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ATTORNEY disciplinary
proceeding. Attorney's license
suspended.
¶1 PER CURIAM. Attorney Ryan D.
Lister has appealed certain legal
conclusions and the recommended discipline
contained in the referee's report and
recommendation. Having concluded that
Attorney Lister had committed professional
misconduct in 17 of the 18 counts charged
in the complaint filed by the Office of
Lawyer Regulation (OLR), the referee
recommended that Attorney Lister's license
to practice law in this state be suspended
for a period of 180 days, that he be
ordered to pay restitution to client J.A.
in the amount of $12,189, and that he be
assessed the costs of this proceeding.
¶2 After reviewing the record and
considering the arguments of the parties,
we adopt the referee's factual findings and
conclusions of law. We determine that as a
result of his professional misconduct
Attorney Lister's license to practice law
in this state should be suspended for a
period of five months. We also determine,
based upon Attorney Lister's concession at
oral argument, that he should be required
to pay restitution in the amount of $12,209
to client J.A. Finally, we conclude that
Attorney Lister should be required to pay
the full costs of this disciplinary
proceeding, which were $10,132.35 as of
December 14, 2006.
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¶3 On October 21, 2004, the OLR filed
a complaint against Attorney Lister
alleging 18 separate counts of misconduct
relating to seven separate grievance
investigations. Attorney Lister's answer
admitted many of the factual allegations in
the OLR's complaint, but, with the
exception of one count of having failed to
provide a written response to a grievance,
denied that he had committed any acts of
professional misconduct.
¶4 Although Attorney Lister had
admitted most of the complaint's
allegations, the OLR served numerous
requests to admit, which tracked the
allegations of the complaint. Attorney
Lister's response to these requests
likewise tracked his responses to the
allegations of the complaint, although his
discovery response did admit at least one
paragraph that he had previously denied,
the impact of which is discussed further
below.
¶5 The referee, Timothy L. Vocke,
conducted a disciplinary hearing on
November 21 and 22, 2005. The OLR
presented testimony from four of Attorney
Lister's former clients, from an opposing
counsel and from Attorney Lister,
adversely. Attorney Lister presented only
his own testimony. At the conclusion of
the evidence, the referee made oral
findings of fact on the record, based on
Attorney Lister's responses to the
allegations of the complaint and to the
OLR's requests to admit, as well as the
testimony of the witnesses at the
evidentiary hearing. The referee also
rendered a legal conclusion of professional
misconduct as to the one count that
Attorney Lister had admitted in his
answer. Following the production of the
transcript of the hearing, the referee
submitted a written report and
recommendation, which set forth his
conclusions of law as to the remaining
counts and his recommendation as to the
appropriate level of discipline. Attorney
Lister subsequently filed an appeal,
challenging certain legal conclusions of
misconduct and the recommended level of
discipline.
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¶6 Before addressing Attorney Lister's
arguments on appeal, we summarize the
referee's factual findings and conclusions
of law. Initially, it should be noted that
in 1986 Attorney Lister was publicly
reprimanded for neglecting a client matter,
failing to carry out a contract of
employment with a client, and
misrepresenting to a client that he had
taken certain actions on the client's
behalf. That is the only prior
disciplinary action against Attorney Lister
since his admission to the practice of law
in this state in 1976.
¶7 Count 1 of the OLR's complaint
relates to Attorney Lister's representation
of J.P. Attorney Lister represented J.P.
in a criminal case involving allegations of
sexual assault, as well as in a divorce
proceeding.
¶8 On June 11, 2001, an assistant
district attorney sent Attorney Lister a
witness list in the criminal action. The
list named J.P.'s son and daughter as
potential witnesses.
¶9 On August 7, 2001, the circuit
court in the divorce action held a hearing
on a motion filed by Attorney Lister to
review a court commissioner's decision
against allowing J.P.'s son and daughter to
visit their father while he was in jail.
During the hearing, opposing counsel stated
that he did not think it was appropriate to
allow visitation while it was unclear as to
whether the children would potentially be
witnesses in the criminal case. In
response, Attorney Lister said that he had
served extensive discovery on the State in
the criminal case and that "the State of
Wisconsin has not listed as of this time -
in 01-CF-181 they have not listed the two
children . . . as witnesses." Attorney
Lister repeated essentially this same
statement twice more. He never indicated
that he was unsure of this fact or that his
memory might be faulty. The circuit court
granted the visitation motion filed by
Attorney Lister, but subsequently reversed
its decision.
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¶10 The referee concluded that these
facts showed that Attorney Lister had
knowingly made a false statement of fact to
a tribunal, contrary to SCR 20:3.3(a)(1).
The referee rejected Attorney Lister's
claim that he had simply made a mistake
when faced with a question during the heat
of the argument in a court proceeding,
stating that Attorney Lister's claim lacked
credibility.
¶11 Count 2 of the complaint related to
Attorney Lister's representation of M.S., a
doctor who retained Attorney Lister to
represent her in an employment dispute with
the Marshfield Clinic. M.S. filed a
grievance with the OLR, alleging that
Attorney Lister had failed to work
diligently on her case and had failed to
communicate with her regarding the status
of the matter.
