State v. Hersh

243 N.W.2d 178, 73 Wis. 2d 390, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1151
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1976
DocketState 22 (1974)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 243 N.W.2d 178 (State v. Hersh) 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. Hersh, 243 N.W.2d 178, 73 Wis. 2d 390, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1151 (Wis. 1976).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The defendant is fifty years old. He was admitted to the practice of law in Wisconsin on *392 September 5, 1950. He has practiced in the city of Milwaukee. He now lives in Prescott, Arizona.

Count I.

This court alleges that the defendant, as attorney and personal representative of the estate of Peter Plovch, misappropriated funds belonging to this estate and then altered bank statements in an attempt to cover up his prior misappropriations. The facts on the first count were essentially admitted by the defendant in his answer.

Peter Plovch (also known as Peter Plovech) died testate on March 7, 1970. His will, which had been executed in 1969, named the defendant as personal representative. The three children of George Dreske, a client and associate of the defendant, were named as beneficiaries in the will. The will was admitted to probate in Milwaukee county court in October, 1970.

The gross value of the estate was $8,418.58 and consisted mainly of a savings account in Plovch's name. The defendant transferred the funds in this account to a checking account at the Bank of Milwaukee entitled “Estate of Peter Plovch.” On two occasions in November of 1970, he withdrew $2,000 and $2,500 from this account and deposited these sums in his personal account at the Midland National Bank. In December of 1970, he withdrew another $2,500 from the account and deposited it in his account.

Eventually the beneficiaries demanded an accounting and the closing of the estate. They also retained Gerald Starr as an attorney. In response to these proddings, the defendant wrote to Attorney Starr on March 28, 1972, enclosing purported copies of the estate bank account which showed only the original deposits and a few minor disbursements. Defendant fraudulently altered the bank statements in order to conceal the three withdrawals which he had made and the subsequent deposits made in *393 August of 1971 and February of 1972 to replace the withdrawn funds.

The referee properly rejected the “defense” presented by the defendant to justify these actions. Hersh testified that his client, George Dreske, directed him to prepare a will in the name of Peter Plovch, who was an elderly man living in a house near a junkyard owned by Dreske. Dreske’s directions were that the will should name his three children as beneficiaries of Plovch’s estate. Hersh prepared such a will without ever speaking to Plovch about his testamentary intentions. He did so knowing that Plovch had practically no assets and in spite of the fact that he “figured it was George’s money and he was giving it to his kids, tax free, you know.” His explanation for preparing a will under such suspicious circumstances was that “I did what I was told.” His surmise that this whole scheme was a tax dodge by Dreske was confirmed in September of 1970 when Dreske came into his office and stated that he was not going to pay him fees in order to get his own money back. In spite of this statement, Hersh filed a petition in probate in October of 1970 in which he stated that Plovch owned the funds in question. Hersh testified that he subsequently loaned some of the Plovch-Dreske money to one Kenneth Wake-field. Wakefield had been Dreske’s partner, but had a falling out with Dreske and was ill and in need of funds. Hersh testified that he lent Wakefield some of the trust funds because he felt sorry for Wakefield.

Assuming this bizarre story were true, it would not constitute a defense to the charges because the use of trust account funds for loans to friends is obviously prohibited. Hersh’s attempted justification of his conduct compounds the original misconduct.

The referee found that the state had shown by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant was guilty of unprofessional conduct by these acts of mis *394 appropriation and fraud. We agree. These actions show a gross disregard of the defendant’s duties as personal representative and as attorney and cast serious doubt upon defendant’s moral fitness to practice law.

Count II.

The original complaint alleged that the defendant had repeatedly converted clients’ trust account funds to his own use between September of 1966 and June of 1968. Twenty separate checks were listed as examples of the defendant’s continuous pattern of misappropriation during this period.

The defendant maintained a trust account for clients’ funds at the First Wisconsin Bank in Milwaukee during the time in question. Among the clients whose funds were deposited in this account were Lois Jankech, Leland Baum, Roto-Kooter Company and Elsie Biesek.

On August 24, 1966, the sum of $8,260.43 was deposited in the defendant’s trust account for Lois Jankech. This same sum was paid out to Lois Jankech by a check dated December 2, 1968. Thus the defendant’s trust account should have had a balance of at least $8,260.43 at all times between August 24, 1966 and December 2, 1968 in the name of Lois Jankech.

On April 17, 1967, the sum of $6,625.67 was deposited in the trust account by Leland Baum. On July 25, 1968, the sum of $5,000 was paid to the United States on behalf of Baum. Even if one assumes that the difference between these sums ($1,625.67) represents the defendant’s fees, $5,000 of the Baum money should have been on deposit in the trust account between April 17, 1967 and July 25,1968.

The trust account receipt book further shows that $12,690 was deposited on July 24, 1967 on behalf of the Roto-Rooter Company. $1,200 of this sum was paid to the defendant’s office account on March 26, 1968, apparently as legal fees. By a check also dated March 26, *395 1968, the remainder of $11,490 was paid out to Roto-Rooter. Between July 24, 1967 and March 26, 1968, therefore, the trust account should have contained $11,490 of Roto-Rooter money.

The evidence is overwhelming, however, that between September of 1966 and March of 1968 the balance in the trust account was substantially less than the total of clients’ funds entrusted to the defendant for safekeeping. For example, check stub number 1015 shows that on December 21, 1967 there was an overdraft of $228.88, when there should have been $24,750.43 of Jankech, Baum and Roto-Rooter monies in the account. Similarly, check stub number 1194 shows that on July 11, 1968 there was an overdraft of $12,853.11, when there should have been $13,260.43 of Jankech and Baum monies on deposit.

The evidence was also overwhelming that during this same period funds were regularly disbursed to the defendant personally, either without notation or with the notation “for loan.” The defendant testified that, if a trust account disbursement was for legal fees, the cheek was made out to his office account and not to him personalty. Trust account checks were also frequently made out to creditors and to friends of the defendant. The reasonable inference is that the major discrepancies described above were due to a continuous pattern of misappropriation and conversion by the defendant.

The record clearly established the connection between unauthorized payments to the defendant and major deficits in the trust account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 N.W.2d 178, 73 Wis. 2d 390, 1976 Wisc. LEXIS 1151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hersh-wis-1976.