
Vol. 77, No. 11, November 
2004
Supreme Court Orders
  
  The Wisconsin Supreme Court will hold a public hearing on Jan. 12, 
2005 regarding
  the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation petition to assess lawyers a 
$50 annual
  fee.
  
Wisconsin Trust Account Assessment
In the matter of the Petition of the Wisconsin Trust Account 
Foundation
    Inc. for a Rule Assessing Members of the State Bar of Wisconsin for 
an Annual
    Sum to Support Organizations that Provide Civil Legal Services to 
the Indigent
    of this State
Order 04-05 
On June 2, 2004, the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation Inc. (WisTAF) 
filed
  a petition proposing creation of a rule to establish an annual 
assessment of
  each member of the State Bar of Wisconsin in the amount of fifty 
dollars ($50.00)
  to augment the insufficient funds received from Interest on Lawyers 
Trust Accounts
  (IOLTA) for the support of civil legal services for persons who cannot 
afford
  a lawyer. 
 IT IS ORDERED that a public hearing on the petition shall be held in 
the
  Supreme Court Room in the State Capitol, Madison, Wis., on Jan. 12, 
2004, at
  9:30 a.m.
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the court's conference in the matter 
shall be
  held promptly following the public hearing.
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of the hearing be given by a 
single publication
  of a copy of this order and of the petition in the official state 
newspaper
  and in an official publication of the State Bar of Wisconsin not more 
than
  60 days nor less than 30 days before the date of the hearing.
Dated at Madison, Wis., this 5th day of October, 2004.
By the court:
Cornelia G. Clark, Clerk of Supreme Court
Petition
The Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation Inc. (WisTAF), by its attorney 
John
  S. Skilton of the firm of Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe LLP, 
and Deborah
  M. Smith, its president, and Patrick F. Norris, its executive 
director, petitions
  this honorable court to adopt a rule establishing an annual assessment 
of each
  member of the State Bar of Wisconsin in the amount of fifty dollars 
($50.00),
  or such other appropriate amount as the court may determine, to 
augment the
  insufficient funds received from Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts 
(IOLTA)
  for the support of civil legal services for persons who cannot afford 
a lawyer.
 (Proposed) Chapter SCR 14
Public Interest Legal Service 
SCR 14.01 Public interest legal service fund: creation and 
purpose;
    definitions. (1) A public interest legal service fund of 
the state
    bar of Wisconsin is created to fund direct legal services to persons 
of limited
    means in non-criminal matters.
 (2) In this chapter:
 (a) "Attorney" means a person who is a member of the state 
bar
  of Wisconsin, except a person who is an inactive member.
 (b) "Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation" means the entity 
created
  pursuant to SCR 13.01.
 (c) "Fund" means the public interest legal service fund of 
the
  state bar of Wisconsin.
 (d) "Board" means the board specified in SCR 13.02(1).
SCR 14.02 Administration. (1) The fund shall be 
operated
  and administered by the board of the Wisconsin Trust Account 
Foundation Inc.
 (2) The board may make grants of available funds to 
eligible
  programs for the purpose specified in SCR 13.03(2)(a)1.
SCR 14.03 Assessment of attorneys; enforcement. (1) 
Annual
  assessments. Commencing with the state bar's July 1, 2005 fiscal year, 
every
  attorney shall pay to the fund an annual assessment, to be determined 
by the
  court, to augment Interest on Lawyers Trust Account (IOLTA) revenues 
as granted
  and administered by the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation Inc. 
pursuant to
  SCR Chapter 13. The initial assessment shall be $50.00. An attorney 
whose annual
  state bar membership dues are waived for hardship shall be excused 
from the
  payment of the annual assessment for that year. An attorney shall be 
excused
  from the payment of the annual assessment for the fiscal year during 
which
  he or she is admitted to practice in Wisconsin.
 (2) Collection: Failure to pay. The annual 
assessments shall
  be collected at the same time and in the same manner as the annual 
membership
  dues for the state bar are collected. An attorney who fails to timely 
pay the
  annual assessment shall have his or her right to practice law 
suspended pursuant
  to SCR 10.03(6).
 The Grounds for this Petition are as Follows:
WisTAF Has Limited Authority and Resources are 
Scarce.
1. Except for IOLTA, the pro bono efforts 
of local
  practitioners, bar associations and private donations to agencies 
providing
  civil legal services there are no other funds raised in this state for 
representation
  of the indigent in civil matters.