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¶12 The OLR sent letters to Attorney
Lister in September and October 2003, but
did not receive any response within the
time specified. Attorney Lister ultimately
contacted the OLR and asked for additional
time, promising to respond on at least two
occasions. When Attorney Lister did not
respond, the OLR was forced to file a
motion seeking the temporary suspension of
his license for failure to cooperate with
an investigation, pursuant to SCR 22.03
(4). After this court issued an order
directing Attorney Lister to show cause why
his license to practice law should not be
suspended due to his failure to cooperate
with the OLR's grievance investigation, he
finally submitted a written response to the
grievance. The OLR then withdrew its
motion.
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¶13 Based on these facts and Attorney
Lister's admission of misconduct, the
referee found that Attorney Lister had
violated SCR 22.03(2), as alleged in Count
2 of the complaint.
¶14 Client J.B. retained Attorney
Lister to represent her in a pending
criminal investigation. During the
investigation, which was directed primarily
against J.B.'s boyfriend at the time, the
police searched her home and seized a
number of items.
¶15 Attorney Lister admitted that he
had agreed to assist J.B. in retrieving her
property and that he had told her that he
would begin a lawsuit to obtain the return
of the seized items. The referee, however,
found that J.B.'s testimony was confused,
that the written representation agreement
was limited to defending her against
potential criminal charges, and that J.B.'s
expectations regarding Attorney Lister's
obligation to assist her in retrieving her
property or pursuing a lawsuit were
unrealistic in light of the written
representation agreement. The referee
specifically found that there was no
representation agreement as to either
seeking the return of the seized items that
belonged to her or for a potential claim
against a municipality.
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¶16 Because the referee found that
Attorney Lister had been retained for only
a limited purpose, which he had
accomplished, the referee concluded that
Attorney Lister had not failed to keep J.B.
reasonably informed about the status of the
matter or respond to her requests for
information, as required by SCR 20:1.4(a).
The referee also noted that although J.B.
had paid a $500 nonrefundable fee for this
representation and Attorney Lister had
earned that fee, he had refunded the entire
$500 to J.B.
¶17 In connection with Attorney
Lister's representation of client W.S. in
post-divorce matters, her ex-husband filed
a grievance against him. The OLR requested
a written response from Attorney Lister and
initially granted him an extension of time
to respond. Attorney Lister, however, did
not respond by the extended deadline.
Indeed, he did not respond even after the
OLR sent and personally served additional
letters requiring a written response to the
grievance.
¶18 Attorney Lister subsequently
claimed that he had sent a response, but it
had been misaddressed and returned to him.
During a voice mail message left by
Attorney Lister for the OLR staff on March
8, 2002, he promised to send the response
again with proof of the incorrect address,
but did not do so. When the OLR staff
called Attorney Lister prior to filing a
motion for the temporary suspension of his
license, he claimed that he could not have
left a voice mail message on March 8, 2002,
because he was in the hospital, and he
denied that the first envelope had been
returned. Ultimately, however, Attorney
Lister sent the OLR a letter indicating
that he had been hospitalized only on March
6 and 7, 2002.
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¶19 The referee concluded that these
facts supported a finding that Attorney
Lister had failed to fully and fairly
disclose all facts and circumstances
pertaining to alleged misconduct within 20
days after service of a request for a
written response to a grievance as alleged
in Count 4, in violation of SCR 22.03(2).
¶20 Counts 5—7 relate to Attorney
Lister's representation of an auto body
business owned by K.F. and L.F. concerning
the business's purchase of a paint spray
booth from Norad Environmental (Norad).
The dispute was focused initially on the
fact that Norad refused to deliver the
booth because it claimed that the body shop
was required to pay an additional $3000 due
to requested upgrades.
¶21 Attorney Lister did file an action
against Norad in Marathon County Circuit
Court on December 15, 2000. Although
Attorney Lister claims he sent the summons
and complaint to a process server, ESI
Associates, for service on Norad, he never
obtained service.
¶22 On February 19, 2001, Attorney
Lister left a message for K.F. and L.F.
stating that he would call them after a
teleconference with a judicial assistant
the following morning. Attorney Lister did
not call about this teleconference, despite
multiple inquiries by K.F. and L.F.
¶23 After a scheduling conference on
February 27, 2001, Attorney Lister told
K.F. and L.F. that Norad was switching
counsel and that he had to file another
suit. On March 7, 2001, Attorney Lister
informed K.F. and L.F. that he would
prepare the papers to seek a prejudgment
replevin. On March 8, 2001, he said that
he would file the paperwork and expected to
have a replevin order the next day. On
March 14, 2001, Attorney Lister stated that
the Marathon County judge had signed the
order and that he had called the Kenosha
County sheriff about executing the writ.
Attorney Lister, however, never obtained
service on Norad and did not file any
motion for replevin in the first action.
