Office of Lawyer Regulation v. Stuart F. Roitburd ( 2016 )


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    2016 WI 12
    SUPREME COURT            OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2014AP2801-D
    COMPLETE TITLE:        In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings
    Against Stuart F. Roitburd, Attorney at Law:
    Office of Lawyer Regulation,
    Complainant,
    v.
    Stuart R. Roitburd,
    Respondent.
    DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS AGAINST ROITBURD
    OPINION FILED:         February 26, 2016
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:
    COUNTY:
    JUDGE:
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:          PROSSER, J. concurs (separate writing appended
    on May 20, 2016 to opinion filed February 26,
    2016)
    DISSENTED:           ABRAHAMSON, A.W. BRADLEY, J.J., dissent.
    (Opinion Filed)
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    
    2016 WI 12
                                                                   NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.     2014AP2801-D
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                           :            IN SUPREME COURT
    In the Matter of Disciplinary Proceedings
    Against Stuart F. Roitburd, Attorney at Law:
    Office of Lawyer Regulation,                                        FILED
    Complainant,
    FEB 26, 2016
    v.
    Diane M. Fremgen
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Stuart R. Roitburd,
    Respondent.
    ATTORNEY    disciplinary    proceeding.            Attorney's        license
    suspended.
    ¶1    PER   CURIAM.    We    review    Referee        Christine        Harris
    Taylor's recommendation that the court declare Attorney Stuart
    F. Roitburd in default and suspend his Wisconsin law license for
    a period of two years for professional misconduct in connection
    with his work as personal representative of his mother's estate
    and his non-cooperation with the Office of Lawyer Regulation's
    (OLR)   investigation     into   that   misconduct.         The    referee      also
    No.    2014AP2801-D
    recommended          that     Attorney        Roitburd      be     required       to    make
    restitution to his mother's estate in the amount of $43,369.74,
    and    to      pay   the    full    costs     of    this    proceeding,      which     total
    $1,120.29 as of August 11, 2015.
    ¶2       Because      no    appeal     has    been    filed,     we     review    the
    referee's report pursuant to Supreme Court Rule (SCR) 22.17(2).1
    After conducting our independent review of the matter, we agree
    with the referee that, based on Attorney Roitburd's failure to
    answer the complaint filed by the OLR, the OLR is entitled to a
    default judgment.             However, we disagree with the referee that
    Attorney Roitburd's professional misconduct warrants a two-year
    suspension of his Wisconsin law license.                         We conclude, instead,
    that       a   60-day      suspension    is    warranted.         We    agree    with    the
    referee that Attorney Roitburd should be ordered to pay the full
    costs of the proceeding.                 We decline to order restitution for
    the reasons explained below.
    ¶3       Attorney      Roitburd      was     admitted     to    practice    law    in
    Wisconsin in 1984.                He had no disciplinary history prior to the
    filing of this complaint.               According to the OLR's complaint, his
    1
    SCR 22.17(2) provides:
    If no appeal is filed timely, the supreme court
    shall review the referee's report; adopt, reject or
    modify the referee's findings and conclusions or
    remand the matter to the referee for additional
    findings;   and   determine  and   impose  appropriate
    discipline.   The court, on its own motion, may order
    the parties to file briefs in the matter.
    2
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    law license is currently suspended for failure to cooperate with
    the OLR in the investigation that gave rise to this proceeding.
    ¶4     On    December    5,     2014,    the     OLR       filed     the       current
    complaint     against      Attorney      Roitburd.         The    complaint          alleges
    three counts of professional misconduct in connection with his
    work as the personal representative of his mother's estate.
    ¶5     The    following       facts      are    taken        from        the     OLR's
    complaint.          Attorney        Roitburd       served         as     the     personal
    representative of his father's estate and, beginning in 2006, of
    his mother's estate.           This matter primarily concerns Attorney
    Roitburd's work as the personal representative of his mother's
    estate (hereafter, the "Roitburd Estate").
    ¶6     In April 2011, in connection with the final accounting
    of   the    Roitburd    Estate,     the    circuit     court      administering          the
    estate ordered Attorney Roitburd to make payments to certain
    creditors by early June 2011.
    ¶7     In late June 2011, an attorney appeared on Attorney
    Roitburd's behalf and informed the circuit court that there were
    errors in the final accounting and that Attorney Roitburd needed
    time to correct the errors.
    ¶8     The    circuit    court      granted      a     lengthy       adjournment.
    Attorney     Roitburd      failed   to    appear     at    the    adjourned          hearing
    date.      The circuit court ordered Attorney Roitburd to appear at
    a subsequent hearing, which he failed to do.
