Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Felli

2006 WI 73, 718 N.W.2d 70, 291 Wis. 2d 529, 2006 Wisc. LEXIS 366
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 2006
Docket2004AP3382-D
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2006 WI 73 (Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Felli) 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 Felli, 2006 WI 73, 718 N.W.2d 70, 291 Wis. 2d 529, 2006 Wisc. LEXIS 366 (Wis. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. Attorney Jay Andrew Felli has appealed from a referee's report concluding that he engaged in professional misconduct and recommending that his license to practice law in Wisconsin he suspended for a period of 18 months. The Office of Lawyer Regulation (OLR) has cross-appealed, arguing that the referee's findings that there was insufficient evidence to prove three of the counts alleged in the OLR's complaint are clearly erroneous. In addition, the OLR asserts that the recommended 18-month suspension inadequately addresses the severity of the misconduct and that the gravity of the offenses supports revocation of Attorney Felli's license to practice law.

¶ 2. We conclude that all of the referee's findings of fact, including those challenged by the OLR, are supported by satisfactory and convincing evidence. We also agree with the referee's conclusions of law that Attorney Felli engaged in professional misconduct. We conclude, however, that the appropriate discipline for the misconduct is a three-year suspension of Attorney Felli's license to practice law rather than the 18-month suspension recommended by the referee. We further agree with the referee that the costs of the proceeding, which total $33,400.72 as of January 19, 2006, should be assessed against Attorney Felli.

*534 ¶ 3. Attorney Felli was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1994 and practices in Brookfield. In 1998 he received a private reprimand for failure to timely pay his Wisconsin State Bar dues. In 2005 he received a public reprimand for failing to act with reasonable diligence and promptness in representing a client and making misrepresentations to the OLR. See In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Felli, 2005 WI 58, 281 Wis. 2d 25, 697 N.W.2d 42.

¶ 4. On December 30, 2004, while the prior disciplinary proceeding was still pending, the OLR filed a second complaint against Attorney Felli and also filed a motion seeking a temporary suspension of Attorney Felli's license on the ground that his continued practice of law posed a threat to the interests of the public and the administration of justice. This court denied the OLR's motion for a temporary suspension, but concluded that the motion raised significant concerns such that the court deemed it appropriate to expedite the disposition of the underlying proceeding.

¶ 5. The OLR's complaint alleged 15 counts of misconduct involving three client matters. All of the cases involved estate planning. Two financial planners, Stanley Zurawski and Ramzi Raad, were partners in a company called Lincoln Financial Planning. Zurawski and Raad presented financial planning seminars to target audiences 55 years of age and older. Sometime between 1995 and 1997 they decided to include an attorney in their seminars so they could refer clients back and forth. They asked Attorney FelH, who was married to Zurawski's cousin, to join them in the financial planning seminars.

¶ 6. The first client matter detailed in the OLR's complaint involved Attorney Felli's representation of R.W. In 1996 R.W. had executed a will, filed with the *535 Milwaukee County Probate Court, leaving her estate, which was valued at more than one million dollars at the time of her death two years later, to the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music and the Milwaukee Ballet Company. R.W appointed her neighbor and his wife as her personal representatives.

¶ 7. R.W. attended an estate planning seminar at which Attorney Felli and Zurawski made presentations. Attorney Felli and Zurawski recommended that R.W. use trusts to carry out the charitable bequests. Attorney Felli prepared a revocable living trust and a charitable remainder unitrust that R.W. executed on June 18, 1997. The Wisconsin Conservatory of Music was named as the sole beneficiary under both trusts. R.W. herself was named as the original trustee of the living trust, with her neighbor and his wife as successor trustees. The neighbors were also appointed as the trustees of the charitable unitrust. R.W. executed a pour-over will that left any remaining assets at the time of her death to the living trust. A year later Attorney Felli prepared amendments to the trusts that deleted the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music as the sole beneficiary and substituted Civic Music as the beneficiary.

¶ 8. In June 1998 Zurawski's sister founded and incorporated a new piano school. Zurawski was initially on the school's board of directors. On July 13,1998, less than one month after the last amendments to R.W.'s estate planning documents had been prepared and executed, Attorney Felli prepared new amendments removing Civic Music as the beneficiary of the trusts and naming Zurawski's sister's piano school as the sole beneficiary. The piano school did not apply for tax-exempt status until September 1998 and did not receive tax-exempt status until March 1999. The amendments dated July 13, 1998, also changed the trustees of both *536 trusts and removed the neighbor's wife as a co-trustee and appointed Attorney Felli as co-trustee of R.W's charitable remainder unitrust and as successor co-trustee of her living trust upon R.W.'s disability or death.

¶ 9. Attorney Felli did not discuss with R.W any alternative trustees, such as financial institutions, nor did he question her about her reasons for appointing him as co-trustee with her neighbor, nor did he suggest that the neighbor might serve as sole trustee.

¶ 10. RW died on September 19, 1998, without having executed further changes to her estate plan and leaving the piano school as the sole beneficiary. Upon R.W.'s death, Attorney Felli served as co-trustee for both trusts, did legal work for the estate and trusts, and managed the estate and trust bank accounts. Zurawski handled trust investment accounts.

¶ 11. An attorney sent a copy of R.W's obituary notice to the Milwaukee County Probate Court and wrote to the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music and the Milwaukee Ballet Company to inform them that RW had a will on file with the court naming their organizations as beneficiaries of her estate. In January 1999 those organizations filed a petition for administration of R.W's 1996 will. On February 23, 1999, Attorney Felli filed the 1997 pour-over will, an objection to the probate of the 1996 will, and a petition for probate of the 1997 will. Various challenges to the 1997 will and trusts ensued, all of which were eventually settled with payments to the challengers by the estate and/or trusts. Attorney Felli retained outside counsel to represent the estate and trusts in those contests.

¶ 12. A section of the living trust document required the trustees to submit at least a semiannual report to beneficiaries regarding trust receipts, disbursements, and distributions. The trust's books and records *537 were also to be made available for inspection by the trust beneficiaries. The piano school received some distributions from the R.W. living trust between 1998 and 2001. Apparently no distribution was larger than $25,000.

¶ 13. In late 2001 Attorney Felli gave instructions to Zurawski to liquidate about $130,000 in trust assets. On December 19,2001, the piano school's attorney wrote to Attorney Felli requesting that the school's accountant be allowed to review trust accounting records.

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Related

Reinstatement of Polk v. Office of Lawyer Regulation
2007 WI 51 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2007)
Polk v. OFFICE OF LAWYER REGULATION
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In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Felli
2007 WI 49 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2007)

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2006 WI 73, 718 N.W.2d 70, 291 Wis. 2d 529, 2006 Wisc. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-felli-wis-2006.