¶24 On March 26, 2001, without
dismissing the first lawsuit, Attorney
Lister filed a second action against
Norad. He again sent the summons and
complaint to ESI Associates for service on
Norad. He also filed a motion for a
prejudgment replevin order in the second
lawsuit, which was scheduled to be heard on
April 9, 2001. On that date, however,
Attorney Lister told K.F. and L.F. that he
would ask for a court order requiring the
sheriff to accompany them to execute the
replevin order allegedly issued in the
first action.
¶25 During the April 9, 2001 hearing on
the replevin motion in the second action,
Attorney Lister informed the court that he
had orally confirmed service on Norad, but
in fact he had no documentation of service
and Norad had not been served by that
date. Norad did not appear for the April
9, 2006 hearing. Subsequently, the circuit
court granted the motion for an order of
replevin, with a requirement that K.F. and
L.F. post a $30,000 surety bond. The
Kenosha County Sheriff's Department
executed the replevin order, but seized the
wrong property from Norad.
¶26 On June 5, 2001, the circuit court
dismissed the first action with prejudice
due to failure to effect service on Norad
within the required statutory time period.
¶27 On June 28, 2001, a representative
of ESI Associates executed an affidavit
stating that on June 25, 2001, ESI had
personally served Norad's counsel with the
summons and complaint in the second
lawsuit. ESI had not accomplished proper
service within the statutory time period.
¶28 On July 27, 2001, Norad filed a
motion to dismiss the second lawsuit on the
ground that the circuit court lacked
jurisdiction due to inadequate service of
process. Norad also sought an order
requiring the return of the seized property
or the forfeiture of the surety bond.
Attorney Lister failed to file a brief in
opposition to Norad's motion to dismiss.
According to the referee's findings, there
was a factual defense to the motion to
dismiss, but Attorney Lister simply missed
it. Attorney Lister also failed to
disclose to K.F. and L.F. that there was a
motion to dismiss pending in the second
action.
¶29 Having concluded that Norad had not
been properly served in the second action,
the circuit court dismissed that action on
October 30, 2001. The court ordered K.F.
and L.F. to return the seized spray booth
immediately to Norad and to pay Norad's
statutory costs. Attorney Lister did not
inform K.F. and L.F. of the court's
decision.
¶30 On December 18, 2001, Norad's
counsel sent a letter to Attorney Lister
asking about arrangements for the return of
the spray booth and the payment of costs.
Attorney Lister did not contact K.F. and
L.F. about these matters. In January 2002
K.F. and L.F. discovered via a court
website that the second action had been
dismissed. Until that time, they had
continued to believe that they would have a
jury trial on their claims against Norad.
Upon reviewing the case file at the
courthouse, K.F. and L.F. also learned
about the order to return the spray booth.
¶31 K.F. and L.F. then made multiple
requests to Attorney Lister for their file,
but did not receive the file. On March 13,
2002, they went to Attorney Lister's office
to request the file in person. After
additional delay, Attorney Lister did
deliver their file on March 19, 2002.
Ultimately, K.F. and L.F. retained another
attorney, who was able to reopen the case
and proceed with their claims.
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¶32 The referee concluded that Attorney
Lister's failure to obtain timely service
on Norad, his failure to file a brief in
response to Norad's motion to dismiss, and
his failure to keep his clients informed of
the status of the matter, all of which led
to the dismissal of the lawsuits, an order
requiring K.F. and L.F. to return the spray
booth to Norad and an adverse cost
judgment, constituted a failure to provide
competent representation, in violation of
SCR 20:1.1. The referee noted that
Attorney Lister's claims that he has
subsequently changed office policies
concerning scheduling and the routing of
copies to clients do not constitute a
defense against this past misconduct. The
referee also concluded that Attorney
Lister's actions with respect to this
matter showed violations of SCR 20:1.3
(failure to "act with reasonable diligence
and promptness") and SCR 20:1.4(a) (failure
to "keep a client reasonably informed").
¶33 J.A. was a landlord who retained
Attorney Lister to represent her in
connection with a lawsuit filed against her
by a former tenant concerning J.A.'s
failure to return or account for the
tenant's security deposit, failure to
safeguard or return the tenant's personal
belongings, and constructive eviction. The
tenant's complaint sought double damages
under Wisconsin's landlord/tenant laws.
Although Attorney Lister recognized that
the tenant had viable claims against J.A.,
he told her that the tenant "didn't have a
leg to stand on" with the complaint.
¶34 J.A. also had affirmative claims
against the tenant because the tenant was
approximately $1500 behind in rent
payments, and had left the apartment in a
messy condition, requiring J.A. to incur
extraordinary cleaning expenses.
¶35 Attorney Lister failed to file any
response to the complaint within the
required 45-day period. The tenant
subsequently moved for a default judgment
against J.A. At that point, Attorney
Lister filed an untimely answer and
counterclaim, paid a $72 jury fee, and
served interrogatories and requests for
admission on the tenant's counsel.
¶36 Attorney Lister told J.A. that he
required a $500 retainer. J.A. paid $200
of that amount initially. After filing the
untimely answer, Attorney Lister sent J.A.
a bill for the balance of his fees.
