Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 77, No. 11, November
2004
Should Lawyers Fund Civil Legal Services for the Indigent?
On Jan. 12, 2005, the Wisconsin Supreme Court will hold a public
hearing to consider the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation (WisTAF)
petition that seeks mandatory payment of $50 per attorney to WisTAF to
fund civil legal services for indigent people. The State Bar seeks
member input on this issue; see the WisTAF petition on page 39.
In Support of the WisTAF Petition
by Deborah M. Smith
The creation of the Wisconsin Interest on Lawyers Trust Account
(IOLTA) program in 1986 was one way in which the Wisconsin Supreme Court
attempted to address the unmet need for legal services of low-income
people in this state. In 1994, State Bar President John Skilton
established the Commission on Delivery of Legal Services to look for
ways to improve the delivery of legal services to the poor. The
commission did its work during a time when the U.S. House of
Representatives had voted to cut Legal Services Corporation (LSC)
funding by one-third and a combination of depressed interest rates and
bank fees had reduced IOLTA funds from $1.7 million annually to
$812,000.
The commission concluded that Wisconsin's civil legal service
programs were so grossly underfunded that they served only a fraction of
low-income people needing legal assistance. More importantly, the
commission concluded that Wisconsin lawyers had fallen far behind their
colleagues in other states in which the private bar was successfully
implementing different strategies to raise funds for legal services. The
commission's report is on the State Bar Web site and makes interesting
reading.
Deborah M. Smith, U.W. 1980, has been
with the Wisconsin State Public Defender since 1980. She is the
immediate past president of the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation, past
president of the James E. Doyle – Inns of Court, and a member of
the State Bar Board of Governors.
A May 2001 article in the Wisconsin Lawyer made the case as
follows:
"In Wisconsin, civil legal funding available for legal services is
$13.47 per low income citizen, placing Wisconsin as the 38th lowest of
the 50 states for such funding."1
The 2000-2001 Annual Report for the Equal Justice Coalition Fund
asserted that more than 500,000 Wisconsin residents live in poverty. It
also reported that Wisconsin legal services programs were only able to
provide about 20,000 low-income residents with legal services each year.
Legal services programs routinely turn away many more families because
they lack the resources to help all of those who need legal help. In
July 2002, the ABA Journal carried an article quoting Gene R.
Nichol, Dean of the University of North Carolina School of Law in Chapel
Hill:
"Study after study shows about 80 percent of the legal needs of the
poor are unmet.
"We leave the poor unrepresented in the most crushing problems of
life: divorce, child custody, domestic violence, housing and benefits
disputes. What passes for civil justice among the have-nots is
stunning."2
Lawyers have incorporated the duty to provide free legal services
into their codes of professional conduct. The comment to Wisconsin SCR
20:6.1 includes the following reminder to lawyers:
"Every lawyer, regardless of professional prominence or professional
workload, should find time to participate in or otherwise support the
provision of legal services to the disadvantaged. The provision of free
legal services to those unable to pay reasonable fees continues to be an
obligation of each lawyer as well as the profession generally, but the
efforts of individual lawyers are often not enough to meet the need.
Thus, it has been necessary for the profession and government to
institute additional programs to provide legal services. Accordingly,
legal aid offices, lawyer referral services and other related programs
have been developed, and others will be developed by the profession and
government. Every lawyer should support all proper efforts to meet this
need for legal services."
The Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation (WisTAF) effort is not unique.
Five states have adopted an assessment on lawyers to assist in funding
legal services for the poor. In three states the decision was made by
the supreme courts. In 1997, the Minnesota Supreme Court increased the
registration fee by $50 for attorneys admitted more than three years and
by $25 for attorneys admitted three years or less, with a 50 percent
discount for attorneys with adjusted gross income under $25,000. The
Minnesota State Bar Association, a voluntary bar, strongly endorsed the
assessment. The Ohio Supreme Court decided on an assessment to assist
legal services over the opposition of the Ohio State Bar Association, a
voluntary bar. In late 2002, the Illinois Supreme Court, on its own
motion, authorized an attorney registration fee increase of $42 for the
purpose of funding civil legal services providers.
In the fall of 2002, the Board of Governors of the Missouri Bar, a
mandatory bar, increased bar dues by $20 for every member eligible to
practice law in Missouri. The dues increase was precipitated by a
reduction in LSC revenue due to the 2000 census redistribution, a
decrease in IOLTA revenues, and an anticipated elimination of
appropriated money by the Missouri Legislature. In 2003, the Texas
Legislature increased bar dues by $65. The money generated will be split
evenly between civil legal assistance and innovative criminal indigent
defense projects.
