Attоrney disciplinary proceeding; attorney’s license suspended.
Attorney John W. Gibson appealed from the referee’s findings and conclusions that he had engaged in unprofessional conduct by making sexual advances to a woman client and from the referee’s recommendation that a 90-day suspension of his license to practice law in Wis
The referee’s findings of fact are not clearly erroneous, and we accept them. However, we do not accept the referee’s conclusions that Attorney Gibson violated SCR 20.35(1) (c),
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as charged in the Board’s complaint, and that he engaged in professional misconduct by violating enumerated “Ethical Considerations” set forth in the Code of Professional Responsibility, SCR chaрter 20.
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Rather, we conclude that Attorney Gibson’s actions violated a standard of professional conduct enunciated by this court in
State v. Heilprin,
Attorney Gibson wаs admitted to practice law in Wisconsin in 1961 and has practiced in Madison since 1971. He has not previously been the subject of formal dis
“SCR 20.02(5): A lawyer should maintain high standards of professional conduct . . . and should refrain from all illegal and morally reprehensible conduct;
“SCR 20.23: The profеssional judgment of a lawyer should be exercised, within the bounds of the law, solely for the benefit of the client and free of compromising influences and loyalties. . . . his or her personal interest . . . should not be permitted to dilute a lawyer’s loyalty to a client; and
“SCR 20.48: A lawyer should avoid even the appearance of professional impropriety. ... A lawyer should promote public confidence in our system and in the legal profession.”
The alleged misconduct in this disciplinary proceeding occurred during the evening of July 13, 1982. On July 9, 1982, following a violent episode with her husband, Mrs. Slane made application to Dane county circuit court for a temporary restraining order to remove her husband from the couplе’s home, where they lived with their five children, and a hearing on the motion was scheduled for July 14. On the day before the hearing, Mrs. Slane telephoned Attorney Gibson to make an appointment, and he told her to stop at his office some time during that day and, although he was very busy, he would talk to her. When she arrived at his office, he was engaged in long-distance telephone discussions, and when Mrs. Slane told him that she wanted to know what would happen at the court hearing on the following day, he told her to return at 8:00 o’clock that eve
Mrs. Slane met Attorney Gibson at his office as arranged, and Attorney Gibson sat on a sofa and had Mrs. Slane sit in а chair opposite him. He asked her three times to move the chair closer to him, and she did. One of the first things Attorney Gibson told Mrs. Slane at this meeting was that he had been thinking about her problem as he was returning to the office and that he decided to represent her in the marital matter, although she had not asked him to do so. He then told her of some dreams he had been having recently, which included her and her family, and he began discussing a certain religious doctrine concerning how many persons one should love. Attorney Gibson expressed his belief that it was acceptable to have more than one person to love, provided that everything was satisfactory with one’s spouse, adding thаt the spouse should not be aware of the other person.
The discussion continued, and at some point Attorney Gibson told Mrs. Slane to take her clothes off. She declined. Some time thereafter Attorney Gibson made a cup of coffee for himself and a cup of tea for Mrs. Slane. When he went to get the tea, he turned the office lights off, knelt beside Mrs. Slane’s chair, began kissing her, put his hands inside her blouse and fondled her breasts, and moved his hands over her pelvic area outside of her clothing. In order to stop him, Mrs. Slane told him she was visualizing being beaten and was frightened. Attorney Gibson stopped at once, got up, turned on the lights, got the tea and returned to converse with Mrs. Slane.
Attorney Gibson told Mrs. Slane that what had happened between them was to be a secret. He told her it was necessary to relieve sexual tensions and that it was something that could continue to happen between them, but it would have to be on his terms, — once a week, once
Mrs. Slane testified that she had experienced a nightmare during the early morning hоurs of the next day, which consisted of a replay of the events with Attorney Gibson of the previous evening, and when she awoke she was screaming and began to cry uncontrollably. She testified to having had the same or a similar nightmare frequently since the incident, sometimes as often as two or three times a week.
The morning of the hearing, Mrs. Slane telephoned Judge Bruner’s office and briefly told the judge’s staff what had occurred the night before and stated that she did not want Attorney Gibson to attend the hearing on the temporary restraining order scheduled for that afternoon. The staff person advised her to go to the Rape Crisis Center, which she did before going to court. She arrived at the courthouse visibly uрset, and she was approached and counseled by a social worker whom she had been seeing.
Attorney Gibson appeared at the courtroom before the hearing began. When he was told that Mrs. Slane did not want him there, he asked her husband whether he wanted him to represent him at the hearing. The husband declined.
On the day following the heаring, Mrs. Slane reported the incident with Attorney Gibson to the police. During her interview with an officer investigating the matter, she said she was willing to sign a complaint. The matter apparently was not pursued.
Attorney Gibson denied having made any sexual advances, as Mrs. Slane had claimed, but he admitted that
In the disciplinary proceeding, the Board presented the testimony of four women, each a former client оf Attorney Gibson, who testified that during his representation of them in a variety of matters he engaged in unsolicited sexual conversation and conduct with them. That conduct occurred over a period of time from 1975 to 1982. The Board presented this proof of similar acts to show a plan of which Attorney Gibson’s conduct with Mrs. Slane could reasonably be said to be a part, that is, the Board attempted to establish a plan by Attorney Gibson to take sexual advantage of vulnerable female clients, albeit without force and subject to their rejection of his suggestions and advances.