¶37 A few days later the circuit court
issued a default judgment in the amount of
$11,637 against J.A. The tenant's counsel
docketed the judgment on July 20, 2001.
The tenant began calling J.A. about
collecting on the judgment. J.A., in turn,
called Attorney Lister on multiple
occasions to inquire about the judgment.
Attorney Lister told J.A. that there was no
such judgment and that the tenant was lying
to her.
¶38 In September 2001 J.A. sent a check
for $372 to Attorney Lister for the balance
on her account. This represented the
remaining $300 in fees and the $72 jury fee
that Attorney Lister had paid to the court
when filing the untimely answer and
counterclaim.
¶39 Because she remained concerned
about the former tenant's claims of a
judgment against her, J.A. had her daughter
check the court's records. The daughter
discovered the judgment in favor of the
tenant.
¶40 Following the entry of the
judgment, the tenant's counsel asked
Attorney Lister to have his client provide
a financial disclosure statement. Attorney
Lister did not pass this information to his
client. On October 30, 2001, the tenant
filed a motion for remedial contempt due to
J.A.'s failure to complete the necessary
financial disclosure statement. The
circuit court did not find J.A. in
contempt, but did issue an order requiring
her to appear for a supplemental
examination. Attorney Lister then sent a
letter to J.A. asking her to contact him
about her case, but she did not receive the
letter.
¶41 Attorney Lister ultimately signed
an admission of service acknowledging that
J.A. would appear for a supplemental
examination. Attorney Lister did not
inform J.A. of this fact. On the morning
of the supplemental examination, Attorney
Lister called J.A. and told her that she
had to appear at the supplemental
examination at 10 a.m. and had to bring a
copy of her income tax return. Despite the
lack of notice, J.A. did appear for the
supplemental examination, which showed that
she had no assets with which to satisfy the
judgment.
¶42 After the supplemental examination,
Attorney Lister told J.A. that he would
immediately file a new action raising her
claims against the tenant. Attorney
Lister, however, took no action on J.A.'s
behalf after the supplemental examination
and did not file a new action. He did not
even contact J.A., except to return her
file to her.
¶43 When the OLR sent a copy of J.A.'s
grievance to Attorney Lister, he did not
respond within the required 20-day time
period. His secretary called the OLR after
the expiration of that period to request an
extension, but Attorney Lister did not
respond within the extended period. After
additional extension requests and still no
response by Attorney Lister, the OLR filed
a motion for a temporary suspension of
Attorney Lister's license to practice law.
Only after this court issued an order to
show cause why his license should not be
suspended did Attorney Lister submit an
initial response to the grievance.
¶44 The OLR determined that Attorney
Lister's response was not sufficient and
asked for a supplemental response on
certain points. Attorney Lister again
asked for multiple extensions, but did not
file the supplemental response. The OLR
then had a process server personally serve
a letter on Attorney Lister informing him
that if he did not submit a supplemental
response within five days, the OLR would
again move for a temporary license
suspension. At that point Attorney Lister
finally filed the supplemental response.
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¶45 Counts 8—13 in the complaint relate
to this representation. The referee
concluded that Attorney Lister had failed
to provide competent representation, in
violation of SCR 20:1.1, and had failed to
act with reasonable diligence and
promptness, in violation of SCR 20:1.3.
The referee also determined that Attorney
Lister had failed to keep his client
reasonably informed about the status of the
matter, contrary to SCR 20:1.4(a).
Further, the referee found that Attorney
Lister's failure to refund the more than
$500 that had been received from J.A. but
had not been earned constituted a violation
of SCR 20:1.16(d). Finally, the referee
concluded that Attorney Lister's failure to
respond to the OLR's initial and subsequent
requests for a response to the grievance
and for additional information had violated
SCR 22.03(2) and 22.03(6).
¶46 Counts 14—18 of the complaint
relate to Attorney Lister's representation
of R.B., who had been involved in a
boundary dispute and a dispute concerning a
survey of his property for a number of
years and had filed several lawsuits in the
matter. In 1998, R.B. hired another
attorney to file a lawsuit against a
surveyor alleging that the surveyor had
been negligent in conducting a 1993 survey
and had improperly moved R.B.'s boundary
lines. R.B.'s complaint sought damages,
but not the return of any real property.
¶47 R.B. retained Attorney Lister in
October 1999 to take over the case and paid
an initial $2500 retainer. When the
surveyor did not appear for trial, a
default judgment for over $47,000 was
entered in favor of R.B. The surveyor
subsequently filed a motion to set aside
the default judgment, arguing that an
earlier action on this same subject matter
had been dismissed with prejudice. The
circuit court vacated the default judgment
and granted judgment in favor of the
surveyor. The court of appeals affirmed.
¶48 Attorney Lister concluded that the
only claim that R.B. could still make on
the matter was for removal or destruction
of monuments under Wis. Stat. § 49.74 (2001-
02). On January 21, 2003, Attorney Lister
wrote to R.B., enclosing a draft complaint
and requesting a check in the amount of
$464 to cover filing fees and service
costs. R.B. sent the check to Attorney
Lister. Attorney Lister did not file the
action. Instead, he later applied the $464
check to R.B.'s past due account, without
informing R.B. of that fact.
