Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Forester

530 N.W.2d 375, 189 Wis. 2d 563, 1995 Wisc. LEXIS 9
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1995
Docket92-1577-D
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 530 N.W.2d 375 (Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Forester) 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 Forester, 530 N.W.2d 375, 189 Wis. 2d 563, 1995 Wisc. LEXIS 9 (Wis. 1995).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorneys' licenses revoked.

The respondent attorneys, Richard M. Forester and James G. Forester, appealed from the referee's findings of fact and conclusions of law that they engaged in professional misconduct in their representations of and dealings with two related corporations and several trusts and from the referee's recommendation that their licenses to practice law in Wisconsin be revoked as discipline for that misconduct. The referee concluded that the appellants engaged in the following misconduct: charging and collecting excessive fees for legal services and so-called "special management services" to client corporations, charging and collecting excessive fees for administrative services to four trusts, undertaking and continuing legal representation in the presence of conflicting interests without making the requisite disclosure of those conflicts, entering into prohibited business transactions with a client and engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation. We determine that the referee properly concluded that Attorneys Richard Forester and James Forester engaged in professional misconduct in those respects and that the recommended license revocations constitute appropriate discipline for it.

In respect to the separate claim of the Board of Attorneys professional Responsibility (Board) against *565 James Forester alleging that he charged and collected clearly excessive legal fees from a client in 1987 and 1988 in several legal matters, the referee concluded that the fees charged to and paid by the client were not unreasonable or clearly excessive and, accordingly, recommended that the claim be dismissed. The Board did not appeal from that conclusion and recommendation. We determine that the referee's conclusion as to that claim is proper and we dismiss that claim.

Richard Forester was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1946 and practices in Brookfield. James Forester, son of Richard Forester, was admitted to practice law in 1959 and practices at the same location as his father under the name "Forester and Forester" but the two do not practice in or hold themselves out as a partnership. Neither of them has been the subject of a prior disciplinary proceeding.

On the basis of testimony and documentary evidence presented at a disciplinary hearing, the referee, Attorney Charles S. Van Sickle, made findings of fact concerning Richard and James Forester's representation of and dealings with a family-owned corporation, a company formed to hold that company's stock and several trusts for the family members, whose principal asset was stock of the holding company. The attorneys' conduct considered in this proceeding occurred from 1969, when Richard Forester was named legal counsel and made a corporate director of Western States Envelope Company (WSE), to 1989, when Richard Forester sold his WSE stock to the corporation after he and James Forester had resigned as officers, directors and attorneys for WSE and its holding company and as trustees of four trusts as part of the settlement of litigation concerning their actions as trustees.

*566 Prior to his admission to the bar, Richard Forester had been an independent insurance agent and sold insurance to WSE, a company owned and run principally by George B. Moss, a second cousin of Richard Forester. Following bar admission, Richard Forester continued in the insurance business and also provided legal services for Mr. Moss and WSE. In 1969, he was named WSE's legal counsel, was made a corporate director and purchased 2000 shares of WSE stock.

Because WSE was a closely held corporation whose stock was not publicly traded, Richard Forester drafted stock repurchase agreements in 1969 requiring WSE's employee-shareholders who were not Moss family members to sell to the company and WSE to buy at a "formula price" WSE stock held at death. That price was periodically determined on the basis of WSE's prior earnings and ranged from 10 to 30 percent below the book value of the stock, which itself was well below the company's market value. The repurchase agreements also provided for mandatory sale of WSE stock to the company at that price upon termination of certain employee-shareholders' employment.

When he drafted a repurchase agreement in respect to his own 2000 shares, Richard Forester included the provision for sale at the formula price upon death but not the provision for sale upon termination of his employment with WSE. In 1983, when he revised the employee repurchase agreements to include a mandatory repurchase at the formula price for all employees upon termination of employment, he did not revise his own repurchase agreement to include that provision.

After he no longer was involved with WSE, the company sought to repurchase" Richard Forester's stock at the current formula price as a requisite to converting *567 its corporate status for tax purposes. Richard Forester had refused to consent to WSE's conversion and he rejected that offer, requiring that WSE commence a legal proceeding to obtain his stock. That litigation was settled by WSE's purchase of that stock for a price approximately $440,000 greater than the price it would have paid if Richard Forester's stock repurchase agreement had included the mandatory repurchase upon termination provision he included in the other stock repurchase agreements he prepared for WSE.

The referee found that Richard Forester had the obligation to include the mandatory repurchase upon termination provision in his own agreement by virtue of the fact that for many years he had been closely involved in WSE's business as general counsel and in a policy-making position and that he considered himself having a status closely akin to that of an employee, as evidenced by the fact that he had prepared and entered into a deferred compensation agreement with WSE that included a non-competition clause. The referee also found that Richard Forester was obliged to advise the WSE officers, if not its board of directors, that his repurchase agreement did not contain the termination repurchase provision and obtain their consent to its omission. The referee concluded that Richard Forester's conduct in this regard violated former SCR 20.27, 1 prohibiting a lawyer from entering into a business transaction with a client under certain *568 circumstances without obtaining the client's consent after making full disclosure to the client.

In 1972, Mr. Moss began to withdraw from active involvement in the operation of WSE and created a new three-person executive committee consisting of his son, George French Moss, Richard Forester and the company's president. In creating that committee, Mr. Moss made it clear that Richard Forester was to act in a consulting capacity with the other members of the committee, particularly in respect to legal work, business affairs and finance, but was not to have any responsibility in the operation of the business, except in respect to policy matters. At that time, WSE placed Richard Forester on a $2,500 per month retainer as legal counsel and Richard Forester made it clear to Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gustafson v. Zumbrunnen
546 F.3d 398 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
530 N.W.2d 375, 189 Wis. 2d 563, 1995 Wisc. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-forester-wis-1995.