 2. WisTAF has also served as a conduit for funds obtained by the 
Equal Justice
  Foundation Inc. and for a $400,000 grant by the Wisconsin Legislature 
of Temporary
  Aid for Needy Families (TANF) that was administered over four years 
beginning
  in 1999. There are two agencies in the state that receive federal LSC 
funds,
  but they are also dependent on WisTAF grants of IOLTA funds as well as 
other
  private donations.
 3. WisTAF revenues are completely dependent upon the rise and fall 
of interest
  rates and the changing custom and practice of lawyers with respect to 
trust
  accounts. Interest rates are at a 45-year low, and there are more and 
more
  private practitioners who, for competitive reasons, no longer can 
demand an
  up-front client retainer. Rather, lawyers favor billing clients 
monthly resulting
  in a shrinking principal base for IOLTA funds.
 4. WisTAF revenues have declined from more than $2.1 million in 
fiscal year
  2000-2001 to approximately $1.01 million for the fiscal year ended 
2003. As
  a result, WisTAF has been forced to cut grant levels as revenues have 
declined.
  In 2000, WisTAF granted more than $1.98 million to 14 agencies. For 
calendar
  year 2004, WisTAF has promised grants of $1.11 million to 12 agencies. 
This
  decline of more than $875,000 is a 44 percent reduction from the year 
2000
  to 2004 that translates directly to a material decline in the ability 
of grantees
  to serve the needs of their clients in obtaining access to justice. 
Currently
  WisTAF projects only $850,000 of IOLTA revenue for fiscal year 2004. 
The continued
  erosion of revenue will mean that WisTAF will have to further cut its 
operating
  expenses (staff) as well as its grants. There will be no one available 
to administer
  IOLTA grants other than at a very basic level. No resources would be 
available
  to seek alternative revenue sources other than IOLTA. The impact on 
the future
  provision of civil legal services for low-income persons in Wisconsin 
will
  be disastrous. Access to justice will be put even further out of reach 
for
  the poor.
A Quantitative Analysis of the Decline in 1986 
Dollars.
5. The Wisconsin Supreme Court created the Wisconsin Trust Account 
Foundation
  Inc. in 1986 to administer the IOLTA program in Wisconsin. The 
creation of
  WisTAF was a statement by the court of a social policy supporting 
civil legal
  services to the poor by creating a mechanism to do so. Our existing 
mechanism
  has been unable to maintain the level of support the court and 
WisTAF's grantees
  enjoyed in 1986.
 6. In 1986 the Consumer Price Index (CPI), according to the Federal 
Reserve
  Bank of Minneapolis, was 109.6. The CPI was created to quantify the 
effects
  of inflation and interest rates in order to compare U.S. dollar values 
over
  time. At the time WisTAF was created by the court the Discount Rate 
(the rate
  at which commercial banks can borrow reserves from the Federal 
Reserve) was
  5.5 percent. The discount rate is important to this analysis because 
it is
  the practical base of short-term rates in U.S. markets. It is an index 
that
  is used by the Federal Reserve to implement monetary policy and as the 
discount
  rate moves so do other short-term rates like Treasuries and Federal 
Funds.
  Most commercial banks will set the interest rates they pay on deposits 
at some
  factor over the discount rate. Their decision of what to pay on 
deposits is
  also a function of the bank's need for deposits or other competitive 
factors.
 8. In 1986 the discount rate was 5.5 percent. In 2002 it was down to 
1.75
  percent. In 2003 it reached a low of 0.75 percent (the lowest in 45 
years.)
  The average rate paid on IOLTA deposits at the present in Wisconsin is 
0.65
  percent.
 9. The significant decline of WisTAF revenues in real dollars is 
striking.
  The 1986 CPI was 109.6. The CPI in 2003 was 183.8. At the end of 
WisTAF's first
  formal fiscal year revenues were approximately $888,000. Restatement 
of that
  amount in terms of 2003 dollars is computed by multiplying the 
conversion factor
  (183.8/109.6 = 1.68) times the 1986 dollars. $888,000 (1.68) = $1.4 
million
  in 2003 dollars. The actual revenues for 2003 were $1.01 million. The 
difference
  is a decline of $480,000 (or 32 percent). Using anticipated 2004 
revenues of
  $850,000, the decline (with a 2004 est. CPI of 1.9) is $837,000 (or 56 
percent). IOLTA
  in 2004 is less than half of the amount the court meant to provide for 
civil
  legal services when WisTAF was created. 