¶49 R.B. attempted to contact Attorney
Lister on multiple occasions about his
matter, but Attorney Lister did not
respond. Finally, in May 2003 Attorney
Lister called R.B., stated that he had
forgotten about him, and said that he had
gotten everything to the courthouse and
would send copies of the filings to R.B.
Attorney Lister never filed a new action
and did not send copies of anything to R.B.
¶50 Although the referee found that
Attorney Lister had not filed the lawsuit
despite receiving the check for filing
fees, the referee also found that R.B. knew
that he had to pay another retainer and
enter into a new written representation
agreement with Attorney Lister before he
would file the new lawsuit. The referee
found that, despite R.B.'s claims of having
paid an additional $1000 cash retainer to
Attorney Lister, R.B. paid no such
additional retainer and did not authorize
Attorney Lister to file another lawsuit.
¶51 In addition, although the OLR's
complaint alleged that Attorney Lister told
R.B. in October 2003 that everything had
been filed and they were simply waiting for
a court date, the referee found that this
conversation did not occur.
¶52 The referee also found, pursuant to
an admission by Attorney Lister, that after
R.B. finally checked the court records and
determined that no new lawsuit had been
filed, he filed a grievance with the OLR in
December 2003 alleging that Attorney Lister
would not return his telephone calls.
¶53 As was the case with other
grievances, Attorney Lister did not respond
to the OLR's requests for information.
Finally, the OLR filed a motion for
temporary suspension and this court issued
an order requiring Attorney Lister to show
cause why his license to practice law in
this state should not be suspended for
failing to cooperate with the OLR's
investigation.
¶54 Attorney Lister filed a response
with the OLR only after receiving the order
to show cause. The OLR then withdrew its
request for a temporary suspension, but
requested additional information from
Attorney Lister. Attorney Lister did not
respond to the OLR's repeated requests for
additional information over the next six
weeks, including a letter personally served
on Attorney Lister. Attorney Lister
finally provided the requested information
on May 14, 2004.
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¶55 Although the referee found that
R.B. was a poor witness, that a new lawsuit
had not been filed because R.B. had not
authorized it and had not paid a required
additional retainer, and that Attorney
Lister had not falsely told R.B. in October
2003 that everything had been filed, he
nonetheless concluded that the OLR had
proven all of their claims of misconduct
concerning the R.B. representation.
Specifically, he found that Attorney Lister
had not acted with reasonable diligence and
promptness, in violation of SCR 20:1.3, and
had failed to keep the client reasonably
informed about the status of the matter, in
violation of SCR 20:1.4(a). The referee
further found that Attorney Lister had
falsely told R.B. that he had filed the
paperwork to begin a new lawsuit and was
waiting for a court date, thereby engaging
in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud,
deceit or misrepresentation, in violation
of SCR 20:8.4(c). Finally, the referee
concluded that Attorney Lister's repeated
failures to provide information to the OLR
about the subject of the grievance had
violated SCR 22.03(2) and SCR 22.03(6).
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¶56 With respect to the recommended
level of discipline, the referee considered
a number of mitigating and aggravating
factors. On the mitigating side, he stated
that Attorney Lister now limits his
practice to areas where he feels more
competent, has changed office procedures to
ensure clients receive copies of pleadings
and correspondence, has cooperated in the
disciplinary proceeding by admitting most
of the factual allegations, was found not
to have engaged in misconduct on one of the
counts alleged in the OLR's complaint, and
refunded $500 to J.B. even though he had in
fact earned the fee.
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¶57 The referee, however, found more
significant and numerous factors on the
aggravating side of the ledger. First, the
proceeding involves seven different
grievances and 17 proven counts of
misconduct. Second, there are patterns of
misconduct that appear throughout the seven
representations under review. Attorney
Lister often provided incompetent
representation, failed to communicate
adequately with his clients, neglected
client matters, and failed to cooperate
with the OLR's investigations. Third,
these patterns of misconduct are similar to
the misconduct that required a previous
public reprimand of Attorney Lister. In
addition, the referee stated that Attorney
Lister should have known better because he
has substantial experience as a practicing
lawyer. The referee also noted that at
least one of the clients had suffered a
financial loss because of Attorney Lister.
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¶58 In addition, the referee noted that
Attorney Lister's defense during the
disciplinary process indicated a lack of
remorse and a failure to acknowledge the
harm caused by his violations of the
Supreme Court Rules. The referee first
pointed to Attorney Lister's claim that he
had failed to cooperate with the OLR simply
because he was too embarrassed and too
proud to do so. The referee also based
this conclusion, however, on the fact that
during the proceedings before the referee,
Attorney Lister's counsel had moved
(unsuccessfully) to disqualify Attorney
Julie Falk of the OLR because she had
previously worked for a firm that had been
adverse to Attorney Lister in a contentious
piece of litigation. The referee also
found a lack of remorse from comments made
during the disciplinary hearing, where
Attorney Lister and his counsel asserted
that Attorney Falk had made an incorrect
factual statement during the heat of a
hearing, just as Attorney Lister claimed to
have done in the J.P. matter.