    ¶9     In    March    2012,   the     circuit       court    removed       Attorney
    Roitburd     as    personal    representative         of    the    Roitburd          Estate,
    appointed a different attorney to serve as successor personal
    3
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    representative,         and     issued        a    bench     warrant      for     Attorney
    Roitburd.       Attorney Roitburd was taken into custody and later
    released on a signature bond.
    ¶10     At a subsequent court hearing, the successor personal
    representative      testified        that         multiple      assets    had    not     been
    transferred      from     Attorney      Roitburd's         father's      estate    to     his
    mother.      Attorney Roitburd also canceled five meetings that the
    successor personal representative had scheduled for the purpose
    of    discussing    the    estates       of       Attorney      Roitburd's      father    and
    mother.
    ¶11     Attorney       Roitburd        stated       he     would        return    any
    unaccounted for assets to the Roitburd Estate by December 25,
    2012, but failed to do so.
    ¶12     On motion from the successor personal representative,
    the circuit court entered an order to show cause for the return
    of    estate    assets.        After     a    hearing      at    which    both    Attorney
    Roitburd and the successor personal representative testified,
    the    circuit     court      ordered        Attorney      Roitburd       to    repay    the
    Roitburd Estate $43,369.74 and to provide proof of payment of
    $13,000 in taxes by mid-March 2013.                     Although Attorney Roitburd
    ultimately provided proof that he had paid the $13,000 in taxes,
    he never paid the $43,369.74 to the Roitburd Estate.                              In April
    2013, the circuit court entered an order and judgment finding
    Attorney Roitburd liable to the Roitburd Estate for $43,369.74.
    The judgment remains unsatisfied.
    ¶13     During the OLR investigation that gave rise to this
    proceeding, Attorney Roitburd failed to provide responses to the
    4
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    OLR's repeated requests for information.               On May 22, 2014, this
    court temporarily suspended Attorney Roitburd's license due to
    his willful failure to cooperate with the OLR's investigation.
    Attorney Roitburd's license has remained temporarily suspended
    to the date of this opinion.
    ¶14     Based on the course of conduct described above, the
    OLR alleged in its complaint that Attorney Roitburd knowingly
    disobeyed      obligations    under   the      rules    of    a    tribunal,      in
    violation     of   SCR   20:3.4(c)2   (Count    One);    engaged        in   conduct
    involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation, in
    violation of SCR 20:8.4(c)3 (Count Two); and failed to cooperate
    with the OLR investigation and to provide relevant information,
    answer questions fully, or furnish documents in the course of an
    OLR       investigation,     in   violation      of     SCR       22.03(2)4      and
    SCR 22.03(6),5 enforced by SCR 20:8.4(h)6 (Count Three).
    2
    SCR 20:3.4(c) provides that a lawyer shall not "knowingly
    disobey an obligation under the rules of a tribunal, except for
    an open refusal based on an assertion that no valid obligation
    exists."
    3
    SCR 20:8.4(c) provides that it is professional misconduct
    for a lawyer to "engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud,
    deceit or misrepresentation."
    4
    SCR 22.03(2) provides:
    Upon commencing an investigation, the director
    shall notify the respondent of the matter being
    investigated unless in the opinion of the director the
    investigation of the matter requires otherwise.    The
    respondent shall fully and fairly disclose all facts
    and circumstances pertaining to the alleged misconduct
    within 20 days after being served by ordinary mail a
    request for a written response.      The director may
    (continued)
    5
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    ¶15   The OLR personally served the complaint and an order
    to answer on Attorney Roitburd.     Attorney Roitburd failed to
    file an answer, and the OLR moved for default judgment.
    ¶16   The referee mailed a notice of a hearing on the OLR's
    motion for default judgment to Attorney Roitburd at his address
    on file with the State Bar of Wisconsin.       Attorney Roitburd
    failed to appear for the hearing.
    ¶17   The referee issued a decision recommending that this
    court grant the OLR's motion for default judgment.     In so doing,
    the referee deemed the allegations in the OLR's complaint to be
    established.   The referee recommended a two-year suspension of
    Attorney Roitburd's Wisconsin law license, the imposition of the
    full costs of this proceeding against him, and the imposition of
    restitution to the Roitburd Estate in the amount of $43,369.74.
    allow additional time to respond.     Following receipt
    of the response, the director may conduct further
    investigation and may compel the respondent to answer
    questions,   furnish   documents,   and   present   any
    information deemed relevant to the investigation.
    5
    SCR 22.03(6) provides that "[i]n the course of the
    investigation, the respondent's wilful failure to provide
    relevant information, to answer questions fully, or to furnish
    documents and the respondent's misrepresentation in a disclosure
    are misconduct, regardless of the merits of the matters asserted
    in the grievance."