The Board also introduced evidence of Attorney Gibson’s conviction in 1971, on his no contest plea of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The criminal complaint in that matter had charged him with having sexual intercourse with a 17-year-old girl who was living in the Gibson home as a result of a foster home placement. Sentence with withheld on the condition that Attorney Gibson pursue psychiatric treatment. The Board introduced this evidence not as part of its attempt to show a pattern of sexual obsession on the part of Attorney Gibson but as evidence on the question of appropriate discipline.
Attorney Gibson argued that the testimony of the former clients was not admissible because his motive, intent and plan were not at issue in the disciplinary proceeding and the “other acts” evidencе was not probative of any motive or intent he had concerning the specific misconduct with which he had been charged. Attorney Gibson contended that the testimony of the former cli
It is unnecessary that we address this issue of the admissibility of the former clients’ testimony for the reason that the referee made clear in his report that his determination of the credibility issue rested on the testimony of another witness, the Honorable Robert Martin, federal bankruptcy judge, who testified that in numerous appearances before him, Attorney Gibson was not absolutely reliable and failed to meet that standard of truthfulness which the judge considered important in an attorney. The referee stated that he determined the relative credibility of Attorney Gibson and Mrs. Slane as he did “particularly because [Mrs. Slane’s testimony] is supported by the testimony of [three of the four former clients], all involving matters of sexual connotations with clients.” He stated further, however, “In considering the veracity of Slane and Respondent, the testimony of Judge Martin that Respondent’s word is not reliable is sufficient tо weigh the scales against Respondent.” Consequently, there is sufficient evidence independent of the testimony of the former clients to support the referee’s findings, and they are therefore not clearly erroneous.
“ (1) A lawyer may not intentionally:
“ (c) Prejudice or damage the client during* the course of the professional relationship, except as required under SCR 20.36(2).”
He argued that there was no evidence that he intended harm to his client, which he contended was a necessary element to а violation of that ethical rule, and he maintained that his conduct did not cause any harm to his client’s legal interests, taking the position that the rule applies only to prejudice or damage to a client’s interest in the lawyer’s professional representation. He contended that Mrs. Slane’s nightmares and her distraught condition at the hearing on the temporary order, as to which Judge Bruner testified, could not reasonably have been considered to constitute “damage” or “prejudice.”
Attorney Gibson also contended that the referee improperly concluded that he engaged in misconduct by violating “Ethical Considerations” which he was not charged with having violated and which hаve not previously been recognized by this court as constituting a basis for attorney discipline. In support of his position, he cited SCR 20.002:
“The ethical considerations are aspirational in character and represent the objectives toward which every member of the profession should strive. They constitute a body of principles upоn which the lawyer can rely for guidance in many specific situations.
“The disciplinary rules, unlike the ethical considerations, are mandatory in character. . . .”
It is unnecessary to consider Attorney Gibson’s contentions concerning the applicability of SCR 20.35(1)
We reiterate our determination in Heilprin that the public must not be subjected to unsolicited sexual conduct by attorneys in the context of an attorney-client relationship. Frequently, the client is in some difficulty and, as a result, is particularly vulnerable to improper advances made by the attorney. The client rightfully looks upon the attorney as legal advisor, one who will act in the client’s best interests. Often, a client will be reluctant to terminate representation in response to an attorney’s improper conduct for fear of losing time and money already invested in the attorney’s representation.
The attorney stands in a fiduciary relationship with the client and should exercise professional judgment “solely for the benefit of the client and free of compromising influences and loyalties.” SCR 20.23(1). By making unsolicited sexual advances to a client, an attorney perverts the very essence of the lawyer-client
The referee recommended a 90-day suspension of Attorney Gibson’s license to practice law as aрpropriate discipline, and that recommendation was explicitly based on the testimony of the former clients. However, we do not rely on that recommendation in determining appropriate discipline in this case. In imposing a 90-day suspension of the license of Attorney Gibson to practice law in Wisconsin, we do not consider, as did the referee, the cumulative testimony in the record or Attorney Gibson’s prior conviction; the discipline we impose is in response to only that conduct Attorney Gibson was found to have engaged in with Mrs. Slane.
IT IS ORDERED that the license of Attorney John W. Gibson to practice law in Wisconsin is suspended for a period of 90 days, commencing August 1, 1985.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that within 120 days of the dаte of this order Attorney John W. Gibson pay to the Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility the costs of this disciplinary proceeding, provided that if the costs are not paid within the time specified and absent a showing by Attorney Gibson of his inability to pay the costs within the time specified, the license of Attorney John W. Gibson to practice law in Wisconsin shall be suspended until further order of the court.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Attorney John W. Gibson comply with the provisions of SCR 22.26 concerning the requirements of a person whose license to practice law in Wisconsin has been suspended.
Notes
SCR 20.35(1) (c) provides:
“(1) A lawyer may not intentionally:
“(e) Prejudice or damage the client during the course of the professional relationship, except as required under SCR 20.36(2).”
The referee concluded that Attorney Gibson’s conduct violated the following Code provisions:
SCR 21.05 provides:
“Grounds for discipline. An attorney is subject to discipline for misconduct. Misconduct is conduct that violates:
“(5) A standard of professional conduct as defined by the supreme court by rule, order or decision.”
