board of Bar Examiners decision; decision affirmed.

This is a review, pursuant to SCR 40.08(5), 1 of the decision of the Board of Bar Examiners (Board) declining to certify to this court that Henry Leroy Martin has the necessary character and fitness to qualify him to be licensed to practice law in Wisconsin. Mr. Martin challenged that decision, as well as the Board's refusal to grant his request for a hearing in the matter.

Because we determine that the Board's conclusions that Mr. Martin failed to meet his burden under the bar admission rules to establish the requisite character and fitness to be admitted to the practice of law in Wisconsin are adequately supported by the facts found by the Board and those facts are not clearly erroneous and because the Board was not required to grant Mr. Martin's request for a hearing on his application, we affirm the decision of the Board declining to certify that Mr. Martin has satisfied the requirements for admission to the practice of law in Wisconsin.

Under SCR 40.07, an applicant for bar admission has the burden of proof to establish the qualifications for bar admission set forth in SCR 40.02, including satisfaction of the character and fitness requirement *30 set forth in SCR 40.06. 2 Pursuant to SCR 40.06(3), the applicant must establish satisfaction of the character and fitness requirement to the satisfaction of the Board, whose duty it is to certify to this court the character and fitness of qualifying applicants.

After Mr. Martin successfully wrote the February, 1989 Wisconsin bar examination, the Board referred his bar admission application to the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (BAPR), pursuant to SCR 22.29(1), 3 for an investigation of his moral character. *31 That referral was made because, in the Board's words, Mr. Martin's file "disclosed serious issues concerning his character and fitness with regard to his extensive criminal record, and with regard to his candor as to his criminal record" when he applied for admission to law school in 1981 and again when he applied for bar admission.

Mr. Martin had applied to write the 1985 Wisconsin bar exam but withdrew his application when it appeared he would not receive his law degree when anticipated. After unsuccessfully writing the bar exams in 1986,1987 and 1988, he received special permission from the Board to write the February, 1989 exam. The Board sent his application to the BAPR in 1986 and again in 1987 for an investigation and recommendation concerning his moral character. In 1986, the BAPR commenced an investigation but terminated it upon learning that Mr. Martin failed the bar exam. In 1987, the BAPR did not conduct an investigation because Mr. Martin failed the bar exam and in 1988 the Board did not refer his application because Mr. Martin did not pass the examination.

Following the 1989 referral, the BAPR conducted an investigation and, on September 14, 1992, submitted to the Board an unfavorable recommendation. The *32 grounds for that unfavorable recommendation set forth in the Board's decision were the following:

A. The pattern of dishonesty which permeated the applicant's extensive criminal record;
B. The applicant's lack of candor to the University of Wisconsin Law School in submitting a law school application in which he did not disclose his 1978 federal conviction and his failure to disclose his actual residence at a federal correctional institution at the time he applied to the Law School;
C. The applicant's lack of candor in his July 1985 Wisconsin Bar Examination application as evidenced by his omission of references to his prior criminal convictions that were not covered by a gubernatorial pardon; and
D. The applicant's failure to honestly explain the circumstances of his convictions to the BAPR during the course of its investigation undertaken pursuant to SCR 22.29.

The Board adopted the BAPR investigative report for purposes of its findings of fact. That report set forth the details of Mr. Martin's criminal record, the relevant facts concerning his 1981 application for admission to the UW Law School, the matter of the pardon granted in respect to Mr. Martin's 1969 conviction of attempted forgery and his 1985 application to write the Wisconsin bar exam.

On his law school application, Mr. Martin set forth a street number in Milwaukee as both his present (mailing) address and his permanent address and listed employment in a family restaurant business in Milwaukee and a tutor position, also in Milwaukee. In fact, however, from 1978 to March 1,1982, Mr. Martin was incarcerated in a federal prison at Milan, Michigan, having been convicted in federal district court in *33 Oregon of seven counts of aiding and abetting the interstate transportation of forged checks, for which he was sentenced at the end of February, 1978 to ten years' imprisonment. Prior to filing his application, Mr. Martin had never resided at the address he listed in his law school application; it was a house purchased in 1980 by a woman to whom Mr. Martin was engaged. Further, the tutor position he held was not in Milwaukee but at the federal prison; Mr. Martin told the BAPR investigator the reference to Milwaukee was a typographical error.

Mr. Martin answered the law school application question concerning criminal convictions in the affirmative and, when asked to "fully explain the circumstances," he stated that he was a former legal offender and received "a full Pardon in 1971." He did not report the fact of his 1978 federal criminal conviction, for which he was then currently incarcerated. He also did not set forth any of his four state criminal convictions (robbery, forgery — 3 counts, burglary and theft, forgery) that occurred prior to his pardon and to which the pardon did not apply.

After notifying Mr. Martin in March, 1981 that he was accepted for admission, the law school learned of his incarceration when contacted by prison officials to make arrangements for his early release to enable him to attend an orientation session for new students. The law school then rescinded its admission decision on August 4,1981.

Mr. Martin filed a federal action against the law school, seeking a preliminary injunction and compensatory and punitive damages, claiming he was deprived of due process and equal protection when his admission was rescinded. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants, Martin v. Hel- *34 stad, 578 F. Supp. 1473 (W.D. Wis. 1983), which was affirmed on appeal, 699 F.2d 387 (7th Cir. 1983).

Mr. Martin subsequently gained admission to the University of California, Berkeley — Boalt Hall School of Law.

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510 N.W.2d 687, 181 Wis. 2d 27, 1994 Wisc. LEXIS 13, 1994 WL 29832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-bar-admission-of-martin-wis-1994.