    6
    SCR 20:8.4(h) provides that it is professional misconduct
    for a lawyer to "fail to cooperate in the investigation of a
    grievance filed with the office of lawyer regulation as required
    by SCR 21.15(4), SCR 22.001(9)(b), SCR 22.03(2), SCR 22.03(6),
    or SCR 22.04(1)."
    6
    No.    2014AP2801-D
    ¶18     Attorney Roitburd did not appeal from the referee's
    report and recommendation.                   Thus, we proceed with our review of
    the matter pursuant to SCR 22.17(2).                                 We review a referee's
    findings of fact subject to the clearly erroneous standard.                                       See
    In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Eisenberg, 
    2004 WI 14
    ,
    ¶5, 
    269 Wis. 2d 43
    , 
    675 N.W.2d 747
    .                              We review the referee's
    conclusions of law de novo.                       
    Id. We determine
    the appropriate
    level of discipline independent of the referee's recommendation.
    See In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Widule, 
    2003 WI 34
    ,
    ¶44, 
    261 Wis. 2d 45
    , 
    660 N.W.2d 686
    .
    ¶19     We    agree    with           the    referee        that    Attorney          Roitburd
    should   be    declared          in    default.            Although       the    OLR        effected
    personal      service       of        its        complaint,       and     although          Attorney
    Roitburd     was    given    notice          of     the    hearing       on   the     motion      for
    default judgment, he failed to appear or present a defense.
    Accordingly, we deem it appropriate to declare him in default.
    In addition, the referee properly relied on the allegations of
    the   complaint,        which          were        deemed       admitted.             See    In    re
    Disciplinary Proceedings Against Coplien, 
    2010 WI 109
    , ¶¶10-11,
    
    329 Wis. 2d
       311,    
    788 N.W.2d 376
    .        We    therefore       accept      the
    referee's     findings      of        fact        based    on    the     allegations         of   the
    complaint.         We also agree with the referee that those findings
    of fact adequately support the legal conclusions of professional
    misconduct     with     respect             to    the     three      counts     of     misconduct
    alleged in the complaint.
    ¶20     However, we disagree with the referee's recommendation
    that this court impose a two-year license suspension.                                       As noted
    7
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    above, it is ultimately this court's responsibility, rather than
    the referee's, to determine the appropriate level of discipline.
    See In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Reitz, 
    2005 WI 39
    ,
    ¶74, 
    279 Wis. 2d 550
    , 
    694 N.W.2d 894
    .                         We owe no deference to
    the referee's recommended sanctions.                      See In re Disciplinary
    Proceedings Against Carroll, 
    2001 WI 130
    , ¶37, 
    248 Wis. 2d 662
    ,
    
    636 N.W.2d 718
    .           In considering the appropriate sanction, this
    court seeks to impress upon the attorney the seriousness of the
    misconduct, to deter other attorneys from engaging in similar
    misconduct, and to protect the public, the courts, and the legal
    system from a repetition of the misconduct.                           See, e.g., In re
    Disciplinary          Proceedings        Against   Grogan,        
    2011 WI 7
    ,     ¶17,
    
    331 Wis. 2d 341
    , 
    795 N.W.2d 745
    .
    ¶21     Under       the    unique      circumstances         of    this     case,     we
    conclude that a 60-day suspension is sufficient to accomplish
    these goals.           This is the first time in the more than three
    decades since Attorney Roitburd's admission to the Wisconsin bar
    that he has been the subject of professional discipline in this
    state.     Until now, Attorney Roitburd has not created a reason to
    believe that the public, the courts, or the legal system must be
    protected from the risk of his misconduct.                        We note, too, that
    the three counts of misconduct at issue here do not evince an
    extensive     pattern         of    indifference         to     our    ethical        rules.
    Finally,    we    note     that     our    knowledge      of     Attorney      Roitburd's
    misconduct       is    limited      to    the    facts    alleged        in    the    OLR's
    complaint and established by Attorney Roitburd's default.                              As a
    result, there is much we do not know about his work as personal
    8
    No.    2014AP2801-D
    representative         of   his     mother's     estate,        and    about       the    estate
    itself.       For example, while we know that certain assets went
    unaccounted for, we do not know whether any mistakes Attorney
    Roitburd made in the administration of the estate rose to the
    level    of   dishonesty       or    bad   faith.         We     do    not    know       whether
    Attorney Roitburd was an heir to the estate, such that he might
    otherwise       have   been    entitled         to   receive      some    amount         of   the
    assets at issue.            We do not know whether his actions affected
    the    rights    and    realization        of    payments        to    creditors         of   the
    estate.
    ¶22    We have, in the past, imposed far less than a two-year
    suspension      for    either      comparable        or   more       serious       misconduct.