¶59 In the end, the referee recommended
that this court suspend Attorney Lister's
license to practice law in this state for
180 days. The referee concluded that a
suspension was warranted, but not a
suspension of six months or more that would
require a formal petition for
reinstatement. See SCR 22.28(3).
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¶60 Attorney Lister's appeal challenges
only the referee's conclusions of law with
respect to Count 1 (knowingly false
statement to tribunal), Count 16
(misrepresentation to client R.B.) and
Count 18 (willful failure to provide
information to OLR during grievance
investigation), and the referee's
recommended level of discipline. Thus, we
accept the referee's findings of fact and
his conclusions of law with respect to all
of the other counts of misconduct.
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¶61 Attorney Lister's first argument is
that the referee erred in finding a
violation of SCR 20:3.3(a)(1) in the J.P.
matter. As noted above, SCR 20:3.3(a)(1)
provides that "[a] lawyer shall not
knowingly make a false statement of fact or
law to a tribunal." Attorney Lister claims
that the OLR failed to prove by clear,
satisfactory and convincing evidence that
Attorney Lister knew his client's children
had been listed as potential witnesses in
the criminal action when he stated that
they had not been so listed during a
hearing on visitation in the divorce
action. Attorney Lister claims that he was
simply under a mistaken impression at that
time, which does not constitute a knowing
violation of the rule. He claims that he
had not planned to argue at the visitation
hearing concerning the "extensive"
discovery in the criminal matter and was
caught off guard by the statements of
opposing counsel. While he admits that his
statement was false, he argues that the
referee's findings of fact do not support
the legal conclusion of a false statement
knowingly made to a tribunal.
¶62 In support of the referee's
conclusion, the OLR points to the fact that
the hearing was concerning whether J.P.'s
children should be allowed to visit him
while he was in jail awaiting trial and
Attorney Lister was aware of statements
allegedly made by J.P. to his son about the
criminal charges, making the children's
status in the criminal matter a likely
topic of discussion. Moreover, the State's
witness list in the criminal case sent to
Attorney Lister a couple of months earlier
had clearly named the children as potential
witnesses. Further, the OLR emphasizes
that Attorney Lister made an emphatic
statement about having served "extensive
discovery" on the State and the State not
having listed the children as witnesses as
of the date of the visitation hearing. The
OLR points out that Attorney Lister
repeated this contention multiple times and
never indicated that he might be unsure of
the fact because of the volume of paper in
the criminal proceeding. Finally, the OLR
notes that Attorney Lister's claim of a
mistaken impression was deemed not credible
by the referee.
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¶63 Although we recognize that
attorneys are human beings and sometimes
make mistakes while making arguments in
court, we agree with the referee's
conclusion that there is sufficient
evidence here to conclude that Attorney
Lister knowingly made a false statement of
fact to the court in violation of SCR 20:3.3
(a)(1). The comment to that rule states in
part that "an assertion purporting to be on
the lawyer's own knowledge, . . . may
properly be made only when the lawyer knows
the assertion is true or believes it to be
true on the basis of a reasonably diligent
inquiry." This explains the rule's concept
of "knowingly" with respect to statements
made to a tribunal.
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¶64 Here, Attorney Lister made his
statements not in response to a question by
the court that caught him off guard, but as
an affirmative, unsolicited argument in
response to opposing counsel's suggestion
that it might be better to delay allowing
visitation until the children's relation to
the criminal case was clarified. Attorney
Lister emphasized that he had
served "extensive discovery" on the State
to bolster his subsequent assertion that
the children had not in fact been listed as
witnesses. He repeated his assertion
multiple times. Although he now claims
that there was a considerable amount of
document production in the criminal matter,
he never indicated to the court that he was
unsure of his answer because of that fact.
There is no indication that he ever checked
the criminal file after the hearing to see
if he had spoken in error. Instead he made
a flat assertion purportedly based on his
own knowledge that he did not condition in
any respect. Moreover, the referee
specifically stated that he found Attorney
Lister's claim of a mistake made in the
heat of battle to be not credible. Under
these particular facts, we conclude that
the record supports the referee's
conclusion that Attorney Lister violated
SCR 20:3.3(a)(1).
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¶65 Next, Attorney Lister argues that
the referee erred in concluding that
Attorney Lister had violated SCR 20:8.4(c)
by falsely telling R.B. that the new
summons and complaint had been filed, as
alleged in Count 16 of the OLR's
complaint. Attorney Lister relies
primarily on the referee's factual findings
during the disciplinary hearing that R.B.
was not a reasonable client or credible
witness and that a new lawsuit had not been
filed because R.B. knew he had to sign a
new written retainer agreement and pay a
new retainer, but never did so. Thus,
Attorney Lister argues that since the
referee found that Attorney Lister was
correct in asserting that there was never
any agreement to file a new lawsuit, the
referee should not have found that Attorney
Lister lied about having filed the lawsuit.
