Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Cassidy

493 N.W.2d 362, 172 Wis. 2d 600, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 774
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1992
Docket91-2285-D
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 493 N.W.2d 362 (Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Cassidy) 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 Disciplinary Proceedings Against Cassidy, 493 N.W.2d 362, 172 Wis. 2d 600, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 774 (Wis. 1992).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license revoked.

This is an appeal by the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) from the referee's recommendation of discipline to be imposed upon Attorney James W. Cassidy for his professional misconduct. That misconduct included conversion of client funds to be held in trust, failure to maintain adequate trust account records and borrowing money from clients without giving them an opportunity to obtain the advice of independent counsel in those loan transactions. As discipline for that misconduct, the referee recommended that the court suspend Attorney Cassidy's license to practice law in Wisconsin for an indefinite period and permit him to apply for license reinstatement after one year, provided the Board certifies that he is physically and mentally fit to practice law and that he has repaid his indebtedness to a former client from whom he had borrowed money. The Board contended that the seriousness of Attorney Cassidy's misconduct requires revocation of his license to practice law.

We determine that the nature and extent of Attorney Cassidy's professional misconduct calls for the revocation of his license. His taking of client funds committed to his trust, his self-dealing with clients and misrepresentations to them and his use of his client trust account to shield his own funds from creditors establish his unfitness to be licensed to represent others in the legal system. By that misconduct, Attorney Cassidy has *602 demonstrated a propensity to be dishonest, which is incompatible with the legal profession.

Attorney Cassidy was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1954 and practiced in Madison prior to the temporary suspension of his license the court imposed in October, 1992, in another disciplinary proceeding. He has not previously been the subject of an attorney disciplinary proceeding. The referee in this proceeding, Attorney Rudolph P. Regez, made the following findings of fact, which are not in dispute.

In June, 1988 a man retained Attorney Cassidy to represent him in a legal separation action. During the course of the action, the client gave Attorney Cassidy a $700 check made payable to Attorney Cassidy's trust account for payment of a bill the parties owed to a clinic. Attorney Cassidy deposited that check into his business account rather than into his trust account and used the client's funds for his own business purposes.

The client was held in contempt of court for failure to pay the bill and subsequently paid it from other funds. Thereafter, he asked Attorney Cassidy for the return of the $700 and, when it was not forthcoming, filed a grievance with the Board. Attorney Cassidy then sent the client a trust account check for $700 drawn on his trust account, although apparently on another client's funds, as the client's money was no longer in that account. Responding to the Board's inquiry into the grievance, Attorney Cassidy stated that he had deposited the $700 check into his trust account and the money was not disbursed because the client had given no instructions concerning what to do with it.

The referee concluded that Attorney Cassidy's deposit of the client's funds into his business account constituted a failure to hold client funds in trust, in *603 violation of SCR 20:1.15(a); 1 his statements to the Board that he had deposited the check into his trust account constituted a misrepresentation, in violation of SCR 22.07(2); 2 his conversion of the client's $700 to meet business obligations violated SCR 20:8.4(c). 3

In the course of its investigation of this matter, the Board examined Attorney Cassidy's trust account records and bank statements covering the period from November, 1988 through September, 1990. Attorney Cassidy stated that he maintained no trust account cash receipts journal, no trust account ledger and no disbursement journal during that time and that his record-keeping consisted of notations he made in each client file of *604 amounts received from and disbursed to or for clients. The Board also discovered that amounts noted as belonging to clients were not always on deposit in Attorney Cassidy's trust account. Notwithstanding those facts, Attorney Cassidy certified to the State Bar in 1988 and 1989 that he had complied with the trust account record-keeping requirements of SCR 20:1.15(e).

The referee concluded that Attorney Cassidy's failure to maintain complete trust account records violated SCR 20:1.15(e) and that his certifications to the State Bar constituted misrepresentations, in violation of SCR 20:8.4(c), and also violated the. requirement of SCR 20:1.15(g). 4

*605 The Board's examination also disclosed that Attorney Cassidy's trust account balance was, at times, far below the amount of client funds he was to be holding in trust. For example, the trust account balance was $.77 on October 12, 1989, at which time Attorney Cassidy had been entrusted with $11,900 of one client's funds and $3,000 of another's; on July 17, 1989 his trust account balance was approximately $35, when he had been entrusted with funds of three clients totaling $21,400. Admitting that he had used client funds to pay his own personal and business expenses, Attorney Cassidy stated that, in all, he had converted funds of five clients amounting to $28,100 and that he has repaid all of those funds to the clients.

During the period from November, 1988 through May, 1990 Attorney Cassidy made 68 deposits into his trust account totaling over $162,000 without making any reference to the source of those funds. At the time of the disciplinary hearing, he was unable to identify the source of each of those deposits. Moreover, during that period, Attorney Cassidy borrowed more than $120,000 from individuals, some of which money he deposited in his trust account, and was unable to identify which of the deposits represented loan proceeds and which were client funds. Attorney Cassidy stated that he had deposited the proceeds of personal loans into his client trust account in *606 order to shield those funds from creditors, as his other bank accounts were then subject to garnishment by the Internal Revenue Service. In addition to his failure to record the source of funds he deposited in his trust account, Attorney Cassidy was unable to identify which of the 136 trust account checks he had drawn to himself totaling $105,620 were for fees to which he was entitled and which were withdrawals of loan proceeds.

The referee concluded that Attorney Cassidy's conversion of client funds held in trust for five clients constituted conduct involving dishonesty, in violation of SCR 20:8.4(c); his commingling of client funds with his personal funds violated SCR 20:1.15(a); his depositing of personal funds into his trust account to shield them from creditors constituted conduct involving deceit, in violation of SCR 20:8.4(c).

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493 N.W.2d 362, 172 Wis. 2d 600, 1992 Wisc. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-cassidy-wis-1992.