Mindful of lawyers' efforts to provide legal serviceS, the WisTAF
Board considered alternatives to an assessment. Several options were
reviewed but rejected as not politically feasible or not a reliable
source of revenue:
- Funding from the state legislature was discussed, but even the
modest $100,000 per year in TANF (Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families) funds previously given to WisTAF was discontinued in the last
budget.
- The board felt there was little political support for proposing
increased court costs or filing fees. Further, court fees enacted to
fund specific programs in the past have been diverted to other
purposes.
- A voluntary check-off on the dues statement was considered, but
based on the State Bar's past experience with check-offs, the board
doubted that enough revenue would be generated to cover even the
administrative cost of the check-off.
Funding through IOLTA income is at a crisis stage. IOLTA programs are
completely dependent on interest rates, which are at a 45-year low. In
addition, there is less money going into lawyers' trust accounts. The
result is that Wisconsin IOLTA revenue went from a high of $2.1 million
in 2000 to projected revenue of only $800,000 in 2004. Grants made by
WisTAF to its legal aid and legal services program recipients in 2000
totaled $1.98 million; grants for 2005 are currently expected to be
$411,000. The board's grants committee has recommended defunding four
programs solely due to lack of funds.
In the end, most of us agree that it is the collective responsibility
of society, not just the bar, to both implement and fund legal services
for the indigent. However, the proposed assessment is the only practical
solution to address the immediate needs of legal services programs and
the needs of the poor next year.
Endnotes
1Hannah C. Dugan, Who's
Providing Legal Counsel to Wisconsin's Poor? 74 Wis. Law. 10 (May
2001).
2Margaret Graham Tebs, Lag in
Legal Services, ABA J. 67 (July 2002).
In Opposition to the WisTAF Petition
Gwendolyn G. Connolly, Drake 1993, is
a solo practitioner in Milwaukee, focusing on consumer and family law
issues. She is a member of the State Bar Board of Governors and
Executive Committee and a board member and treasurer of the Law Practice
Management Section. She is a past president of the Association for Women
Lawyers, a member of the Milwaukee Bar Association's Technology
Committee, and a former board member for The Women's Center and chair of
the Fund Development Committee. She is a recipient of the 2004 State Bar
of Wisconsin's President's Award.
by Gwendolyn G. Connolly
The Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation (WisTAF) has petitioned the
Wisconsin Supreme Court requesting that all attorneys licensed to
practice in this state be taxed $50 annually for an indefinite period of
time. The purpose of the tax is to generate additional revenues for
WisTAF grantees who provide legal services to poor and indigent people.
While the purpose is noble and should be addressed by our state
legislature, this petition overreaches, lacks foresight, and essentially
attacks Wisconsin lawyers. It does not merit support.
Before exploring the petition, it is worthwhile to understand that
Wisconsin lawyers sought the creation of WisTAF. In 1985, Wisconsin
lawyers, through the State Bar of Wisconsin Board of Governors,
petitioned the supreme court to establish an independent body that would
receive the interest generated on lawyer trust accounts.1 The following year, in response to that petition,
the supreme court established SCR 13 and WisTAF.2 WisTAF was created to administer and grant funds
that are pooled from lawyer trust accounts.3 Contrary to the claim in WisTAF's petition, there
is nothing in the court's order to suggest that it was acting as a
legislative body and seeking to create social policy. Moreover, and
again contrary to WisTAF's claim, nothing in the court's order indicates
that the court meant to provide a certain level of funding through the
establishment of WisTAF. In truth, the supreme court was responding to a
request made by Wisconsin lawyers, who sought to provide legal aid to
poor people based solely on the uncertain income generated from lawyer
trust accounts.4
Nevertheless, WisTAF ignores the efforts of Wisconsin lawyers and
attempts to justify, on the basis of declining revenues, its bold action
of reaching beyond the boundaries of SCR 13. According to WisTAF,
because lawyer trust account balances have declined at the same time as
interest rates, WisTAF has fewer dollars at its disposal. However, a
review of WisTAF's financial statements suggests that its current
circumstances are, to some degree, of its own making. According to
WisTAF's financial statement ending December 2002, it had $2.7 million
in revenue during the prior 18 months. However, WisTAF made grants of
$2.8 million and paid an additional $300,000 for administrative
expenses. The result was that WisTAF overspent its revenue and depleted
its net assets or fund balance by more than $400,000, amounting to
almost a 25 percent decline in its fund balance, during that
period.5 Notably, the decision to deplete
the net assets was made during a time when interest rates were already
low and there was no indication rates would be increasing. Now, after
those monies have been spent and the reserves depleted, WisTAF is
seeking to have Wisconsin lawyers pay for those decisions.