¶66 Although we recognize that the
referee stated that R.B. was "not a
reasonable client, in general" and was "not
a good witness," Attorney Lister's argument
on this point ignores the fact that in
response to a request to admit he conceded
that in May 2003 he had "called [R.B.],
informed him that he had forgotten about
him, that Lister had gotten everything down
to the courthouse, and would copy [R.B.]
with the documents." Attorney Lister also
admitted that he had not sent R.B. any
copies of the documents allegedly filed at
the courthouse.
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¶67 This admission was the basis for
the referee's conclusion of a violation of
SCR 20:8.4(c). Although Attorney Lister
had denied this same allegation in his
answer to the OLR's complaint, for whatever
reason he admitted it in his subsequent
responses to the OLR's requests for
admission. While we do not think
repetitious requests to admit should be
used in order to catch an adverse party in
a mistaken admission, Attorney Lister never
claimed that his admission had been a
mistake and never moved to withdraw the
admission before the referee. He did not
do so even after the referee made a finding
of fact based on his admission at the
conclusion of the evidentiary hearing and
made the other findings of fact about
R.B.'s unreasonable expectations on which
Attorney Lister now relies. Attorney
Lister did not even seek to have the
admission withdrawn when the referee
concluded in his written report that
Attorney Lister had violated SCR 20:8.4
(c). At that point, given the referee's
explicit finding that Attorney Lister had
not had the October 2003 conversation with
R.B., Attorney Lister should have
recognized that the basis for the referee's
conclusion that he had misrepresented
having filed a new lawsuit to R.B. was his
admission concerning the May 2003
statements. Nonetheless, Attorney Lister
filed nothing to indicate to the referee
that the factual basis for the SCR 20:8.4
(c) violation was a mistake on his part.
¶68 Indeed, although Attorney Lister's
briefs in this court attempted to undermine
the referee's legal conclusion of a
violation due to the referee's comments
about R.B. not being a good witness,
Attorney Lister never stated that his
admission to the May 2003 conversation was
a mistake. It was not until the court at
oral argument asked Attorney Lister's
counsel about the initial denial and
subsequent admission of the May 2003
statements that counsel claimed that the
admission had been a mistake. Counsel did
not raise this issue on his own.
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¶69 Attorney disciplinary proceedings
are generally governed by the rules of
civil procedure. See SCR 22.16(1).
The referee acts as the trial court and we
perform our usual role as a reviewing
court, with the exception that we determine
the proper level of discipline
independently of the referee.
¶70 Even if his admission of the May
2003 conversation was a mistake, Attorney
Lister has foregone any opportunity to
avoid the effect of that admission in this
proceeding. Under Wis. Stat. § (Rule)
804.11, any matter that is admitted in
response to a request to admit is
conclusively established in the proceeding
unless the trial court (here the referee)
on motion permits withdrawal or amendment
of the admission. The trial court may
permit withdrawal "when the presentation of
the merits of the action will be subserved
thereby and the party who obtained the
admission fails to satisfy the court that
withdrawal or amendment will prejudice the
party in maintaining the action or defense
on the merits." Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 804.11
(2). This determination is committed to
the sound discretion of the trial court and
this court's role (or that of the court of
appeals in a civil action) is to review the
lower court's ruling to determine if it
properly exercised its discretion. See
Schmid v. Olson, 111 Wis. 2d 228, 237,
330 N.W.2d 547 (1983).
¶71 Here, Attorney Lister never asked
the referee to exercise his discretion and
allow the withdrawal of the admission.
Thus, we have no determination to review.
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¶72 Moreover, Attorney Lister's
argument on this point is that the
conclusion of a violation of SCR 20:8.4(c)
on the basis of the finding of the May 2003
statements is in conflict with the
referee's statements that R.B. was "not a
good witness" and that the October 2003
conversation did not occur. Even if the
October 2003 conversation did not occur and
Attorney Lister ultimately demanded the
payment of an additional retainer before
filing the new action on R.B.'s behalf,
that does not mean that Attorney Lister
could not have falsely told R.B. in May
2003 that he had taken care of filing the
new action in order to appease R.B.'s calls
for progress on his matter.
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¶73 Under these facts, we conclude that
Attorney Lister's challenge to the
conclusion of misconduct on Count 16 must
fail. Attorney Lister's admission to the
May 2003 conversation conclusively
establishes in this disciplinary proceeding
the factual predicate for the referee's
legal conclusion of a violation of SCR
20:8.4(c).
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¶74 Attorney Lister next argues that
the referee erred in concluding that he had
violated SCR 22.03(6) by willfully failing
to provide relevant information and
documents to the OLR during the
investigation of the R.B. grievance. He
asserts that although he did not provide
the requested information in a timely
manner, he ultimately did provide all of
the requested information.