Other States Have Met the Scarcity of Funds in a Number 
of Ways.
10. The funding or coordination of access to legal services for the 
indigent
  including the creation of a viable pro-bono program and fiscally sound 
staff
  programs has not been an issue that has been addressed or resolved by 
the Wisconsin
  Legislature, the State Bar of Wisconsin1 
or the
  Wisconsin Supreme Court.
 11. Many of our sister states have developed alternative sources of 
revenue
  for providing access to justice for indigent citizens. The states of 
Minnesota,
  Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Florida and 
California have
  integrated into a single organization the management of IOLTA funds as 
well
  as private fund-raising and educational programs. Such organizations 
have access
  to funds and grants that WisTAF, with its limited mandate, does not 
have.
 12. Those states have generated from three to twelve times the 
amount of
  dollars that IOLTA has provided to Wisconsin residents for indigent 
representation,
  because those states have avoided the vulnerability of relying on one 
source
  of funds to support legal services for persons of limited needs.
 13. The majority of money obtained by those organizations comes from 
sources
  other than IOLTA, including assessments of licensed members of the 
Bar, filing
  fees, escheats, private donations and gifts from private foundations.
 14. Five states have adopted an assessment on lawyers to assist in 
funding
  legal services for the poor. In three states (Minnesota, Ohio, and 
Illinois),
  the decision was made by the supreme courts. In one state (Missouri), 
the decision
  was made by its mandatory state bar association and in one state 
(Texas) the
  assessment was imposed by the state legislature.
 (a) In 1997, the Minnesota Supreme Court increased the registration 
fee by
  $50.00 for attorneys admitted more than three years and $25.00 for 
attorneys
  admitted three years or less with a 50 percent discount for attorneys 
with
  adjusted gross income under $25,000. That came about as a result of a 
recommendation
  by a blue ribbon committee charged by the Minnesota Supreme Court with 
meeting
  the long-term funding needs of civil legal services for the poor. 
Ultimately,
  the General Assembly of the Minnesota State Bar Association (a 
voluntary bar)
  strongly endorsed the assessment.
 In the year 2002, the Minnesota equivalent of WisTAF received more 
than $10.6
  million to fund civil legal service providers and provide legal 
education resources.
  $1.6 million came from IOLTA; $1.03 million came from attorney 
assessments
  of $50.00 and the bulk of the remainder of $6.86 million came from 
State of
  Minnesota general revenues.
 (b) In 1998, the Ohio Supreme Court increased the attorney 
registration fee
  by $50.00 generating an additional $1.75 million. The court has 
consistently
  allocated some - but not all - of those funds to the Ohio Legal 
Assistance
  Foundation (OLAF): $375,000 in 1998 and 1999, $500,000 in 2000 and 
2001 and
  $1 million in 2002. The 2002 increase was made because of the serious 
reductions
  in funding from the Legal Services Corporation and the reduction of 
IOLTA funds.
  The court recently approved an additional $12.50 increase in the fee 
which
  will be allocated to help OLAF in its effort to stabilize the annual 
grant
  at $1 million.
 The Ohio Supreme Court made the decision to provide the funding over 
the
  opposition of the Ohio State Bar Association, a voluntary bar 
association.
 (c) In the fall of 2002, the Board of Governors of the Missouri Bar 
(a mandatory
  bar) increased bar dues by $20.00 for every member eligible to 
practice law
  in Missouri. The dues increase was precipitated by a reduction in 
Legal Services
  Corporation revenue due to the 2000 census redistribution, an over 50 
percent
  decrease in IOLTA revenues and an anticipated elimination of 
appropriated money
  by the Missouri legislature.
 (d) In late 2002, the Illinois Supreme Court, on its own motion, 
authorized
  an attorney registration fee increase of $42.00 for the purpose of 
civil legal
  services providers. That fee produced $2.4 million in 2003.
 (e) Michigan generated approximately $8 million for civil legal 
service providers
  in 2002. $1.5 million of that came from IOLTA but approximately $6 
million
  came from filing fees which are earmarked for legal services for the 
poor.
  Michigan does not assess members of the Bar, but it has a very active 
initiative
  among practitioners that has raised $4 million over two years for an 
endowment
  designed for civil legal services.
