Inside the Bar
January 2008
Supreme Court rules on State Bar petitions, grants nonresidents
"pure" CLE comity, moves on consumer protection
On Dec. 10, the Wisconsin Supreme Court held an administrative
hearing and open conference on several State Bar petitions. The court
approved a pure CLE comity rule and limited the number of terms a member
can serve as State Bar president. The court adopted several recommended
changes to State Bar bylaws but denied the request seeking formalization
of the statewide rotation of elections for the office of
president-elect. The court asked for more work on the Legal Services
Consumer Protection petition, which would define the unauthorized
practice of law and create an administrative process within the Office
of Lawyer Regulation (OLR) to enforce it.
CLE Comity. The court adopted a pure comity
rule for CLE requirements for State Bar nonresident members. Pure comity
respects the CLE requirements of other states without demanding that
they be identical or nearly identical to Wisconsin’s. Nonresidents
who do not have mandatory CLE requirements in their home state must
meet Wisconsin CLE requirements.
At its Nov. 27 hearing, the court ruled that petition 07-08 in
support of a provisional comity plan was too complex. Chief Justice
Shirley Abrahamson and other members of the court expressed concern with
the proposed rule’s conditional nature, under which the rule would
extend CLE comity to State Bar members residing in other states only on
condition that the BBE examined and approved those states’ CLE
requirements. The court asked the State Bar and the BBE to revisit the
proposal and determine if a pure comity rule could be implemented.
On Dec. 7, the State Bar Board of Governors supported an
unconditional (pure) version of the CLE comity rule. The BBE advised the
court that it had nothing more to recommend regarding the petition.
In their response to the court, the Nonresident Lawyers Division
(NRLD) and the State Bar BBE Review committee stated that:
- pure comity follows the lead of most other states;
- CLE requirements of other states are similar enough to
Wisconsin’s to adequately keep State Bar members who practice
mainly in other states up-to-date on legal developments and protect the
public; and
- an unconditional comity rule would encourage neighboring states to
adopt unconditional comity rules, which would be to the advantage of
resident Wisconsin lawyers who are also licensed in those states.
“CLE comity represents a vast improvement for thousands of
nonresident lawyers in the State Bar of Wisconsin,” says NRLD
President Donna Jones. “We want to thank the supreme court for
approving and the Bar for supporting CLE comity. It will make the
reporting process more efficient and effective for our
members.”
Justices Abrahamson, Butler, Crooks, and Prosser supported pure
comity. Justices Bradley, Roggensack, and Ziegler dissented.
Legal Services Consumer Protection Petition. The
court heard testimony during the 4 ½-hour hearing from 15
representatives of the paralegal, banking, accounting, real estate,
engineering, and architectural professions, along with a private
citizen, in opposition to Petition 07-09, which would define the
practice of law.
State Bar President Tom Basting told the court, “The State Bar
is not here because we are seeking special treatment for lawyers, but
because we are seeking consistency with how the unauthorized practice of
other professions is handled in Wisconsin. The object of requiring
licenses for professionals is to protect the public from those who would
prey upon the weakest in our society.”
Speaking in opposition to the petition on behalf of the Wisconsin
Realtors Association, Madison attorney Brady C. Williamson, reminded the
court that in 1961 the Wisconsin Supreme Court decided Reynolds v.
Dinger, in which it said that some services offered by real estate
licensees amount to the practice of law and that such activity is
permissible. Williamson argued that the phrase “unauthorized
practice of law” cannot be the hinge for regulation in light of
Dinger. “The language in the petition referencing
‘fill in the blanks’ won’t work either,” said
Williamson. “It is a question of what is permitted by the
Department of Regulation and Licensing, and most other professions
opposing the petition are indeed regulated.”
The justices asked all appearing in opposition to the petition
whether their organizations would be willing to write a statement that
would be satisfactory as an exemption and submit it to the Bar. All
respondents were amenable to this request.
Ann Ustad Smith, Chair of the OLR's Board of Oversight, appeared in
opposition to the petition. Smith told the court that costs associated
with the petition are likely to be significantly higher than projected
and expressed concern about the staffing projections and the underlying
rationale of the placing the responsibility of administration in the
OLR.
Smith added that since the Board of Oversight would be charged with
the responsibility in the State Bar petition, “We would now have a
situation where we would have additional duties and we would be looking
at nonlawyers … not just lawyers. An oversight board for
nonlawyers does exist in several other states, however, the State Bar
petition does not look at that option.”
When asked why the Bar did not consider itself as the body
overseeing the unauthorized practice of law, Basting responded that the
committee did not think that the court would want to relinquish its
control over the practice of law. Basting told the court that assigning
responsibility to regulate the unauthorized practice of law to a
nongovernmental body would not be sound public policy.
Basting said the State Bar would welcome suggested amendments from
the professions that appeared before the court in opposition to its
petition. He also noted the absence of the Office of the Commissioner of
Insurance at the hearing and said that perhaps not all regulated
professions have a problem with the petition as written.
In addition to requesting suggested exemption language from groups
that oppose the petition, the court requested additional documentation
of likely administrative needs and an assessment of organizational
alternatives.
Other rulings. The court created a supreme court
rule limiting to one term the number of terms a member can serve as
State Bar president. The court also adopted the State Bar’s
requested changes to Article II, sections 1 - 4, of the State Bar Rules
and Bylaws, but denied a request seeking a formalized system requiring
the statewide rotation of elections for the office of
president-elect.
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