Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Woodard

515 N.W.2d 700, 183 Wis. 2d 575, 1994 Wisc. LEXIS 54
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1994
Docket93-1135-D
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 515 N.W.2d 700 (Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings Against Woodard) 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 Woodard, 515 N.W.2d 700, 183 Wis. 2d 575, 1994 Wisc. LEXIS 54 (Wis. 1994).

Opinion

*576 PER CURIAM.

Attorney disciplinary proceeding; attorney's license suspended.

We review the recommendation of the referee that the license of Attorney Stanley V. Woodard to practice law in Wisconsin be suspended for a period of one year as discipline for professional misconduct. That misconduct consisted of the following: assisting the friend of an incarcerated client to violate the terms of her probation by delivering on her behalf and at her request sealed packages to the client in jail, failing to maintain contact with a criminal client for an extended period or arrange for substitute counsel to attend scheduled court dates on his behalf, failing to prepare for trial in that client's matter and timely notify the court of his inability to proceed to trial as scheduled, failing to meet with another criminal client and adequately prepare for trial, failing to act promptly in a client’s custody matter, keep the client informed of its status, return that client's file upon request and refund the unearned portion of the client's retainer, failing to appear at scheduled court hearings in three criminal cases and failing to respond to the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility (Board) and cooperate with it in its investigation of grievances made in respect to those matters. In addition to the license suspension, the referee recommended that Attorney Woodard's license be suspended indefinitely on the grounds of medical incapacity, which he asserted as a mitigating factor in this proceeding.

We determine that the recommended one-year license suspension is insufficiently severe in response to the seriousness of Attorney Woodard's professional misconduct and in view of the fact that he has been disciplined for misconduct, similar to some of that established in this proceeding, on three prior occasions. *577 The most serious of that misconduct concerns Attorney Woodard's twice having actively assisted a person in the violation of the terms of her probation by himself delivering packages for her to his incarcerated client, knowing that by doing so he was thwarting jail policy. By delivering those packages, one of which contained four hacksaw blades, without first having informed jail personnel or himself inspecting their contents, Attorney Woodard knowingly interfered with the operation of the criminal justice system and violated the trust the penal system places in attorneys by foregoing inspection of materials they carry with them when they visit their incarcerated clients. As a person licensed by this court to act on behalf of others in the Wisconsin legal system, Attorney Woodard's actions in that matter alone warrant severe sanction.

The court determines that the totality of his misconduct, its nature and its repetition call for the suspension of Attorney Woodard's license to practice law for three years. Furthermore, as he has asserted in this proceeding that he suffers a medical incapacity, he will be required to show, as a condition of reinstatement of his license following the suspension, that he no longer suffers that incapacity.

Attorney Woodard was licensed to practice law in Wisconsin in 1977 and practices in Madison. He has been publicly reprimanded twice by the Board for neglect of client legal matters, failure to promptly respond to Board inquiries, failure to deposit a client's funds into a trust account and misrepresentation of the location of those funds. In 1989, the court suspended his license for 60 days as discipline for his failure to file income tax returns, respond to inquiries from the revenue department regarding his tax liability and respond to several requests from the Board for information con *578 cerning that conduct. Disciplinary Proceedings Against Woodard, 150 Wis. 2d 594, 441 N.W.2d 750.

When Attorney Woodard failed to answer the Board's amended complaint, respond to its motion for default or appear for a deposition as ordered, the referee, Attorney Norman Anderson, granted the default and made the following findings of fact. While employed as an assistant state public defender, Attorney Woodard represented an inmate charged with assaulting a prison guard. After the client was bound over for trial following a preliminary hearing on February 4, 1991, Attorney Woodard did not contact the client and did not appear at an arraignment scheduled for June 12,1991 and rescheduled three times thereafter due to his failure to appear. Attorney Woodard claimed that his failure to appear was due to the illness, hospitalization and ensuing death of his mother in late June, 1991, but he did not contact the court prior to his failure to appear at the arraignment, although he did ask the Public Defender's office to send substitute counsel to the arraignment rescheduled for July 10, 1991.

After the court set that matter for a jury trial on September 6,1991, the client himself sought to amend his plea as a result of having been unable to enter a not guilty plea because of Attorney Woodard's absence at the arraignment. After unsuccessfully attempting to contact Attorney Woodard, the court learned from the prosecutor that Attorney Woodard had stated his intention to ask the court for a continuance on September 3, 1991, but he did not do so. The following day he telephoned the court and told the judge of his mother's death but offered no explanation for having failed to maintain contact with his client following the February 4, 1991 arraignment. He requested a continuance of *579 the trial date for the stated reason that he had a conflict with the scheduled date but he ultimately admitted to the district professional responsibility committee investigating his conduct in the matter that he had not been prepared for trial.

The court had directed Attorney Woodard to confer with his client and telephone the court to reschedule the trial and when he failed to do so, the judge told the Board of his concern with the handling of the criminal case. The Board then asked Attorney Woodard to respond but he did not do so uiitil six weeks later, explaining that his response was late because he had gotten married, was out of his office for three weeks and had gotten behind with his mail. When he finally responded to the Board, Attorney Woodard stated that he was asking the Public Defender to appoint other counsel to represent the client and that he was filing a motion to withdraw from the case. However, he never filed that motion and the case was ultimately dismissed after the client had been transferred to a prison in another state.

The referee concluded that Attorney Woodard failed to act in this matter with the thoroughness and preparation reasonably necessary for the client's representation, in violation of SCR 20:1.1, 1 and failed to make reasonable efforts to expedite litigation of the client's case, in violation of SCR 20:3.2. 2

*580 The second matter considered in this proceeding concerns the representation Attorney Woodard, then in private practice, provided another criminal defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
515 N.W.2d 700, 183 Wis. 2d 575, 1994 Wisc. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-disciplinary-proceedings-against-woodard-wis-1994.