    For     example,       in     In     re    Disciplinary          Proceedings             Against
    Fitzgerald, 
    2008 WI 101
    , 
    314 Wis. 2d 7
    , 
    752 N.W.2d 879
    , we
    suspended Attorney Fitzgerald's license for 60 days based on a
    six-count       disciplinary         complaint.           The        misconduct         included
    Attorney Fitzgerald's appearing on behalf of clients during her
    law license suspension; billing the State Public Defender and
    accepting     payment       for     appearances       made      on    behalf       of    clients
    during her law license suspension; misleading a county clerk
    about her law license status; and failing to cooperate with the
    OLR.      Our 60-day suspension of Attorney Fitzgerald's license
    followed a previous 90-day suspension for numerous instances of
    misconduct.        In In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Osicka,
    
    2014 WI 33
    , 
    353 Wis. 2d 656
    , 
    847 N.W.2d 343
    , this court imposed
    a 60-day suspension based on Attorney Osicka's default to                                       a
    four-count       disciplinary        complaint.           The        misconduct         included
    9
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    failing to place a client's advanced fee into a client trust
    account or to provide the notices required by the alternative
    advanced fee procedure; charging an unreasonable fee; failing to
    refund unearned fees; and failing to cooperate with the OLR.
    Our 60-day suspension of Attorney Osicka's license followed two
    previous public reprimands.                       Finally, in In re Disciplinary
    Proceedings Against Lamb, 
    2011 WI 101
    , 
    338 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    806 N.W.2d 439
    , this court imposed a 60-day suspension for 21 counts of
    misconduct related to Attorney Lamb's handling of four client
    matters.       Our    60-day      suspension         of    Attorney          Lamb's     license
    followed a previous private reprimand.
    ¶23    In    light     of   our    resolutions          of    prior       disciplinary
    actions, and in light of the unique circumstances of this case,
    we   deem    the     OLR's    and       the       referee's      recommended          two-year
    suspension to be excessive.                       To be clear, Attorney Roitburd
    should not construe this opinion as a vindication of any aspect
    of his misconduct or his failure to appear at any stage of these
    disciplinary       proceedings.              We    simply     conclude          that,     while
    Attorney Roitburd violated his ethical duties as an attorney, a
    60-day      suspension       will       be    sufficient           to        accomplish      the
    objectives of the lawyer disciplinary system.
    ¶24    As to the issue of restitution, the OLR requested and
    the referee recommended that this court order Attorney Roitburd
    to   pay    restitution      to   the    Roitburd         Estate        in    the   amount    of
    $43,369.74.          However,     we    note       that    the     OLR       states     in   its
    complaint that the circuit court administering the estate has
    entered an order and judgment directing Attorney Roitburd to pay
    10
    No.    2014AP2801-D
    the estate the amount of $43,369.74.                         Neither the OLR nor the
    referee explains why this court should order restitution that
    would duplicate that already ordered by the circuit court.                                   We
    therefore deny the referee's recommendation for restitution.                                 We
    deem it appropriate, however, to require, as a condition of the
    reinstatement         of    his        Wisconsin      law    license,      that     Attorney
    Roitburd demonstrate to the court that he has satisfied the
    judgment    entered         by     the    circuit      court    against      him       in   the
    Roitburd Estate.
    ¶25   Finally, we agree that Attorney Roitburd should pay
    the full costs of the proceeding.
    ¶26   IT IS ORDERED that the license of Stuart F. Roitburd
    to   practice     law       in    Wisconsin      is    suspended     for    a     period     of
    60 days, effective April 26, 2016.
    ¶27   IT       IS    FURTHER       ORDERED      that    the   temporary          license
    suspension      of    May        22,    2014,   which       arose   out    of     Stuart     F.
    Roitburd's       willful          failure       to    cooperate      with        the     OLR's
    investigation in this matter, is lifted.
    ¶28   IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that within 60 days of the date
    of this order, Stuart F. Roitburd shall pay to the Office of
    Lawyer Regulation the costs of this proceeding.
    ¶29   IT       IS     FURTHER       ORDERED      that     compliance        with      all
    conditions of this order is required for reinstatement.                                     See
    SCR 22.28(2).             This requirement includes Stuart F. Roitburd's
    obligation to demonstrate to the court that he has satisfied the
    judgment entered by the circuit court against him in Estate of
    11
    No.   2014AP2801-D
    Shirley   Roitburd,   Milwaukee   County   Case   No.   06-PR-1840,    as
    described above.
    12
    No.    2014AP2801-D.dtp
    ¶30   DAVID T. PROSSER, J.                    (concurring).            This attorney
    discipline case is more than "problematic" because the facts are
    not clear.