 (f) In 2003, the Texas Legislature increased bar dues by $65.00. The 
money
  generated will be split evenly between civil legal assistance and 
innovative
  criminal indigent defense projects. The legislation is scheduled to 
sunset
  in four years.
Wisconsin Has Not Met the Legal Needs of the 
Poor.
15. In 1996, a Wisconsin State Bar Commission on Delivery of Legal 
Services
  concluded that Wisconsin's civil legal service programs were so 
grossly underfunded
  that they served only a fraction of low income people needing legal 
assistance.
  More important, the Commission concluded that Wisconsin lawyers had 
fallen
  far behind their colleagues in other states where the private bar was 
successfully
  implementing different strategies to raise funds for legal services. 
The State
  Bar of Wisconsin allocated $75,000 to organize a private campaign 
called the
  Equal Justice Coalition to raise funds. Fund-raising began in 1997 
with a goal
  of raising $5 million over three years: $2.5 million from lawyers and 
law firms
  and $2.5 million from foundations and corporations. At the end of the 
three-year
  campaign in June of 2000, the Equal Justice Coalition had raised about 
$1.2
  million with $330,000 coming from law firms, $250,000 from 
corporations and
  foundations and $620,000 from individual attorneys and other 
individuals. These
  gifts came from only 900 donors, mostly individual attorneys. Less 
than five
  percent of Wisconsin licensed attorneys contributed. In short, the 
effort to
  raise a large sum of money as an endowment to support legal services 
programs
  into the future was not successful. Instead the funds were slowly 
exhausted
  as they were distributed to legal assistance organizations. Recently, 
the Equal
  Justice Coalition closed its office and terminated all of its full 
time employees
  as its board of directors reassesses the strategic direction of the 
organization.
 16. A comment from the campaign literature put out by the Equal 
Justice Coalition
  in March of 2001 as it attempted to encourage lawyers to solicit 
annual giving
  is as instructive today as it was then:
 "[W]e learned some important general things about lawyers' 
giving to
  legal services. We learned that prospective lawyer and law firm donors 
were
  largely uninformed about Wisconsin's provision of civil legal services 
to the
  poor and the need for the private bar's support... ." - EJC Memo 
to 2001
  Campaign Committee Members, 3/5/01.
 17. In July of 2002, the ABA Journal carried an article 
describing
  the profession's lack of commitment to pro bono work. The article 
quoted Gene
  R. Nichol, Dean of the University of North Carolina School of Law in 
Chapel
  Hill:
 "Study after study shows about 80 percent of the legal needs of 
the
  poor are unmet."
 
 "Less than one percent of our total expenditure for lawyers 
goes towards
  services for the poor, but legal aid budgets are capped at levels 
making effective
  representation of the poor a statistical impossibility."
 
 "We leave the poor unrepresented in the most crushing problems 
of life:
  divorce, child custody, domestic violence, housing and benefits 
disputes. What
  passes for civil justice among the have-nots is stunning."
 
 "I can report from personal experience that bar associations 
have fought
  mandatory pro bono requirements with the zeal and passion unsurpassed. 
Sometimes
  we act exactly like a self-regulated monopoly would be expected 
to." -
  Margaret Graham Tebs, "Lag in Legal Services," ABA 
Journal,
  July 2002, p. 67.
 18. On March 21, 2003, the Board of Governors of the State Bar of 
Wisconsin
  by a vote of 30 to 7 rejected a resolution to support mandatory pro 
bono reporting
  for a limited four-year period.
 19. The 2000-2001 Annual Report for the Equal Justice Coalition Fund 
asserts
  that over 500,000 Wisconsin residents live in poverty.
 "Because of their financial situation, they cannot afford a 
lawyer when
  faced with pressing legal problems, such as domestic violence, 
eviction, loss
  of child support, discrimination, termination of government benefits, 
and seizure
  of property or wages.
 "Fortunately, Wisconsin's civil legal services programs are 
able to
  provide 20,000 low-income people with legal assistance each year. 
However,
  legal services programs often must turn away many more families 
because they
  lack the resources to help all of those who need legal help."
 20. A May 2001 article appearing in the Wisconsin Lawyer 
made the
  case as follows:
 "In Wisconsin, civil legal funding available for legal services 
is $13.47
  per low income citizen, placing Wisconsin as the 38th lowest of the 50 
states
  for such funding." - Hannah C. Dugan, "Who's Providing Legal 
Counsel
  to Wisconsin's Poor?," Wisconsin Lawyer, May, 2001, pp. 
