Philip Habermann exerted quiet influence
First State Bar executive director dies
February 26, 2003
On Feb. 11, 2003, Philip S. Habermann, 89, passed away in
Madison following a lengthy illness. Habermann was hired as the State
Bar of Wisconsin's first executive secretary, serving in the position
from December 1948 until his retirement in November 1974.
Milestones achieved in early years had long-lasting
impact. During the 26 years of Habermann's leadership, the Bar
achieved several milestones, including leasing its first office in 1948
in Madison at 114 W. Washington Ave. and then later building - and
enlarging - its own offices at 402 W. Wilson St. Habermann also served
as the Bar's first lobbyist, and he soon began publishing a regular
legislative bulletin. The contacts Habermann made with legislators
during his time as the Legislative Council's executive secretary served
the Bar in good stead for years to come.
Surge in membership, programs. Following World War
II, the Bar through Habermann's efforts adapted to a surge in membership
in the voluntary association as the legal profession saw rapid growth.
Attorneys who had served the nation during the war sought educational
offerings so as to be brought current in the law and infused the Bar
with new member program and public service ideas. Meanwhile, thousands
of returning service personnel boosted law school enrollment nationwide,
with new law school graduates seeking networking and employment
opportunities, among other Bar services.
Importance of continuing legal education, public
service. With Habermann's guidance, the Bar embarked on
publishing Wisconsin-specific law books and increasing the number and
quality of seminar offerings through a partnership with ATS-CLE (the
precursor to State Bar CLE Seminars and Books). According to attorney
Jack R. DeWitt, State Bar president from 1975-76, "Phil was always very
aware of the importance of continuing legal education. He worked with
the Marquette and U.W. law schools to combine their efforts in this work
with the Association to improve programs, avoid duplication, and to hold
down costs." These efforts increased even more in response to the
mandatory CLE requirements, effective on Jan. 1, 1977, of which
Habermann considered among the most important issues during his years as
executive secretary.
Habermann also encouraged the organized bar's and lawyers' individual
public service and representation of low-income persons. In a July 7,
1994, Lodi Enterprise article reporting his achievements, Habermann
said, "I get the most pride from having conceived and developed the
Judicare program, which is still active in Wisconsin and has been
adopted in some other states." Habermann conceived the Judicare program
in response to a mandate to make civil legal services more accessible to
poor people during President Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty. Habermann
also worked to create the Wisconsin Bar Foundation.
Honoring a lifetime of service to the legal
profession. In March 1994, Habermann was awarded the U.W. Law
School Distinguished Service Award in recognition of his lifetime of
service to the legal profession as State Bar of Wisconsin executive
director (his title changed effective with the Bar's integration on Jan.
1, 1957). In the July 1994 Lodi Enterprise article mentioned earlier,
Habermann included the bar's transition from a voluntary to a mandatory
organization in 1957 as one of the most important issues he and the Bar
faced. Attorney George Steil Sr., State Bar president from 1977-78, said
of Habermann, "I can recall the arguments of many very respected lawyers
who opposed integration and, when it was finally confirmed by the
decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in Lathrop v. Donahue, it was the
respect that lawyers had for Phil Habermann that caused the State Bar of
Wisconsin to prosper and serve the lawyers, the courts, and the public
at large."
Leadership by example. Habermann also was
influential in the Bar's efforts to provide ethics guidance to lawyers
and in championing the concept of applying sound business practices to
law office management, just as he applied those practices to managing
the Bar's finances. Some attorneys referred to Habermann fondly as
"Frugal Phil" and respected his abilities to do much with a slim budget.
"[His] habit of frugality as a child of the Depression stood him in good
stead as his budget was small and he husbanded association assets
carefully," said DeWitt. Others will recall Board of Governors' meetings
in the old Bar building with luncheon provided by Habermann and his wife
from their kitchen at home.
In addition to his Wisconsin Bar work, Habermann was active in the
American Bar Association, as a member of the ABA Commission on Organized
Crime (1951-53), which was headed by U.S. Secretary of War Robert P.
Patterson, to work with the Kefauver Committee on Organized Crime; and
serving for eight years as a member on the Economics of Legal Profession
Committee. Habermann also served as president (1951-52) of the National
Association of Bar Executives.
Habermann never applied for the position of executive secretary.
Following the Green Bay convention in 1947, where it was decided to
employ a full-time executive, two U.W. Law School professors wrote to
State Bar President Jacobson recommending Habermann for the post based
on his previous experience with statewide associations (he was then
executive secretary of the State Legislative Council). The letter was
found in Jacobson's files after his death and forwarded to the search
committee, which, it turned out, was not satisfied with the list of
applicants. Habermann was asked to interview for and eventually offered
the job - at the annual salary he requested of $7,500. (Unknown to
Habermann and the other applicants, including one who would have
accepted the job for $6,000, the top salary limit had been raised to
$10,000.)
Following his retirement from the Bar in 1974, Habermann continued to
serve the legal profession through the ABA Division of Bar Services by
conducting management surveys of bar associations. And in 1986 Habermann
wrote "A History of the Organized Bar in Wisconsin," which
counts among his significant contributions to the Bar and to Wisconsin's
legal history generally. In commemorating the Bar's 125th anniversary in
2003, the Bar continues to rely on Habermann's work.
Born on Aug. 11, 1913, Haberman was a Lodi native and noted local
historian who was proud of his family's long history in Lodi (his
grandparents settled there in 1888, his father was a veterinarian in the
community, and Habermann attended Lodi schools through high school).
Habermann served in the U.S. Navy during WWII and upon his discharge
earned a law degree in 1947 from U.W. Law School under the G.I.
Bill.