    ¶31   Attorney Roitburd was named personal representative of
    his   mother's   estate.           He    had       previously        served      as   personal
    representative        of    his    father's         estate.           Attorney         Roitburd
    transferred many thousands of dollars from his mother's estate
    to his own accounts.               Allegedly, he had earlier transferred
    money from his father's estate to himself so that it could not
    later be transferred to his mother.                   When these matters led to a
    discipline   charge        by    the    Office       of    Lawyer     Regulation         (OLR),
    Attorney Roitburd was not cooperative.
    ¶32   The majority opinion imposes a suspension of 60 days
    for his conduct; the concurring opinion of Justice Abrahamson
    would impose a suspension of two years.                         The latter suspension
    is the period of suspension that was sought by OLR and approved
    by the referee after a default judgment.
    ¶33   It   is    not      uncommon       for        members     of     the      court   to
    disagree    about     the       length    of       suspension        for     a     disciplined
    attorney, but the difference between two months and two years is
    quite extraordinary.              That difference must be grounded in two
    substantially    different          perceptions           of   the    facts.          When    the
    facts are not clear, the court is forced to speculate about what
    the facts are or make assumptions about what the facts are, and
    those guesses or assumptions can be wrong.
    ¶34   Ironically, the court recently reviewed a separate but
    similar case that has been dismissed with no discipline.                                      The
    1
    No.   2014AP2801-D.dtp
    case involved an attorney who served as trustee for his father's
    estate,    which   was   created   to    protect   the   attorney's    mother.
    Without authorization, the attorney took approximately $360,000
    from the trust to pay for his gambling.                  When third parties
    informed the attorney's mother and other members of the family,
    the family rallied around the attorney who promised to pay all
    the money back with interest.           The attorney also cooperated with
    the OLR.     See OLR v. Karabon, No. 2015AP183-D, which we also
    decide today.
    ¶35     The facts in the present case do not disclose what
    Attorney Roitburd's family thinks about his conduct.               What we do
    know is that Attorney Roitburd did not cooperate with the OLR.
    ¶36     I believe that some discipline should be imposed in
    this case and that some discipline could have been imposed in
    the other case as well.        How much discipline should be imposed
    in this case depends on facts we don't have.             For that reason, I
    concur without a decision as to the amount of discipline.
    2
    No.       2014AP2801-D.ssa
    ¶37     SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, J.                         (concurring in part and
    dissenting in part).                   The OLR charged Attorney Roitburd with
    three       violations          of    the    Rules        of    Professional             Conduct      for
    Attorneys.           I        agree    with      the      per     curiam          that       the     three
    violations         were       established       by     virtue      of       Attorney         Roitburd's
    default      in     these       proceedings.              I    also     agree           that    Attorney
    Roitburd       should          pay     the    full        costs        of     this       disciplinary
    proceeding.               I     agree,       finally,          that         Attorney         Roitburd's
    compliance         with       all     conditions          imposed       in        the    per       curiam,
    including satisfaction of the judgment entered by the circuit
    court      against        him    in     Estate       of    Shirley          Roitburd,          Milwaukee
    County        Case        No.         06-PR-1840,             should         be      required          for
    reinstatement.
    ¶38     I    disagree,          however,        with      two    aspects           of    the   per
    curiam:
    ¶39     (I) I disagree with the four justices joining the OLR
    per    curiam1       blocking         release        of    Justice          David       T.     Prosser's
    separate writing and insisting that his writing be released at a
    later time.          No basis exists for this action.                             Indeed, the four
    justices have violated the Supreme Court's Internal Operating
    Procedures (IOP).
    ¶40     (II) I disagree with the length of suspension imposed
    by    the    per     curiam          opinion.    The       per    curiam           grants       Attorney
    Roitburd a 22-month reduction in the sanction requested in the
    1
    I use the phrase "OLR per curiam" to refer to a per curiam
    in an attorney discipline proceedings prepared by a court
    commissioner. See Internal Operating Procedure (IOP) II H.
    1
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    OLR complaint to which he defaulted.                    There is no justification
    for this significant downward departure.
    I
    ¶41     The per curiam insists that Justice Prosser's separate
    writing be held and not be released at the same time as the OLR
    per curiam.           They want the per curiam to bear the notation
    "separate writing to follow."2
    ¶42     The    instant     OLR   per       curiam     does   not    explain    why
    Justice Prosser's separate writing will follow later rather than
    be released with the per curiam.
    ¶43     There is, however, only one possible explanation.                      The
    four       justices   must   be    relying        on   the   procedure     for   opinion
    preparation and mandate adopted by a majority of the court in
    September 2014.3
    ¶44     The     September        9,    2014       procedure        for    opinion
    preparation and         mandate is set forth in the Supreme Court's
    Internal Operating Procedures (IOP) at II G.                        A reading of the
    plain language of IOP II G. demonstrates, however, that IOP II
    G. does not govern the instant OLR per curiam.
    ¶45     I have attached a copy of Internal Operating Procedure
    II G. as Attachment A.4             Attachment A also includes paragraphs
    2
    Per curiam, ¶30.