10, 13.
 21. In 1995, the Wisconsin Supreme Court denied a petition by the 
Dane County
  Bar Pro Bono Trust Fund for a mandatory reporting of pro bono 
activities. Then
  Chief Justice Heffernan enclosed a letter in the 1995 dues statement 
requesting
  lawyers to voluntarily report their pro bono activities in order to 
confirm
  the Wisconsin Supreme Court's belief that a substantial amount of 
undocumented
  pro bono work is being done in Wisconsin.
 22. Only three percent of the Wisconsin lawyers responded to the 
Chief Justice's
  request making the verification of what is actually being provided 
still a
  matter of mere conjecture.
 23. For the profession as a whole, the following laudable statements 
have
  been largely ineffective:
 (a) The attorney's oath:
 I will never reject, from any consideration personal to myself, the 
cause
  of the defenseless or oppressed, or delay any person's cause for lucre 
or malice.
 (b) SCR 20:6.1 Pro Bono Publico Service:
 A lawyer should render public interest legal service. A lawyer may 
discharge
  this responsibility by providing professional services at no fee or a 
reduced
  fee to persons of limited means or to public service or charitable 
groups or
  organizations, by service in activities or improving the law, the 
legal system
  or the legal profession, and by financial support for organizations 
that provide
  legal services to persons of limited means.
 (c) April 15, 1989 State Bar of Wisconsin Board of Governors 
Resolution:
 1. The State Bar of Wisconsin is committed to expanding civil legal 
services
  for low-income residents of Wisconsin.
 2. The State Bar of Wisconsin recommends that all attorneys in the 
State
  of Wisconsin voluntarily and resolutely agree to perform or contribute 
to legal
  services in one or both of the following ways:
 A. Representation of low-income client(s) without a fee or at a 
substantially-reduced
  fee for at least 25 hours per year through:
 1. Participation in an organized pro bono panel or project; or
 2. Appointment by a state or federal court in civil cases; or
 3. Serving of counsel or otherwise providing legal services directly 
to or
  for an organization whose primary purpose is to serve the needs of 
low-income
  persons; or
 4. Accepting as clients low-income persons whose civil legal needs 
would
  otherwise be unmet.
 B. Contribution of a dollar amount equivalent to 25 hours per year 
to an
  organization or project for the providing of civil legal services for 
services
  for low-income persons.
WisTAF's Goal.
24. With 17,500 members of the Wisconsin 
Bar paying
  full dues, an assessment of $50.00 would produce $850,000 a year in 
additional
  income (beginning in July of 2005). This funding would allow WisTAF to 
maintain
  existing grant levels and give WisTAF time to expand its efforts to 
seek alternative
  sources of revenue. If the court would see fit to rule on the petition 
in the
  spring of 2005 the assessment could go out with the Bar dues 
statements in
  May of 2005.
 25. WisTAF's goal in seeking these funds is not to ensure WisTAF's 
continued
  existence; the purpose is to further the goal for which WisTAF was 
established:
  the continued funding of the provision of civil legal services for the 
people
  of Wisconsin who have a desperate need but cannot afford a lawyer. 
Access to
  counsel for the majority of the poor in this state is effectively 
denied given
  the lack of resources.
 26. The problems surrounding the need for legal services to 
Wisconsin residents
  are deep and complex, but they deserve attention now. The need is 
imperative
  and immediate. Funding the provision of civil legal services needs to 
be addressed
  with a long-term strategy with input from the court, the bar, the 
legislature
  and those in need. The request of this petition does not even bring 
WisTAF
  back to 1986 funding levels.
 27. The request for a $50.00 assessment is an amount less than 
asking a Wisconsin
  lawyer for the value of one billable hour per year.
 28. WHEREFORE, the petitioners request the court to adopt proposed 
SCR Chapter
  14 and for such other and further relief as the court may deem 
necessary.
 Dated at Madison, Wis., this 28th day of May, 2004.
Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe LLP
By: Attorney John S. Skilton
Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation Inc.
By: Deborah M. Smith, President
Patrick F. Norris, Executive Director
1The State Bar of Wisconsin is mounting a 
pilot
  project to increase pro bono service by lawyers.
Wisconsin Lawyer