Lawyer Discipline
The Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility, an arm
of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, assists the court in discharging
its exclusive constitutional responsibility to supervise the
practice of law in this state and to protect the public from
acts of professional misconduct by attorneys licensed to practice
in Wisconsin.
The board is composed of eight lawyers and four
nonlawyer members, and its offices are located at Room 410, 110
E. Main St., Madison, WI 53703, and 342 N. Water St., 3rd Floor,
Milwaukee, WI 53202.
Disciplinary Proceeding against Thomas D. Baehr
On Feb. 9, 2000, the Wisconsin Supreme Court suspended the
law license of Thomas D. Baehr, 47, Stevens Point, for 90 days
for professional misconduct, effective March 20, 2000.
Baehr was appointed in June 1997 to represent an incarcerated
client on an appeal and on a claim of ineffective assistance
of his previous counsel. The client was incarcerated following
revocation of his probation. Baehr took no action in the client's
case and did not communicate in any way with the client. Baehr
failed to respond to two letters from the client requesting information
about the status of the appeal, and Baehr failed to return two
calls from the client's mother that were made at the client's
request. Approximately 17 months after Baehr had been appointed,
the client retained private counsel to represent him on appeal.
After the client filed a grievance, Baehr failed to respond
to requests from the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility
(BAPR) staff and the district professional responsibility committee.
The court concluded that Baehr failed to act with reasonable
diligence and promptness in representing the client, in violation
of SCR
20:1.3. The court further concluded that Baehr's failure
to communicate in any manner with the client violated SCR
20:1.4(a), which requires a lawyer to keep a client reasonably
informed of the status of a matter and comply promptly with reasonable
requests for information. The court determined that Baehr's
failure to discuss or evaluate appellate issues with the client
violated his duty under SCR
20:1.4(b) to explain a matter to the extent reasonably necessary
to permit a client to make informed decisions regarding the attorney's
representation. Finally, the court found that Baehr's failure
to respond to requests from BAPR and the district committee constituted
a failure to cooperate with BAPR's investigation, in violation
of SCR
21.03(4) and 22.07(2).
Baehr had no previous discipline.
Disciplinary Proceeding against Richard C. Glesner
On Feb. 23, 2000, the Wisconsin Supreme Court ordered a 60-day
suspension of the law license of Richard C. Glesner, 58, Madison,
effective the date of the order. The court acted pursuant to
a stipulation entered into by Glesner and BAPR.
On two occasions, Glesner added an unearned $1,500 to monthly
billing statements sent to a client. The client did not immediately
pay the second of the two periodic bills and requested an itemization
of time entries. Glesner reviewed the time entries for the invoice
and adjusted several of them upward in order to make it appear
that the bill was justified by time spent on the matter. The
time entries Glesner adjusted were not his own but those of other
attorneys who had worked on the client's matter. Glesner
and BAPR stipulated that his conduct involved dishonesty, fraud,
deceit, or misrepresentation, in violation of SCR
20:8.4(c), and violated his fiduciary duty, established by
case law, to the firm at which he was employed, as well as his
duty of honesty in his professional dealings with his law firm.
Glesner was publicly reprimanded in 1993 for representing
clients with conflicting interests and giving misleading deposition
testimony intended to evade discovery of the conflict he had
an affirmative duty to disclose.
Public Reprimand of David Merriam
David Merriam, 58, Madison, has been publicly reprimanded
by BAPR for neglect of an estate and failure to cooperate with
BAPR's investigation.
Merriam was retained to probate a simple estate in 1997. When
the personal representative filed a grievance in 1998, Merriam
had not done any work on the estate for more than a year and
had not filed the estate inventory.
Merriam initially failed to respond to two requests for a
written response to the grievance, but he eventually cooperated
with a district committee investigation. In 1999, at the conclusion
of the committee's investigation, Merriam had still taken
no further steps to file the inventory or conclude probate.
Noting that Merriam had received two prior private reprimands
for neglect, failure to communicate with clients, and noncooperation,
BAPR voted to publicly reprimand Merriam on the condition that
he conclude probate of the estate. Merriam concluded the probate
and consented to the public reprimand.
Public Reprimand of Verlin H. Peckham
Verlin H. Peckham, 66, Portage, has been publicly reprimanded
by the Wisconsin Supreme Court for entering into a loan transaction
with a client, failing to pursue a small claims action, and failing
to cooperate with the grievance investigation.
A client retained Peckham in a 1995 small claims action to
recover interest on mortgage payments that had been refunded
by virtue of mortgage insurance. At the pretrial conference,
Peckham asked the client, who was also his friend and neighbor,
for a $500 loan. The client agreed, and Peckham gave her a handwritten
promissory note requiring repayment, with 12 percent interest,
in 60 days. Peckham did not respond to contacts from the client
thereafter.
The client appeared at trial, but Peckham did not, and the court
granted the defendant's motion to dismiss. Peckham learned
of the dismissal shortly thereafter, but made no effort to contact
the client or have the case reopened. Peckham failed to respond
to requests for information from BAPR when the client filed a
grievance. The loan the client gave Peckham is still outstanding.
The court concluded that Peckham entered into a business transaction
with a client without appropriate disclosure and consent, contrary
to SCR
20:1.8(a); failed to provide competent representation, contrary
to SCR
20:1.1; failed to act with reasonable diligence and promptness,
contrary to SCR
20:1.3; failed to keep a client reasonably informed and to
comply with reasonable requests for information, contrary to
SCR
20:1.4(a); terminated the representation without protecting
the client's interests, contrary to SCR
20:1.16(d); and failed to cooperate with BAPR's investigation,
contrary to SCR
21.03(4) and 22.07(3).
Peckham had been reprimanded previously for similar misconduct
in 1983. The court noted, however, that the client had been a
long-time friend, that poor health had caused Peckham to retire
from the practice of law in November 1998 and that Peckham does
not intend to resume the practice of law. Peckham also was ordered
to repay the client's loan, with interest, within 60 days
of the court's order.
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