Providing legal services for the poor and indigent people in our
state is a worthy cause but not one that should be borne by Wisconsin
lawyers exclusively. Justice Donald Steinmetz articulated this issue
almost 20 years ago in his dissent to the creation of WisTAF:
"There can be no argument against the purpose of the Interest on
Trust Accounts Program (IOLTA) as stated in SCR 13.01. There is a need
for legal aid to the poor, even though that group is not defined by
these rules. (SCR 13.04(2)(a).) However, that need should be satisfied
by the state of Wisconsin through the tax system. Every taxpayer and
citizen of this state has a right and duty to support legal aid to the
poor or be recipients of such services, if qualified. It is a
function of government to see that the need is met. There is no
reason that clients of bar members should be the only persons in society
supplying the funds as an investment base for the money to support a
legal aid program."6 This same analysis
applies to the tax proposed by WisTAF currently.
In its petition, WisTAF never cites any authority that would
illuminate what substantive areas of legal services are not being met.
Without knowing the substantive areas that lack adequate representation,
policy-makers have no clear understanding of what assistance can be most
appropriate or useful.7 Legislative options
could include broadened private attorney general statutes, assessments
on excessive punitive damage awards, specialty license plates, or income
tax check-offs. WisTAF could have pursued private donations, including
specific fund-raising efforts or cy pres designations. Or, it could have
considered specific fee increases such as civil filing fees or
assessments against pro hac vice admissions. And finally, WisTAF could
have sought collaboration with the state attorney general's office for
negotiation for payment to WisTAF in its settlements. Instead, WisTAF
seeks only the easiest course: a tax on Wisconsin lawyers.
It is also notable that WisTAF has failed to explore the two stated
reasons for its declining revenues: low interest rates and declining
lawyer trust account balances. WisTAF's reference to low interest rates
is meaningful only when examined within the short term crisis low
interest rates have created. And while interest rates are at a low, it
is likely they will rise in the coming months and years. Most
significantly, WisTAF does not address the condition that has greatly
affected our profession and lawyer trust account balances for the last
20 years: the unauthorized practice of law. For example, almost any real
estate lawyer will tell you that he or she has fewer funds in his trust
account because realtors and title companies are conducting the closings
at which the lawyer previously represented his clients. Encroachments
such as this on the practice of law have had a very real impact on the
balances maintained by lawyers in their trust accounts. Yet, WisTAF
remains silent on this issue that is critical to Wisconsin lawyers,
consumers of legal services, and, ultimately, WisTAF.
Contrary to WisTAF's assertion, the tax it proposes has not been
imposed in any other state. There is no tax assessed on lawyers by any
state supreme court with a mandatory state bar association.8 Unlike in Illinois, Minnesota, or Ohio, where
those states' supreme courts have imposed an assessment on all state bar
members, lawyers in those states do not have a mandatory bar
association. In Missouri, the mandatory state bar association approved a
dues increase on its own members to create further funding for legal
services. But, unlike the WisTAF proposal, that bar association, through
elected representatives who could be removed by members, approved the
assessment. In Texas, in which the state legislature has imposed the fee
on lawyers, the critical difference is that elected officials imposed
the tax. These are fundamental and important distinctions.
The most compelling argument WisTAF employs is that a tax on our
profession is justified because the legal needs of poor people in our
state are not being met. However, if the question is whether a tax on
Wisconsin lawyers is appropriate because the ultimate outcome is valid
or "good," there is no end in sight to additional taxes. For example,
this year in New Jersey, because the rise in medical malpractice
insurance is blamed on excessive lawsuits against doctors resulting in
the political drum beat against trial lawyers reaching a crescendo, the
state legislature has imposed a $75 tax on all lawyers and many medical
professionals for the next three years. The revenue generated by this
tax will be used to reduce medical malpractice insurance premiums and to
assist medical students in paying off student debt.9 The New Jersey tax reveals how arbitrary and
unfair a tax can be when the focus is on taxing lawyers for perceived
wrongs rather than understanding the scope and depth of the societal
concern.