    3
    See State v. Gonzalez, 
    2014 WI 124
    , ¶¶30-31, 
    359 Wis. 2d 1
    ,   
    856 N.W.2d 580
      (Abrahamson, C.J., concurring)
    (setting forth in full the procedure adopted by the court and
    disagreeing with its adoption).
    4
    The Supreme Court Internal Operating                           Procedures      are
    printed in volume 6 of the Wisconsin Statutes.
    2
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    adjacent to IOP II G. to put II G. in context.                         Attachment A
    sets       forth   paragraphs   E,   F,    G,   and   H    of    "II.    Decisional
    Procedure—Appellate and Original Jurisdiction."
    ¶46     Apparently   Justice       Prosser's       separate      writing    is
    viewed by the four justices as falling within IOP II G. 55 and
    IOP II G. 66 because        Justice Prosser's separate writing compares
    in general terms the instant case with a pending OLR case that
    raises similar issues.
    5
    Section 5 of IOP II G. provides as follows relating to the
    "separate writing to follow" notation:
    5.    Separate Writings to Follow.    If, during the
    course of a separate writing, the author cites to a
    case then pending before the court for which the
    opinion of the court has not been released, the
    majority   opinion   shall  be  released    with  the
    designation "separate opinion(s) to follow," unless
    the citation can be replaced with ellipses in which
    case the separate opinion shall be released with the
    majority opinion and the ellipses shall be replaced
    with the omitted citation when the cited opinion is
    released.   There shall be no further changes to the
    separate writings after mandate.    Separate writings
    for which the citation cannot be replaced with
    ellipses shall be released when the then unreleased
    decision that was cited in the separate opinion is
    released.
    6
    Section 6 of IOP II G. provides as follows relating to the
    "separate writing to follow" notation:
    6.    Holds; Tying Together Release of Two Pending
    Cases.   No one justice may block the release of a
    majority opinion by a "Hold."       It shall take the
    affirmative vote of the majority of the participating
    justices to block the release of a majority opinion.
    No one justice may tie together the release of two
    pending cases. It shall take the affirmative vote of
    a majority of the participating justices in each case
    to tie together the release of two pending cases.
    3
    No.    2014AP2801-D.ssa
    ¶47   I conclude that IOP II G. does not apply to OLR per
    curiam opinions.         OLR per curiam opinions are governed by IOP II
    H.   (entitled    Per     Curiam     Opinion)     and   IOP     II   I.    (entitled
    Mandate).
    ¶48   I    would    follow     the   Internal     Operating         Procedures.
    Therefore the opinion in the instant OLR per curiam should not
    be released at this time.              The per curiam in the instant OLR
    case and Justice Prosser's separate writing should be released
    at the same time as (or after) the other OLR per curiam to which
    Justice Prosser's separate writing refers.
    ¶49   Applying      IOP   II    G.   to   the   instant    OLR      per   curiam
    violates the text of IOP II G.             IOP II G. is written entirely in
    terms of opinions authored by a justice.                See the text of IOP II
    G. set forth in Attachment A.              OLR per curiams are not authored
    by a justice.
    ¶50   Furthermore, IOP II H. and IOP II I. explicitly govern
    the procedure to be followed for per curiam opinions in attorney
    disciplinary proceedings.            IOP II H. provides (emphasis added):
    H. Per Curiam Opinion
    Per curiam opinions may be prepared by a justice
    or a court commissioner for consideration by the
    court.   Per curiam opinions in judicial and attorney
    disciplinary proceedings are prepared by a court
    commissioner for the court's consideration.        The
    decisions in all cases are made by the court, and the
    per curiam opinions are reviewed by the entire court
    and are approved as to form and substance by the court
    prior to issuance.
    ¶51   IOP II I. provides (emphasis added):
    I.    Mandate
    4
    No.    2014AP2801-D.ssa
    The court's decision in a case is mandated
    promptly upon approval of the opinion by the court, as
    set forth above, and upon notification by the chief
    justice to the clerk, or upon notification by the
    author of the majority opinion if the chief justice is
    unable or unwilling to notify the clerk. The court's
    opinion is issued simultaneously with any concurring
    or   dissenting   opinions,    unless  concurring   or
    dissenting opinion or opinions come within paragraph 5
    above as "Separate Writing to Follow."
    ¶52   In contrast to IOP II G. 5., relating to "separate
    writing to follow," IOP II I. sets forth the general rule that a
    court's opinion is mandated simultaneously with any concurring
    or dissenting opinions (except when a                    concurring or dissenting
    opinion or opinions falls within section 5 of IOP II G.).
