Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Carl H. Creedy

2014 WI 114, 854 N.W.2d 676, 358 Wis. 2d 345, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 656
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 2014
Docket2013AP001439-D
StatusPublished

This text of 2014 WI 114 (Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Carl H. Creedy) 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
Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Carl H. Creedy, 2014 WI 114, 854 N.W.2d 676, 358 Wis. 2d 345, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 656 (Wis. 2014).

Opinion

*346 PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. Pending before the court is the report of referee James W. Mohr, Jr., rendered following a hearing and receipt of a stipulation filed after the respondent, Attorney Carl H. Creedy, opted to plead no contest pursuant to Supreme Court Rule (SCR) 22.14. 1 The referee recommends that this court publicly reprimand Attorney Creedy for professional misconduct. No appeal has been filed so we review this matter pursuant *347 to SCR 22.17(2). 2 We also consider Attorney Creedy's objection to the request by the Office of Lawyer Regulation (OLR) for imposition of full costs, which total $17,801.64 as of May 21, 2014. See SCR 22.24.

¶ 2. We approve and adopt the referee's findings and conclusions and we agree that a public reprimand is sufficient discipline for Attorney Creedy's misconduct. We further order that Attorney Creedy pay one-half the costs of this disciplinary proceeding. Restitution is not an issue in this matter.

¶ 3. Attorney Creedy was admitted to the practice of law in Wisconsin in 1980. He practiced law in Orfordville, Wisconsin at the time of the filing of the complaint, and now practices in Janesville, Wisconsin. He has no previous disciplinary history.

¶ 4. Most of the allegations in the OLR's complaint involve Attorney Creedy's business relationship with a client named Joseph Murphy. Murphy, who is not an attorney, created a company called American Disability Entitlements LLC, intended to represent claimants in Social Security disability matters. Social Security laws and procedures permit nonlawyers to represent such claimants. Murphy learned that if an attorney provides similar services, the attorney can have fees paid directly to the attorney by the Social Security Administration out of any award. Murphy approached Attorney Creedy to see if they could work together representing disability claimants in order to ensure receipt of any fees.

*348 ¶ 5. Murphy and Attorney Creedy both represented claimants before the Social Security Administration. They would discuss and mutually agree upon a fair division of fees. They did not have a written agreement.

¶ 6. Murphy was routinely accepting unlawful fee advances, a practice prohibited by applicable Social Security rules and procedures. The parties disputed whether Attorney Creedy knew that Murphy was routinely accepting unlawful fee advances.

¶ 7. Attorney Creedy maintained that he first learned this was occurring in March of 2010, when an attorney representing a claimant advised Attorney Creedy that the claimant had been improperly assessed two fees: one paid by the claimant directly to Murphy, and another later paid to Attorney Creedy by the Social Security Administration. Upon receiving and confirming this information, Attorney Creedy promptly refunded one set of fees to the claimant. He then began dissolving the business arrangement with Murphy.

¶ 8. Meanwhile, law enforcement was investigating Murphy in connection with a variety of matters. Attorney Creedy voluntarily met and provided law enforcement with some information about Murphy.

¶ 9. On June 27, 2013, the OLR filed an eight-count complaint against Attorney Creedy seeking a four-month suspension of his license to practice law. Attorney Creedy filed an answer and the court appointed the referee, who conducted an evidentiary hearing in February 2014.

¶ 10. After the hearing, the parties executed a stipulation whereby the OLR voluntarily dismissed Counts Four, Five, and Seven of the Complaint. The OLR also dismissed its allegation that Attorney Creedy violated two subsections of the supreme court rule alleged in Count Three. Attorney Creedy withdrew his *349 answer and pled no contest to the remaining allegations of misconduct: Counts One, Two, Six, and Eight, and the remaining two supreme court rule subsections in Count Three.

¶ 11. Our rules provide that where, as here, a respondent pleads no contest to allegations of misconduct pursuant to SCR 22.14, the referee shall make a determination of misconduct in respect to each allegation to which no contest is pled and for which the referee finds an adequate factual basis in the record. The referee rendered a thorough and thoughtful report in which he summarized the evidence from the hearing and made detailed factual findings and conclusions.

¶ 12. As relevant to this matter, the referee explicitly stated that he found Attorney Creedy to be both credible and professional. He believed that Attorney Creedy was unaware that Murphy was improperly accepting advance fees until confronted by a claimant's lawyer in March 2010. He deemed Murphy to be a less than credible witness, noting that Murphy is currently serving time for felony convictions related to a variety of fraud-related transactions. Moreover, the referee observed that "it was clear that [Murphy] had personal animosity toward [Attorney] Creedy and went out of his way to express that animosity."

¶ 13. We summarize the referee's findings and conclusions. Count One of the OLR's complaint involves Attorney Creedy's resolution of a fee issue where a conflict of interest existed between Attorney Creedy, Murphy, and a Social Security claimant. The facts pertaining to this charge are undisputed. Murphy took unauthorized advance fees from a Social Security disability claimant, a practice prohibited by the Social Security Administration. Attorney Creedy was counsel of record for the claimant at the time. Additional fees *350 were then paid to Attorney Creedy as part of the ensuing Social Security disability award. When Attorney Creedy learned, from the claimant's attorney, that Murphy had already received an advance fee, Attorney Creedy promptly agreed, on behalf of Murphy, to refund the advance fees that Murphy had taken improperly.

¶ 14. The problem with this decision is that, as the referee found, Attorney Creedy had a concurrent conflict of interest, because Murphy was both a business partner and a client of Attorney Creedy. As such, Attorney Creedy's representation of one client (the Social Security claimant) was directly adverse to the other client (Murphy). Attorney Creedy admits he did not get informed consent, confirmed in writing, signed by either of his clients as required by court rule. The OLR alleged, Attorney Creedy stipulated, and the referee agreed that the record evidence supported a conclusion that Attorney Creedy violated SCR 20:1.7(a). 3 The referee noted, however, that despite having failed to obtain a written, informed consent, Attorney Creedy nevertheless acted entirely properly in refunding the excess fees to the Social Security claimant almost immediately.

¶ 15. Count Two of the complaint relates to Attorney Creedy's failure to comply with supreme court *351 rules, specifically in violation of SCR 20:1.8(a), 4

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Bluebook (online)
2014 WI 114, 854 N.W.2d 676, 358 Wis. 2d 345, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/office-of-lawyer-regulation-v-carl-h-creedy-wis-2014.