Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Sommers

2012 WI 33, 811 N.W.2d 387, 339 Wis. 2d 580, 2012 WL 1059983, 2012 Wisc. LEXIS 28
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2012
DocketNo. 2006AP2851-D
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2012 WI 33 (Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Sommers) 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. Sommers, 2012 WI 33, 811 N.W.2d 387, 339 Wis. 2d 580, 2012 WL 1059983, 2012 Wisc. LEXIS 28 (Wis. 2012).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1. Attorney Joseph L. Sommers appeals a referee's recommendation that his license to practice law in Wisconsin be suspended for professional misconduct and that he be directed to pay a portion of the costs of the disciplinary proceeding. After exhaustive review and consideration, we approve the referee's findings of fact, conclusions of law and recommendations relating to discipline and costs. We suspend Attorney Sommers' license to practice law for 30 days, but we reduce, by one-half, the costs of the proceeding to be assessed against him.

¶ 2. We begin our discussion by noting that this has been a difficult case. Pending some five years, it has implicated not only the allegations in the Office of Lawyer Regulation's (OLR) complaint, but an OLR corn-[585]*585plaint filed against Assistant District Attorney (ADA) Paul W Humphrey, as well as a variety of unusual procedural developments, including Attorney Sommers' motion to substitute the first appointed referee, substantive motions regarding whether Attorney Sommers could pursue counterclaims against the OLR, Attorney Sommers' efforts to advance additional issues in the Humphrey disciplinary matter, Attorney Sommers' repeated challenges to the state of the record, extensive discovery, OLR's permissive appeal to this court regarding discovery and in camera review of OLR investigative files, the evidentiary hearing before the referee which Attorney Sommers declined to attend, various requests that all participating members of the court recuse themselves,1 and this appeal, which was further delayed because of Attorney Sommers' challenge to the documents to be included in the court record on appeal.

¶ 3. Attorney Sommers was admitted to practice law in Wisconsin on September 3, 1992. He practices in Oregon, Wisconsin, and has proceeded pro se throughout this litigation. He has not previously been disciplined.

¶ 4. This disciplinary matter and the disciplinary matter involving ADA Humphrey both stem from counsels' respective conduct during the three and one-half year prosecution of Adam Raisbeck. Attorney Sommers defended Raisbeck and in April 2005, following a four-[586]*586day jury trial, Raisbeck was acquitted of homicide by negligent operation of a motor vehicle.

¶ 5. Because the OLR complaint against Attorney Sommers derives from his conduct during his defense of Raisbeck, a brief summary of the Raisbeck matter is necessary. On September 1, 2001, Raisbeck, then 17 years old, was the driver in a one-car rollover accident near Medina that killed one passenger and injured the other passenger. On December 12, 2001, Raisbeck was charged with negligent homicide by operation of a motor vehicle and reckless driving. Attorney Sommers, a friend of the Raisbeck family, was retained as Raisbeck's defense counsel. ADA Humphrey was the prosecutor.

¶ 6. The State claimed that Raisbeck was traveling at an excessive rate of speed when the accident occurred. Both parties considered the accident scene photographs critical. They disputed the meaning of certain tire markings seen in the pictures, argued over how Attorney Sommers was to obtain a set of the accident photos, and debated the opinions of accident reconstruction experts as to the speed of the vehicle and whether Raisbeck braked before entering the curve in the road where the accident occurred. As the litigation proceeded, Attorney Sommers became increasingly persuaded that the evidence for such a serious charge against Raisbeck was lacking, was based on error, and that ADA Humphrey and others were engaging in a cover-up to avoid acknowledging that critical evidence was faulty.2 Attorney [587]*587Sommers' serious and sweeping allegations necessarily pervade this opinion as they pervaded the underlying litigation. However, it is important to recall that the case we decide today involves Attorney Sommers' appeal from a referee report concluding that Attorney Sommers committed professional misconduct warranting suspension of his license to practice law.

¶ 7. On November 17, 2006, the OLR filed a disciplinary complaint against Attorney Sommers alleging three counts of misconduct and recommending a 60-day suspension.3 As noted, this case was extensively litigated; every procedural twist and turn cannot be recounted here. However, we mention a few specific [588]*588procedural events. These provide some insight into the tangled complexity of this case.

I. REFEREE SUBSTITUTION

¶ 8. Two referees have presided over this matter. Initially, both disciplinary complaints were assigned to Referee Russell Hanson. On August 3, 2007, Referee Hanson issued a report and recommendation in the Humphrey matter. On August 10, 2007, Attorney Sommers asked this court to replace Hanson as referee in his own disciplinary proceeding. This court granted Attorney Sommers' request, removed Referee Hanson, and on October 3, 2007, appointed Referee Stanley Hack. Although Attorney Sommers now makes scathing references to "this court's hand-picked" referee, the removal of Referee Hanson was permitted as a courtesy in response to Attorney Sommers' request and is not reflective of any finding of misconduct by Referee Hanson.

II. COUNTERCLAIM AND COMPLAINTS AGAINST OLR

¶ 9. Attorney Sommers contested the allegations in the OLR disciplinary complaint and also sought to file a counterclaim against the OLR alleging misconduct by the OLR in the crafting of the disciplinary complaint. OLR moved to dismiss Attorney Sommers' counterclaim on the ground that the supreme court rules contain no procedure for permitting a formal counterclaim in an OLR proceeding. Attorney Sommers asserted that Referee Hanson initially indicated a counterclaim would be permitted and then concluded that [589]*589instead, Attorney Sommers would be permitted to introduce evidence of OLR actions as an affirmative defense.

¶ 10. On February 29, 2008, Referee Hack dismissed Attorney Sommers' counterclaim but agreed that Attorney Sommers could present the substance of his arguments regarding alleged OLR misconduct as an affirmative defense. The decision was memorialized in a written order dated June 5, 2008. Attorney Sommers appeals this determination, maintaining his right to pursue a counterclaim. Indeed, he asserts that this court authorized Referee Hanson and Attorney Sommers, himself, to proceed with a counterclaim. He cites to a letter from the deputy clerk of court to Referee Hanson dated February 1, 2007. The referee had written to the court inquiring whether a procedure exists for evaluating a complaint made against the director of the office of lawyer regulation and OLR staff counsel. The response advised the referee that "SCR 22.25 provides a procedure for evaluating allegations of misconduct or malfeasance by lawyer regulation system participants." The letter does state, in response to the referee's inquiry, that "it would be appropriate for the referee to consider such allegations [against the OLR] in the context of the disciplinary proceeding in the form of a counter claim or challenge to the complaint, as you propose in your letter" and continues that if the respondent "is not satisfied with a referee's resolution of the matter, the respondent retains the right to appeal the referee's determination."

¶ 11.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 WI 33, 811 N.W.2d 387, 339 Wis. 2d 580, 2012 WL 1059983, 2012 Wisc. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/office-of-lawyer-regulation-v-sommers-wis-2012.