    ¶53   Here is how justice-authored opinions governed by IOP
    II G. differ from OLR per curiam opinions:
    • The     September        2014    procedure       speaks        to    a   majority
    opinion authored by a justice.                   But an OLR per curiam
    is not authored by a justice.
    • A justice-authored opinion is assigned to a justice by
    the court.        In contrast, an OLR attorney discipline
    matter     is     assigned          to     a     supreme           court    staff
    commissioner by the Clerk of the Supreme Court.
    • The justice who authors a majority opinion has been
    instructed with regard to the writing by the court.
    With     regard     to     an       OLR    per     curiam,           the   court
    commissioner       recommends        a     resolution         to    the    court.
    The    court      may     accept      or       change    the        recommended
    resolution of the OLR matter.                   The commissioner drafts
    the per curiam and circulates it to the justices for
    approval or separate writings.
    5
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    • Four   justices      must    agree       to    hold   a     conference   to
    discuss a draft of a justice-authored opinion.                            In
    contrast,     four     votes       are   not    needed      for   a   court
    conference on a circulated OLR per curiam opinion.
    • The Internal Operating Procedures state procedures and
    time periods for circulating and mandating a justice-
    authored opinion.        In contrast, an OLR per curiam and
    separate writings relating to the per curiam are not
    governed by the procedures or time periods set forth
    by IOP II G.
    ¶54   In   sum,   IOP   II    G.     entitled        "Opinions"      relates    to
    justice-authored majority and lead opinions. IOP II G. does not
    relate to OLR per curiams.        OLR per curiams are governed by IOP
    II H. and IOP II I.
    ¶55   Several     justices    have       become      so   enamored      with   the
    "separate writing to follow" notation that they have threatened
    its use in situations that have no relationship to IOP II G. 5.
    In other words, they want to extend the "separate writing to
    follow" practice to separate writings that do not have anything
    to do with a pending case that has not yet been released.
    ¶56   For example, as I noted in my dissent to an order
    issued on December 4, 2015 in what is collectively known as "the
    John Doe trilogy,"7 I was directed that any separate writing I
    7
    The John Doe case comprises the following matters: Three
    Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson, Nos. 2013AP2504-2508-W;    Two
    Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson, No. 2014AP296-OA; Schmitz v.
    Peterson, Nos. 2014AP427-421-W.
    6
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    prepared    would       not    be     issued   along    with     the   order      unless    I
    circulated my separate writing within a short time after the
    majority writing was circulated.8                   The same thing happened about
    a month later, with regard to another order in the John Doe
    trilogy that was issued on January 12, 2016.9                      Again I objected.
    ¶57        In both orders, I noted that the court's practice of
    using "separate writing to follow" serves to stifle minority
    views     and    full      consideration       of     the   case   and     in     fact   may
    encourage a later circulation of a separate writing.
    ¶58        In   any     event,     this       "separate     writing     to      follow"
    intimidation in the John Doe trilogy violates IOP II H. which
    clearly    states       as     follows:        "The    court's     opinion      is    issued
    simultaneously          with    any    concurring      or   dissenting       opinion       or
    opinions, unless concurring or dissenting opinion or opinions
    come within paragraph 5 above as "separate writing to follow."
    In the John Doe trilogy my separate writings made no reference
    to any pending but unreleased opinion.10
    8
    Three Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson, Nos. 2013AP2504-
    2508-W;   Two Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson, No. 2014AP296-OA;
    Schmitz v. Peterson, Nos. 2014AP427-421-W, unpublished order,
    ¶¶23-32 (Abrahamson, J., dissenting) (Dec. 4, 2015).
    9
    Three Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson, Nos. 2013AP2504-
    2508-W;   Two Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson, No. 2014AP296-OA;
    Schmitz v. Peterson, Nos. 2014AP427-421-W, unpublished order,
    ¶¶31-35 (Abrahamson, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
    part) (Jan. 12, 2016).
    10
    I have also noted my objections to the court's recent
    failure to follow our IOPs in State v. Finley, No. 2014AP2488-
    CR, unpublished order (Jan. 11, 2016); Regency West Apts. LLC v.
    City of Racine, No. 2014AP2947, unpublished order (Jan. 11,
    2016); and Wis. Carry, Inc. v. City of Madison, No. 2015AP146,
    unpublished order (Jan. 11, 2016).
    7
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    ¶59   In sum, IOP II G. does not apply to OLR per curiams.
    Per curiam opinions relating to attorney discipline are governed
    by IOP II H. and IOP II I.
    ¶60   Moreover, the "separate writing to follow" tool in IOP
    II G. 5. and IOP II G. 6. is peculiar to Wisconsin appellate
    practice.      "Separate writing to follow" will be confusing to the
    litigants, readers of opinions, and publishers of opinions.                        It
    raises numerous problems.        Under these circumstances, it is best
    to cabin "separate writing to follow," not expand it beyond its
    present borders.