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¶75 Attorney Lister's argument is
without merit. SCR 22.03(6) states that an
attorney's willful failure to provide
relevant information to the OLR, to answer
the OLR's questions fully, or to furnish
documents to the OLR constitutes
misconduct. Attorney Lister's argument is
that an attorney can willfully choose not
to provide the requested information for as
long as the attorney wants, just as long as
the attorney ultimately decides to provide
the information. That undercuts the plain
language of the rule and the need for the
OLR to proceed with its investigations in
an efficient manner. In the present case,
Attorney Lister routinely delayed for
months providing the information requested
by the OLR. When the OLR requested
additional information in the R.B.
grievance investigation, after Attorney
Lister had already received an order to
show cause why his license should not be
temporarily suspended for failure to
cooperate with the OLR, he continued his
pattern of delay. He asked for extensions
of time to respond, but never responded by
the extended dates he had requested. Only
when faced with the possibility of another
motion for a temporary suspension of his
license did he provide the requested
information. The referee was correct in
concluding that this conduct constituted a
willful failure to provide information, in
violation of SCR 22.03(6).
¶76 Attorney Lister also argues that he
should not receive a suspension for the
violations of SCR 22.03(2) because the OLR
sought the temporary suspension of his
license and subsequently withdrew its
motion because of Attorney Lister's belated
response to the OLR's grievance
investigation. This argument is also
without merit. The fact that the OLR
concluded that it did not require a
temporary suspension to induce Attorney
Lister's cooperation does not mean that he
should be absolved of his violations of SCR
22.03(2). As with his previous argument,
this interpretation of the rules would
encourage attorneys to delay responding to
the OLR because they could avoid any
penalties for their delay so long as the
attorney responded before a temporary
suspension was imposed. This is contrary
to the rule's requirement that attorneys
must respond to the OLR's initial request
for information within 20 days.
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¶77 Turning to the level of discipline,
we determine that a five-month suspension
of Attorney Lister's license is appropriate
discipline. In this regard, we note that
we generally have not issued 180-day
license suspensions. The next more serious
sanction after a five-month suspension is a
six-month suspension, which requires the
formal reinstatement petition and procedure
set forth in SCR 22.29—.33. When the facts
have warranted a six-month suspension, we
have imposed that discipline, regardless of
the accompanying need for a formal
reinstatement proceeding. See,
e.g., In re Disciplinary Proceedings
Against Scanlan, 2006 WI 38, ¶¶72-74, 290
Wis. 2d 30, 712 N.W.2d 877.
¶78 Here, it cannot be denied that
Attorney Lister's misconduct, as proven
during this proceeding, is serious. The
evidence shows a disturbing pattern of
failing to act diligently on his clients'
behalf and of failing to communicate with
them about the status of their matters. It
also shows a failure by Attorney Lister to
recognize that an attorney is obligated to
cooperate with an OLR investigation in a
timely fashion. Ultimately, however, the
OLR has not disputed Attorney Lister's
claim that he did provide, albeit in a
tardy manner, all of the information the
OLR requested. Moreover, although Attorney
Lister has a prior reprimand for similar
conduct, that reprimand occurred over 20
years ago and is the only discipline
imposed on Attorney Lister during 30 years
of practice.
¶79 Having considered all of the facts,
we conclude that a five-month suspension is
an appropriate level of discipline to
impress upon Attorney Lister the serious
nature of his misconduct and his need to
conform his conduct to his obligations
under the Rules of Professional Conduct.
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¶80 With respect to restitution, the
referee recommended that Attorney Lister be
ordered to pay restitution to client J.A.
equal to the default judgment entered
against her plus the amount of money J.A.
paid to Attorney Lister. At oral argument,
Attorney Lister conceded that he should pay
restitution to J.A. for those amounts.
Thus, we determine the amount of
restitution to J.A. should be $12,209,
which is the sum of the $11,637 default
judgment and the $572 in payments that J.A.
made to Attorney Lister.
¶81 We also determine that Attorney
Lister should bear the full costs of this
disciplinary proceeding. In this regard,
Attorney Lister acknowledged at oral
argument that his delay in responding to
the OLR's requests for information, which
necessitated the OLR's motions for the
temporary suspension of his license, had
increased the total costs of this
proceeding.
¶82 IT IS ORDERED that the license of
Ryan D. Lister to practice law in Wisconsin
is suspended for a period of five months,
effective June 15, 2007.
¶83 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Attorney
Lister comply with the provisions of SCR
22.26 concerning the duties of a person
whose license to practice law in Wisconsin
has been suspended.
¶84 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that within
60 days of the date of this order, Attorney
Lister shall pay restitution to J.A. in the
amount of $12,209. If restitution to J.A.
is not paid within the time specified and
absent a showing to this court of his
inability to pay the restitution amount
within that time, the license of Attorney
Lister to practice law in Wisconsin shall
remain suspended until further order of
this court.
¶85 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that within
60 days of the date of this order, Attorney
Lister shall pay to the Office of Lawyer
Regulation the costs of this proceeding.
If the costs are not paid within the time
specified and absent a showing to this
court of his inability to pay those costs
within that time, the license of Attorney
Lister to practice law in Wisconsin shall
remain suspended until further order of
this court.
¶86 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that
restitution to client J.A. is to be
completed prior to paying costs to the
Office of Lawyer Regulation.
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