Matter of Bar Admission of Wadsworth

527 N.W.2d 311, 190 Wis. 2d 576, 1995 Wisc. LEXIS 21
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1995
Docket94-2379-BA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 527 N.W.2d 311 (Matter of Bar Admission of Wadsworth) 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 Wadsworth, 527 N.W.2d 311, 190 Wis. 2d 576, 1995 Wisc. LEXIS 21 (Wis. 1995).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

Review of Board of Bar Examiners decision; decision affirmed.

This is a review of the decision of the Board of Bar Examiners (Board) not to certify the eligibility of Charles Anthony Wadsworth for bar admission on the basis of his practice of law in Indiana. The Board determined that the rule rendering ineligible for admission on proof of practice elsewhere an applicant who proposes to satisfy the durational practice requirement by practice in a jurisdiction that does not grant bar admission to applicants on the basis of practice in Wisconsin applies to Mr. Wadsworth. We affirm the Board's decision.1

While Indiana admits to its bar without examination attorneys who have practiced in another jurisdiction five of the preceding seven years, that admission is expressly conditional on the attorney's actively engaging in the practice of law predominantly in Indiana and does not become permanent until the attorney has done so for five consecutive years. Thus, bar admission in Indiana is not granted on the basis of the applicant's prior practice in another jurisdiction.

[578]*578Mr. Wadsworth, who was admitted on examination to the bars of Michigan and Indiana in 1978 and had practiced law for 15 years, applied for foreign license admission in Wisconsin in Septémber, 1993, soon after moving to Wisconsin to join the legal staff of one of a group of companies controlled by the corporation in whose legal department he had worked in Indiana since 1987. His Wisconsin application was based on his six years of practice in Indiana. Stating that his decision to move to Wisconsin was made in part on having concluded that he qualified for foreign license admission on the basis of his Indiana practice, Mr. Wadsworth told the Board that, consistent with the Indiana "foreign license admission" rule, he intended to be actively and predominantly engaged in the practice of law in Wisconsin and was willing to submit five annual verifications that he had done so in order that his Wisconsin admission would be considered permanent.

Two weeks after Mr. Wadsworth filed his application, the Board informed him that it was unclear whether the conditional bar admission available in Indiana to applicants who had actively engaged in the practice of law in another jurisdiction for at least five of the seven preceding years is equivalent to the bar admission granted applicants in Wisconsin on proof of practice elsewhere. The Board alerted him to the possibility that it might not certify his eligibility for admission and offered him the opportunity to withdraw his application or convert it into an application to write the Wisconsin bar examination. Mr. Wadsworth elected to proceed on his application for bar admission on prior practice.

The Board determined that Mr. Wadsworth is ineligible for admission in Wisconsin on the basis of his [579]*579practice in Indiana because Indiana does not grant an unconditional license to an applicant for admission without examination until the applicant has satisfied the requirement for a permanent license: five consecutive years of conditional licensure, renewed annually, actively engaged in the practice of law predominantly in Indiana, as established by the applicant's annual verifications. The rules on which the Board based its determination are:

SCR 40.05( lm)(a) An applicant who proposes to satisfy [the durational practice requirement] by practice in a jurisdiction that does not grant bar admission to attorneys licensed in Wisconsin on the basis of practice in Wisconsin shall not be eligible for admission on proof of practice elsewhere.

Indiana Rule 6. Admission on Foreign License.

(1) A person who has been admitted to practice law in the highest court of law in any other state or territory of the United States or the District of Columbia, may be conditionally admitted to practice law in Indiana upon a finding by the State Board of Law Examiners that said person has met each of the following conditions:
(a) The applicant has actively engaged in the practice of law for a period of at least five (5) of the seven (7) years immediately preceding the date of application....
(3) Said conditional admission on a foreign license may continue in force for one year, and may be renewed for a like period upon the submission of such verified individualized information as will demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Board that the applicant has during the past year been both (a) actively engaged in the practice of law, and (2) (sic) predominantly in Indiana. Each application for [580]*580renewal of conditional admission shall be accompanied by a fee of $50.00. Upon the fifth consecutive renewal granted to the applicant, the admission to practice shall be permanent.

In this review, Mr. Wadsworth relied on what he contended was the plain meaning of SCR 40.05(lm)(a)2 to support his position that because Indiana does admit to its bar without examination attorneys who have actively engaged in the practice of law in another jurisdiction for at least five of the preceding seven years, the ineligibility provision does not apply to him. He argued that the rule applicable to his request for admission is SCR 40.05(l)(c),3 the provision that requires an appli[581]*581cant seeking admission on the basis of practice in another jurisdiction having foreign license admission requirements other than Wisconsin's to satisfy those "other" requirements. Because Wisconsin requires an applicant to have been primarily engaged in the active practice of law for three of the past five years, Mr. Wadsworth established that he met the five-of-seven-year requirement of Indiana Rule 6.

Mr. Wadsworth contended that the year-to-year conditional bar admission Indiana grants without examination to lawyers who have practiced for five of the preceding seven years in another jurisdiction is nothing more than a bar admission requirement "other than" the Wisconsin requirements. Accordingly, he asserted, as he has indicated his willingness to be bound by the Indiana conditional admission rule, i.e., that he will verify to the satisfaction of the Board annually for the next five years that he has been actively engaged in the practice of law predominantly in Wisconsin during each preceding year, he has satisfied that "other" requirement. Mr. Wadsworth also argued that the ineligibility provision of SCR 40.05(lm)(a) is directed at jurisdictions that limit bar admission to those who qualify by bar examination and, because Indiana does not require examination of lawyers it admits on a conditional basis, the provision does not apply to him.

Mr. Wadsworth next argued that if his only means of admission to the Wisconsin bar is by examination, he is being subjected to requirements more stringent than those imposed on an applicant for admission in Indiana on the basis of practice in Wisconsin. Further, he asserted, the Board should be required to enforce the requirements Indiana imposes on foreign license applicants, as it did in the case of Michigan's requirement [582]*582that applicants at the time of admission intend in good faith to maintain a law office in that state. In re Saretsky, 179 Wis. 2d 92, 506 N.W.2d 151 (1993). Mr.

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Related

In Matter of Bar Admission of Mostkoff
2005 WI 33 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2005)
Matter of Bar Admission of Wadsworth
527 N.W.2d 311 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
527 N.W.2d 311, 190 Wis. 2d 576, 1995 Wisc. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-bar-admission-of-wadsworth-wis-1995.