Supreme court will set public hearing on petition regarding
State Bar dues, takes other administrative action
Jan. 18, 2011 – The Wisconsin Supreme Court will hold a public
hearing on amended petition 09-08, filed by Wisconsin attorney Steven
Levine and 42 other State Bar members who are seeking to limit the
use of State Bar dues through amendment Supreme Court Rule (SCR) 10.03(5)(b)(1).
Amended
petition 09-08 attempts to strike the current language of
10.03(5)(b)(1) that requires State Bar members to prove activities are
“political or ideological” before they can object to using
mandatory dues to fund such activities.
In addition, the petition attempts to place a burden on the State Bar
to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that an activity is
“directly, primarily, and substantially intended for the purposes
of regulating the legal profession or improving the quality of legal
services” in order to overcome an objectioner’s challenge to
the use of mandatory State Bar dues.
At its Jan. 12 administrative conference, the supreme court voted to
hold a public hearing on the issue and is expected to release an order
that specifies the date for public hearing in the next couple weeks. It
is anticipated that such hearing will take place in April.
In 2009, petitioners filed petition
09-08. The Wisconsin Supreme Court held the petition in abeyance
pending the outcome of federal litigation in Kingstad v. State Bar
of Wisconsin.
In September 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled
in favor of the State Bar and affirmed an arbitrator’s decision to
overrule the objections of three State Bar members, including Levine,
who objected to the use of mandatory State Bar dues to fund an attorney
public image campaign. A petition for rehearing en banc was denied.
In November 2010, the Wisconsin Supreme Court again issued an order
to hold petition 09-08 in abeyance awaiting a decision on whether a
petition for writ of certiorari would be filed with the U.S. Supreme
Court in the Kingstad case.
Levine, James Thiel, and John Kingstad – petitioners in the
Kingstad case – have since indicated that they will not
file a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court.
Last month, Levine filed amended petition 09-08, which further attempts
to restrict the State Bar’s use of mandatory dues to fund certain
activities.
Other administrative actions
At its Jan. 12, 2011 administrative conference, the supreme court also
took action on a number of other petitions, including the following:
• Adverse determination of character and
fitness. After a public hearing, the supreme court voted to
approve (in principal) second amended
petition 08-11, submitted by the Wisconsin Board of Bar Examiners
(BBE) with minor changes.The petition seeks to repeal and recreate
Supreme Court Rule 40.08 relating to adverse determinations of a bar
applicant’s character and fitness.
According to a memo issued by BBE Director Jacqueline Rothstein, the
BBE seeks to repeal and recreate SCR 40.08 “to improve both the
manner in which the Board of Bar Examiners communicates adverse
determinations to applicants and the process by which applicants can
appeal those determinations.”
• Conditional admission to the bar.
The supreme court has voted to accept a future supreme court
rule that allows conditional admission to the bar, pending the
redrafting of amended
petition 08-13.
The amended petition, submitted by the BBE, seeks to create SCR 40.075.
Originally submitted by the BBE in May 2008, the rule would allow
applicants facing substance-related disorders or mental illness to be
conditionally admitted to the bar if certain requirements are met.
Under the current version, those individuals would take part in a
monitoring program through WisLAP
until conditional admission status ends.
The State Bar Board of Governors had opposed the petition without
inclusion of a confidentiality provision, which is included in the
amended petition. However, some supreme court justices expressed concern
over inclusion of a confidentiality provision, which would protect an
applicant’s record from public view.
• Wisconsin Lawyers’ Fund for
Client Protection. The supreme court voted to hold a public
hearing on amended
petition 10-10, which asks the supreme court to amend SCR 12.07
relating to the annual assessment of attorneys for the operation of the
Wisconsin Lawyers’ Fund for Client Protection. The petition was
submitted by the fund’s chairperson, Deborah Smith.
The fund reimburses clients who suffer financial losses due to lawyer
misconduct. Currently, SCR 12.07 sets a sufficiency level of $250,000.
The sufficiency level has not changed since 1981, the year the fund was
established by the supreme court.
In prior years, assessment amounts fluctuated based on the fund’s
sufficiency level, but never exceeded $25 per year. Smith stated the
amended rule would “provide a more reliable and predictable source
of income for payment of eligible claims.”
The petition seeks to eliminate the Fund’s $250,000 sufficiency
level and provide for a $20 annual assessment, regardless of whether the
fund’s value on the valuation date equals or exceeds $250,000.
Excess funds would flow to a reserve account, which would be reviewed
periodically. The State Bar’s Board of Governors approved
the petition. The supreme court is expected to issue an order in the
coming weeks to specify the public hearing date.
• Petition relating to administration of
municipal courts. The supreme court voted to hold a public
hearing on petition
10-11 – filed in December 2010 – by A. John Voelker,
director of state courts. The petition attempts to amend certain
provisions of SCR Chapters 70
and 33
relating to administration of municipal courts. The supreme court is
expected to issue an order in the coming weeks to specify the public
hearing date.
Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin