State v. Heilpkin

207 N.W.2d 878, 59 Wis. 2d 312
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1973
DocketNo. State 94
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 207 N.W.2d 878 (State v. Heilpkin) 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
State v. Heilpkin, 207 N.W.2d 878, 59 Wis. 2d 312 (Wis. 1973).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Richard Heilprin is thirty-nine years of age, a resident of Madison, Wisconsin, and has practiced law in this state for thirteen years. He is married and has two children.

The complaint in this proceeding alleges as follows:

1. On November 6, 1970, he “conducted himself in a rude, discourteous, offensive, and unprofessional manner in conversations with Julia Hunt of the office of the Dane County Clerk of Courts,” at which time he called Mrs. Hunt “stupid, irresponsible and derelict in her duty” and threatened to have her removed from her job and thrown in jail for improperly disbursing funds;

2. On November 13, 1970, and on numerous prior occasions, he similarly conducted himself with Julia Hunt and several other members of the office staff of the Dane County Clerk of Courts, creating a disturbance at which he was loud and abusive, characterized all the clerks as incompetent and accused them of dishonesty, stupidity, dereliction of duty, and favoritism toward certain attorneys;

3. From August 3 through August 11, 1970, he made abusive telephone calls to Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Kalin in an attempt to coerce settlement of a claim against their son, at which time he threatened an expensive lawsuit he knew to be without merit, threatened to kick Mr. Kalin’s “ass from wall to wall” and told Mr. Kalin that [315]*315he (Heilprin) was a “killer” as Kalin would soon find out;

4. On September 23 and 25, 1969, he made abusive telephone calls to the wives of the principals of the Madison business firm of Hoff & Lem, Inc., and to that firm’s secretary to whom he said such things as “If you don’t tell me your name, I’ll call the police and they’ll come up and get your name,” “You go in there and kick that goddamn door down,” “Get that son of a bitch on the telephone,” and “You get that jackass,” and obtained a $550 check from Mr. Hoff upon the false assertion that Mr. Lem wanted to settle a claim.

5. During January or February of 1970, he made sexual advances to N- S-, a client, at her initial visit, at which time he talked obscenely, indecently exposed himself, touched N-S-in her chest and pelvic areas, and proposed sexual intercourse; he repeated all but the indecent exposure on the client’s second visit;

6. During August or September of 1970, he made sexual advances to D- M-, a client, at her initial visit, at which time he talked obscenely and made indecent gestures; he repeated this conduct at her second visit and also indecently exposed himself; and in subsequent telephone conversations he talked obscenely and made indecent sexual proposals;

7. On October 6, 1970, he commenced an action on behalf of a client against Erdman & Associates, Inc., in the course of which he made a settlement demand of more than twice the amount in dispute; threatened to “queer federal financing by filing a lien” on the project involved in the action; threatened to collect 10% from the IRS for reporting that Erdman’s pension trust was nonexempt; accused Erdman of “inside dealing with Madison Bank & Trust;” accused Erdman of “committing a fraud on the federal government;” threatened to “put Erdman out of business,” stating that he knew [316]*316where to draw the line with respect to abuse of process, and threatened that if Erdman representatives did not agree to a 45 minute delay in taking depositions, his “first stop would be at the IRS for ten percent.”

Either by answer or stipulation, Heilprin admitted all allegations, in the complaint except that he knew the threatened lawsuit against Mr. Kalin to be without merit, that he obtained a $550 check from Mr. Hoff upon a false representation, and that he made sexual advances or exposed himself to N- S- and D-M-on more than one occasion. Heilprin then set up the affirmative defense that he was inflicted with a personality disorder for which he sought medical treatment and which was a major contributing factor in causing his problems. At a hearing on August 9, 1972, over objection by the defense, the state produced witnesses to testify as to the allegations of the complaint which were already admitted.

. Mr. Ivan Kalin testified that in August of 1970, he came home and found his wife in tears. She told him that an attorney called with regard to their twenty-three-year-old son. The next day, Heilprin called Kalin at work, interrupting a business conference and stated he was representing a client who had a claim against Kalin’s son which arose, out of an automobile accident. The reason he called was that he understood Kalin had control over some money that belonged to Kalin’s son. Heilprin stated he would settle for $3,000 if Kalin came over and made a settlement promptly. When Mr. Kalin stated he had nothing to do with his son’s business, Heilprin told him he would settle for $3,000 or make Kalin sorry about it. Heilprin then added, “I just want you to know I’m a killer, and I can make it pretty tough for you.” He further stated that if Kalin were in his office he would “kick his ass from wall to wall” and show what a killer he was.

[317]*317Mrs. Julia Hunt, the Deputy Clerk of Courts for Dane County, testified that Heilprin often called the clerks stupid and incompetent if they could not take care of his business at the moment, and called her a “goddamn son of a bitch.” He acted this way in more than 10 telephone conversations she had with him. On one particular occasion, Heilprin represented a certain client in two successive divorce actions, but failed to file a temporary order which would advise the clerks of the second action. By mistake, the clerks sent money paid in by Heilprin’s client to the client’s first wife instead of to the second for whom the payments were intended. When Heilprin discovered this, he kept Mrs. Hunt on the phone for over an hour, calling her stupid, incompetent and derelict in her duties. He told her he would call someone in the County Board’s Personnel Department to see that she was removed from her job and would have the sheriff arrest her and put her in jail until she could produce the money that was mistakenly sent out. On another occasion, on November 13, 1970, Heilprin came into the clerk’s office with a client at which time he called Mrs. Hunt incompetent and used profane language because she refused to send his client money until she received a termination notice from the department of social services. He ended the conversation by telling her it was time she kept her fingers out of the till and saw that people who were entitled to money were getting it.

Rose Richgels and Marion Mindrum, employees in the clerk of court’s office, testified they received similar abuse from Heilprin. Marion Mindrum testified that on his November 13, 1970, outburst in the clerk’s office, he pointed to her, stating, “And you over there are incompetent, derelict and cheat on the blind draw for the assignment of judges.” In the year prior to the hearing, the clerks had no trouble with Heilprin. On April 7, [318]*3181971, lie sent a letter of apology to Mrs. Hunt and all other office personnel in the clerk’s office.

Also testifying at this hearing were Mrs. Helen Lem and Mrs. Patricia Hoff, the wives of the principals of Hoff & Lem, Inc. Mrs. Lem testified that Heilprin called her on the telephone on September 24 or 25, 1969, looking for her husband. When she stated she did not know where he was, he said she did know and he would keep calling, until she told him. Heilprin threatened to send out the sheriff if she did not tell him where her husband could be found.

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

Related

State v. Heilprin
207 N.W.2d 878 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 N.W.2d 878, 59 Wis. 2d 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-heilpkin-wis-1973.