    II
    ¶61   I turn now to the length of suspension imposed by the
    per curiam.      Attorney Roitburd has known since he received the
    OLR complaint that the OLR sought a two-year suspension.                       He has
    also   known    since   he   received    the       referee's    report    that    the
    referee recommended a two-year suspension.                     Yet he has never
    questioned or challenged that recommended suspension.                        He has
    not been heard from whatsoever.
    ¶62   Problematically,     the        per    curiam     appears    to     give
    Attorney Roitburd the benefit of              the doubts created by his own
    non-participation.       The per curiam notes, for example, that we
    do not know all the facts concerning Attorney Roitburd's work as
    personal representative of his mother's estate, nor do we know
    the details of the estate itself.             The per curiam holds open the
    possibility that Attorney Roitburd did not engage in dishonest
    or bad faith behavior at all.           According to the per curiam, this
    uncertainty justifies an over 90% reduction in the OLR's and the
    8
    No.    2014AP2801-D.ssa
    referee's recommended suspension, even though Attorney Roitburd
    never made an appearance to oppose that suspension.                                    Based on
    this result, a lawyer facing misconduct charges could hardly be
    blamed for believing that the best defense is no defense—indeed,
    no cooperation with the disciplinary process at all.
    ¶63   In my view, Attorney Roitburd cannot supply by default
    the grounds for a reduction of a sanction that he never opposed.
    It must be remembered that Attorney Roitburd has neither alleged
    nor offered any evidence from which any fact in his favor could
    possibly    be    found.        There    is       also    no     claim     that       the    facts
    alleged     in    the    OLR's     complaint,            which      the    referee          deemed
    admitted     by     virtue       of     Attorney          Roitburd's           default,        are
    erroneous,       much    less    clearly        so.           See   In    re     Disciplinary
    Proceedings Against Eisenberg, 
    2004 WI 14
    , ¶5, 
    269 Wis. 2d 43
    ,
    
    675 N.W.2d 747
           (referee's      findings         of    fact      must    be    affirmed
    unless clearly erroneous).
    ¶64   We     must        therefore      resolve           this      case        with     the
    understanding that the facts are exactly as the OLR alleges.
    Those facts include Attorney Roitburd's failure to return to his
    mother's    estate       over    $43,000      in      unaccounted-for            assets;       his
    repeated    failure       to    appear     at      court       hearings         scheduled       to
    discuss estate assets; the circuit court's issuance of a bench
    warrant for him; the circuit court's removal of him as personal
    representative; his repeated failure to meet with the successor
    personal representative to discuss estate assets; and his total
    refusal to cooperate with the OLR.
    9
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    ¶65   Our precedent shows that these facts merit a two-year
    license suspension.              See, e.g., In re Disciplinary Proceedings
    Against Goldstein, 
    2010 WI 26
    , 
    323 Wis. 2d 706
    , 
    782 N.W.2d 388
    (imposing     a    two-year      suspension            for      misconduct      that     included
    converting nearly $70,000 from three probate estates for which
    the    attorney        served     as     special            administrator         or    personal
    representative);           In     re     Disciplinary                  Proceedings       Against
    Krezminski,        
    2007 WI 21
    ,    
    299 Wis. 2d 152
    ,         
    727 N.W.2d 492
    (imposing a two-year suspension for converting client funds that
    the lawyer held in his capacity as personal representative for
    an estate, knowingly offering false evidence, and failing to
    communicate with a client).
    ¶66   I    would    therefore         order          a   two-year    suspension.           I
    would not do as the majority has done:                           construe the slimness of
    the default record——caused by Attorney Roitburd's total failure
    to    join   issue——as       a    mitigating            circumstance.             We    recently
    explained that it is unnecessary for a referee to take evidence
    regarding        the    allegations          of        an       OLR    complaint        after    a
    declaration       of   default.          See      In    re      Disciplinary       Proceedings
    Against      Boyle,       
    2015 WI 90
    ,     ¶¶53-55,           
    364 Wis. 2d 544
    ,          
    869 N.W.2d 475
           (deeming       unnecessary            the       referee's       post-default
    "prove-up" hearing and reducing requested costs by 40% as a
    result).     Today's decision teaches just the opposite.
    ¶67   For the reasons set forth, I dissent regarding the
    discipline.
    ¶68   I    am    authorized       to       state         that    Justice        ANN   WALSH
    BRADLEY joins this opinion.
    10
    No.   2014AP2801-D.ssa
    ATTACHMENT A
    SUPREME COURT INTERNAL OPERATING PROCEDURES
    II. DECISIONAL PROCESS – APPELLATE AND ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
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