Former State Bar President Dan Hildebrand passes away, devoted
his life to the public and the profession
Daniel W. Hildebrand, a senior litigator with DeWitt Ross &
Stevens in Madison, passed away on Dec. 31, 2007. Service and excellence
were early hallmarks of his career. He was 67.
Hildebrand had more than 40 years of legal experience, with a major
focus in appellate work as well as in all areas of business and
professional litigation, and professional ethics matters. He joined the
DeWitt Ross & Stevens Law Firm in 1968. Hildebrand was a former
president of the State Bar, the Wisconsin Law Foundation, and the Dane
County Bar Association.
“Dan Hildebrand was a splendid lawyer,” said long-time
friend and colleague Jack DeWitt. “He was a fine legal scholar and
blessed with good judgment and common sense. He was devoted to service
to both the bar and the public, and when I say the bar I mean not only
the State Bar but also the American Bar Association (ABA) and the Dane
County Bar Association. In recognition of his long career of such
service, Dan was recently awarded the prestigious Charles L. Goldberg
Award by the Wisconsin Law Foundation. It has been an honor as well as a
pleasure for me to have been associated with Dan in the practice of
law.”
“The legal profession has lost one of its great ones,”
noted long-time friend and colleague John Skilton.“Dan saw the
best in what we do for a living, and practiced law as a calling. Indeed,
he represents the best in us.He brought much good to our pursuits.This
is more than just a business – it is a profession that has
obligations that transcend our need to make a living. How do I know? I
knew Dan Hildebrand. He is, truly, irreplaceable, and we will miss him
dearly.”
Hildebrand served as a member and chair of the Wisconsin Judicial
Commission, a member of the board of directors of Legal Action of
Wisconsin Inc., and as chair of the Wisconsin Supreme Court Code of
Professional Responsibility Review Committee. He was a Fellow of the
Wisconsin Law Foundation and the American Bar Association and a
member of the American Law Institute and the American Academy of
Appellate Lawyers.
Jon Axelrod, long-time friend and colleague, noted, "Dan was a highly
respected legal ethics expert to whom the profession and the courts
often turned to for guidance. He will be sorely missed.”
Hildebrand chaired the Wisconsin Ethics 2000 Committee, appointed by
the Wisconsin Supreme Court to review Chapter 20, the Rules of
Professional Conduct for Attorneys. On Jan. 5, 2007, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court adopted changes to the rules, which went into effect last
July.
Hildebrand was appointed by the president of the ABA to its Amicus
Curiae Briefs Committee where he participated in reviews of all amicus
curiae briefs filed by the ABA in the U.S. Supreme Court. Hildebrand
also was a member of the ABA Litigation Section’s Trial Practice
Committee. He served six years as a member of the ABA’s Standing
Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, 14 years as a
Wisconsin delegate to the ABA House of Delegates, and recently completed
a three-year term with the ABA Board of Governors.
He was a frequent lecturer for State Bar CLE programs and
contributing writer for Wisconsin Lawyer™ magazine. For
more than 30 years Hildebrand provided updates of Supreme Court
decisions to the Dane County Bar Association. He also taught courses in
federal jurisdiction and professional responsibility at the U.W. Law
School for many years.
Hildebrand regularly accepted appointments to represent indigent
criminal defendants who desire to appeal their convictions to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit.
He received his J.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1964 and was
elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif. He served as an
editor of the Wisconsin Law Review. Hildebrand spent four years
as an associate with Willkie, Farr and Gallagher, New York City,
participating in the litigation brought by the State of Wisconsin
against the Milwaukee Braves and the National League.
Another colleague and long-time friend, Franklyn Gimbel, said,
“Dan's death demonstrates the vulnerability of us all – if
he could not successfully plead his case for a longer term on this good
earth by way of his extraordinary good deeds (mitzvahs) – his
gracious leadership style his commitment to family and community –
then we all best take the lesson of making each of our remaining days,
weeks, months, or years relevant to our own circumstances and understand
that our mortality will prove again that nobody gets out of life
alive.”
Hildebrand leaves his wife Dawn, also a lawyer with DeWitt, Ross
& Stevens, and their three young children Catherine, Jacob, and
Rachel. He also leaves three adult children Elisabeth, Douglas, and
Daniel.
Visitations will be on Thursday, Jan. 3, 4 - 7 p.m. at the
Gunderson Funeral Home on University Avenue in Middleton and on Friday,
Jan. 4, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at St. Maria Goretti Catholic Church,
5405 Flad Avenue, Madison. A funeral service will immediately follow the
Friday visitation.
In lieu of flowers, the family kindly requests donations in Dan's
name to St. Raphael's Cathedral Building Fund, the Wisconsin Law
Foundation, St. Maria Goretti Church and School, or to the Madison
Chapter of the Nature Conservancy.