Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Rader

359 N.W.2d 156, 121 Wis. 2d 410, 1984 Wisc. LEXIS 2891
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1984
Docket83-2101-D
StatusPublished

This text of 359 N.W.2d 156 (Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Rader) 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 Rader, 359 N.W.2d 156, 121 Wis. 2d 410, 1984 Wisc. LEXIS 2891 (Wis. 1984).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney’s license suspended.

Attorney Larry W. Rader appeals from the referee’s report concluding that he revealed client confidences and used those confidences to his advantage and to the *411 disadvantage of his client and recommending that he be publicly reprimanded for unprofessional conduct. The Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) cross-appeals from the referee’s recommendation for discipline, taking the position that the recommended public reprimand is too lenient and that a suspension of Attorney Rader’s license for at least 90 days is appropriate discipline. We accept the referee’s findings of fact and conclusions that Attorney Rader violated SCR 20.22(1) (b) and (c) by knowingly using client confidences without the clients’ consent to the disadvantage of the clients and for his own advantage. However, we do not accept the referee’s recommendation of a public reprimand; we conclude that Attorney Rader’s unprofessional conduct warrants the imposition of a 90-day suspension of his license to practice law.

Attorney Rader was admitted to practice in Wisconsin in 1960, and practices in Wausau. He was previously disciplined in 1979, receiving from the Board a private reprimand for having recorded a deed that had been given to him by another attorney with explicit instructions not to record it unless notified otherwise. In the context of this appeal, Attorney Rader filed a motion to have the 1979 private reprimand struck from the court’s records, filed a motion to supplement the appendix of his appellate brief in support of the motion to strike, and filed a motion requesting the court to take judicial notice of alleged misconduct by the Board in its investigation of the 1979 matter. We deny each of those motions.

This disciplinary proceeding concerns Attorney Rader’s representation of one of three brothers who were partners in the operation of a farm and whom Attorney Rader represented in partnership matters. In 1980, one of those brothers, LaVerne Springer, retained Attorney Rader to represent him in a divorce action. *412 The divorce was bitterly contested, and Mr. Springer was dissatisfied with the court’s award of property division. Attorney Rader brought several unsuccessful motions for reconsideration of that award.

When Attorney Rader refused Mr. Springer’s request to appeal the court’s judgment, Mr. Springer obtained other counsel to represent him in taking an appeal, but Attorney Rader refused to sign a substitution of attorney form. Attorney Rader claimed his refusal to appeal the judgment was the result of having discovered his client had hidden assets in the divorce proceeding which would have to be disclosed to the court if the matter were pursued. Attorney Rader maintained that he refused to consent to the substitution of attorney in order to bring the matter of the alleged hidden assets to the court’s attention. However, the referee, the Honorable Rodney Lee Young, reserve judge, found that Attorney Rader wanted the substitution issue to go before the court so that a disagreement between him and Mr. Springer over his fees in the divorce action would be resolved.

In preparation for the hearing on the substitution motion, Attorney Rader prepared three affidavits attempting to establish the fact that Mr. Springer had hidden assets from the court in the divorce action, and he informed the proposed successor attorney, James Lonsdorf, that he intended to file those affidavits with the court prior to the hearing on the substitution motion. The affidavits disclosed information concerning not only LaVerne Springer, but also the Springer brothers and their farm partnership dealings, as well as problems La Verne Springer had been having with his wife and with the partnership. Attorney Lonsdorf asked Attorney Rader not to file the affidavits because of their prejudicial content, but the affidavits were delivered to the judge’s chambers on the morning of the hearing. Unaware that the affidavits had been delivered, Attor *413 ney Lonsdorf spoke to the judge in chambers and asked that he not read the affidavits should they be filed. The affidavits were sealed in the court’s file, and the judge did not read them.

At the disciplinary hearing, Attorney Lonsdorf testified that he had obtained access to Attorney Rader’s files in the divorce action with the express understanding between himself and Attorney Rader that he would review Attorney Rader’s fees with Mr. Springer and help resolve the fee dispute. Attorney Lonsdorf also testified that when Attorney Rader gave him copies of the three affidavits two days prior to the hearing on substitution, Attorney Rader told him he might file the affidavits but that Attorney Lonsdorf should discuss the fee issue with Mr. Springer. Attorney Lonsdorf further testified that on the afternoon of the hearing on the substitution motion he asked Attorney Rader not to file the affidavits, not realizing that they had already been delivered to the judge in chambers, and that Attorney Rader told him that if he were not paid $5,000 in fees for his representation of Mr. Springer in the divorce action, he was going to file them. Attorney Rader subsequently reduced his demand to $1,500, but Mr. Springer refused to pay him anything.

The referee found that by preparing those affidavits and delivering them to the court, Attorney Rader sought to use the hearing on the substitution motion as a means of obtaining payment of his fees in the divorce matter, as well as to inform the court of his suspicion that his client had withheld certain assets from the court during the divorce proceeding. The referee also found that the affidavits disclosed information about his client’s marital problems which Attorney Rader had obtained through office conferences with LaVerne Springer, as well as partnership information obtained through office conferences with the three brothers, and that all of the *414 clients had expressly requested that such information be kept confidential.

The referee concluded that Attorney Rader’s primary interest and objective in requiring a court hearing on the substitution motion was to obtain payment or settlement of his fees and that the threat of filing the affidavits was contingent upon a settlement of those fees. This conduct constituted a knowing use of a client confidence without the client’s consent to the disadvantage of the client and for Attorney Rader’s own advantage, in violation of SCR 20.22(1) (b) and (c). The referee found that Attorney Rader’s attempt to inform the court of what he termed “suspicious circumstances” indicating his client’s allegedly having withheld assets in the divorce proceeding was “indirectly and inferentially made, but not pursued.”

We find to be without merit Attorney Rader’s argument that no privileged or confidential client information was publicly disclosed by his having delivered the affidavits to the judge in chambers. In Attorney Rader’s cover letter accompanying the affidavits and in his testimony at the substitution hearing, he made clear his intention that the affidavits be filed and made a part of the record in the divorce action. We likewise reject his contention that his client’s alleged nondisclosure of assets in the divorce proceeding justified his disclosure of the information contained in the affidavits.

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Bluebook (online)
359 N.W.2d 156, 121 Wis. 2d 410, 1984 Wisc. LEXIS 2891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-rader-wis-1984.