State v. MacIntyre

298 N.W. 200, 238 Wis. 406, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 57
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 298 N.W. 200 (State v. MacIntyre) 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. MacIntyre, 298 N.W. 200, 238 Wis. 406, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 57 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed May 20, 1941:

Per Curiam.

The basis of the charge warranting disciplinary measures against the defendant is set forth in the first and second counts of the petition for his disbarment. These counts relate to defendant’s action in the preparation of a complaint in the divorce action commenced by him for one Elma Franzak. Plis effort was ü> secure a favorable result for a client by misleading the trial judge by a false statement of fact.

The misgivings which a consideration of this charge aroused are caused by the character of the accusing witnesses. In the state’s brief the statement is made that it is unfortunate that an attorney with the years of experience and standing of the defendant should have charges filed against him and that such charges should be supported by the testimony of persons of doubtful moral and financial responsibility. This statement was made with reference to all of the charges against Mr. MacIntyre and is especially applicable to the first count. A wholly disinterested witness characterized Mrs. Franzak as a moral delinquent, a person who would lie unnecessarily, and who was wholly untrustworthy so far as veracity is concerned. Her general bad character, however, does not render her testimony false as a matter of law. There is nothing inherently improbable in her story, and she is corroborated by the testimony of her mother and by the testimony of Mr. *410 MacIntyre’s secretary. Some suggestion is made that Mrs. Franzak’s mother was no more reliable than she, but certainly there is a difference in degree between the two so far as the record is concerned. However, we shall pass that matter. Mr. MacIntyre’s secretary, who was of undoubted veracity and was in no manner impeached, testified that Mrs. Franzak came to the MacIntyre office just as she had testified she did for the purpose of examining the complaint which had been prepared in her divorce case. Mrs. Franzak stated to the secretary that she did not understand certain parts. The allegation that Mrs. Franzak did not understand was the one about her residence. She asked: “What does that mean?” And the secretary testified:

“I told her that it meant that she had to be a resident of the state for two years in order to get a divorce. She acted kind of bewildered right away and wanted to see Mr. MacIntyre.

She then was admitted tO' Mr. MacIntyre’s office and undoubtedly had a conference with him, after which she verified the divorce complaint and later swore that she was a resident of the state for two years preceding the commencement of the action.

From this the referee was entitled to conclude and in fact .could hardly avoid the conclusion that Mrs. Franzak was greatly concerned at the inclusion of this allegation in the complaint — concerned to the point where she asked an immediate interview on the matter with Mr. MacIntyre. The only concern she could have had, had to do with the facts concerning her residence here, and the referee had a right to believe and conclude that she detailed those facts to Mr. Mac-Intyre. At this point the question naturally arises whether this is not a case where a lawyer has had the facts told to him and has determined that in legal effect they constituted a two-year residence'. The facts, however, do not warrant such a conclusion.

*411 Mrs. Franzak was married in Chicago, Illinois, June 27, 1931. In that year she spent some months with her mother at Madison, Wisconsin, but after November they were in Chicago where they stayed until September, 1932. There was another visit to Madison but in September, 1933, Mrs. Franzak and her husband returned to Chicago where they lived until May or June of 1938. Hence, if the scattered times during which Mrs.- Franzak was in Madison over a period of seven and one-half years immediately preceding the complaint in the divorce action are all added together, they total no more than one year and ten months. Mrs. Franzak did not vote anywhere, but her husband voted in Illinois. It was in November of 1938, but a few months after Mrs. Franzak’s return to Madison and after she had completed a continuous stay of four years and nine months in Chicago, that the defendant set forth the misleading and false statement of fact in the complaint which was later presented in the circuit court. On the basis of these facts there can be no reasonable difference of opinion that she had not lived in the state for the two years immediately preceding the commencement of the action as required by sec. 247.06, Stats.

We are, therefore, faced with the fact that Mrs. Franzak has testified to having laid the facts before Mr. MacIntyre and to having been told in spite of them to verify an allegation that she had resided in Wisconsin for a period of two years immediately preceding the action; that Mrs. Franzak, although not of good reputation either for veracity or in other respects, is corroborated by the unimpeached evidence of Mr. MacIntyre’s secretary at least to the extent that she showed immediate and noticeable concern at'the inclusion of this allegation in the complaint, requested an immediate interview with Mr. MacIntyre and ultimately verified the complaint; that on the facts of her residence no reasonable opinion could be entertained in support of the allegation; and that Mrs. Franzak ultimately pleaded guilty to deliberate perjury in *412 connection with this allegation. Under all of these circumstances, we consider that the findings of the referee on these counts must be sustained. State v. Barto, 202 Wis. 329, 232 N. W. 553; State v. Bradford, 217 Wis. 389, 259 N. W. 109. It is unnecessary to enlarge upon the seriousness of the offense. The advice was to swear to what was false both in fact and in legal effect. The matter sworn to was to be presented to a court of which defendant was an officer, and was to be the basis of action by the court. This presentation was to be by a subordinate whose knowledge of the facts was comparatively superficial and whose reliance upon his superior’s judgment was to be confidently expected.

Count 4 charges misapplication of funds deposited with defendant for a special purpose. The referee was of the opinion that the defendant did not treat honestly with Mrs. Iiagen. He correctly states the rule that when money is left with an attorney for a special purpose the attorney has no authority to appropriate the money to any other use against the client’s objections. This presents the question as to what the understanding between the parties really was. Mrs. Hagen, a client of defendant, after having had work done by Mr. MacIntyre in two divorce cases contemplated the beginning of a suit for alienation of her husband’s affections against a certain woman and $50 was paid to Mr. MacIntyre by his client at that time. After some preliminary steps it was found that the woman in the case had left the state and the action for alienation of affections was never begun. There was, however, an account upon Mr. MacIntyre’s books according to which Mrs. Hagen was indebted to him for services and expenses amounting to $201. Mrs. Hagen’s former husband had paid $57.50 and when Mrs. Hagen was credited with the $50 there was a total credit in her favor of $107.50. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 200, 238 Wis. 406, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-macintyre-wis-1941.