Finally, the most offensive aspect of the WisTAF petition is found in
its overall indictment of Wisconsin lawyers. WisTAF asserts that one of
the reasons there are poor people in our state who lack legal assistance
is because Wisconsin lawyers are failing to provide pro bono service,
and thus Wisconsin lawyers essentially are unethical.10 WisTAF concludes that the attorney's oath and
the aspirational goals of SCR 20:6.1 are ineffective because there are
poor people whose legal needs are not met. Yet, WisTAF has no data to
support the contention that Wisconsin lawyers are not providing pro bono
service. Instead, it cites the unsuccessful fundraising efforts of the
Equal Justice Coalition (EJC) and rejection of mandatory pro bono
reporting to support its conclusion. Apparently, because only 5 percent
of Wisconsin lawyers chose to donate money to the EJC, WisTAF
extrapolates that Wisconsin lawyers do not financially support legal
services for the poor and should be forced to pay through a tax.
Likewise, because the State Bar of Wisconsin Board of Governors, like
many other state bar associations nationwide, rejected a proposal for
mandatory reporting of pro bono, WisTAF essentially concludes
that Wisconsin lawyers are not providing pro bono service. Such a
conclusion is not supported by facts. And the notion that Wisconsin
lawyers are greedy because they have not given to a particular charity
is unworthy. WisTAF degrades the Wisconsin lawyers who sought its
creation and fuels the fires of public disdain for and distrust of our
profession.
It should be clearly understood that opposition to this petition is
not an opposition to the societal issue of providing legal services to
poor and indigent people or an opposition to pro bono service. Indeed,
Wisconsin lawyers do volunteer and do provide legal services to the poor
and indigent. But, the answer to this larger societal problem is not
found in a $50 tax on Wisconsin lawyers. WisTAF's petition is
shortsighted, incomplete, and done as a reaction to its own management
decisions.
Endnotes
1See Interest on Lawyers'
Trust Account, 58 Wis. B. Bull. 42 (April 1985).
2IOLTA Begins Jan. 1,
1987, 59 Wis. B. Bull. 25 (May 1986).
3SCR 13.03(2)(1). WisTAF
acknowledged its limited purpose in its articles of incorporation in
1986 and in its 2003 financial statement: "WisTAF is a nonprofit
corporation created to administer the IOLTA program throughout the state
of Wisconsin and to disburse the funds collected under this program." WisTAF
2003 Financial Statement 240
KB at 5; see also WisTAF
Articles of Incorporation 174
KB.
4Before the adoption of the model
rules of ethics in Wisconsin, the profession was guided by an ethics
code. The code recognized that "every lawyer, regardless of professional
prominence or professional workload, should find time to participate in
serving the disadvantaged." SCR 20.06(7)(b) (pre-1988). The code also
recognized that the "efforts of individual lawyers are often not enough
to meet the need" and that the "profession [should] institute additional
programs to provide legal services." Id. The creation of WisTAF
was in keeping with the ethical construction.
5WisTAF
2002 Financial Statement 240
KB
6In re the Matter of the
Creation of SCR Chapter 13 and Amendment of SCR 11.05 and SCR 20.50:
Interest Trust Accounts Program (Steinmetz, J. dissent) (emphasis
added).
7The Washington Supreme Court
organized a Task Force on Civil Equal Justice Funding in 2001 that
conducted a civil legal needs study in order to provide a "fresh and
long-term approach to recommending solutions to the problem of
inadequate funding for these services." Charles W. Johnson & Mary
Kay Becker, Moving
Beyond Anecdotes: The Washington State Civil Legal Needs Study,
BarNews (Wash. State Bar Assoc. Jan. 2004).
8The distinction between
mandatory and voluntary programs was identified by Justices Steinmetz
and Shirley Abrahamson in their respective dissents to the creation of
WisTAF. Supra n.6.
9Dan Kittay, New Jersey
Passes Assessment on Legal, Medical Professionals, Bar Leader 5
(Sept./Oct. 2004).
10While not the focus of this
response, the "long history" of pro bono service, which serves as the
foundation for WisTAF's proposed tax, is the subject of debate. B.
George Ballman Jr., Note, Amended Rule 6.1: Another Move Towards
Mandatory Pro Bono? Is That What We Want? 7 Geo. J. Legal Ethics
1139 (1994). And while some people may question the notion that pro bono
service is a long-standing tradition, other people do acknowledge the
tradition of volunteerism in the profession. Esther F. Lardent,
Mandatory Pro Bono in Civil Cases: The Wrong Answer to the Right
Question, 49 Md. L. Rev. 78 (1990).
Wisconsin
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