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MARTIN LEE SEGLER

JurisdictionAustralia — Western Australia
BodyLegal Practice Board of Western Australia (LPBWA)
Professionlawyer — 572 Hay Street PERTH WA 6000
Case numberLegal Profession Complaints Committee v Segler [2010] WASAT 135 and [2010] WASAT 135 (S)
Date30 September 2010
HearingState Administrative Tribunal
OutcomeProfessional Misconduct and Unsatisfactory Professional Conduct and Suspended

Allegation / charges

Professional Misconduct and Unsatisfactory Professional Conduct and Suspended

Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision

SanctionSuspension
Suspension2 months
FineAUD 7,500
CostsAUD 8,000
Dishonesty foundYes

The State Administrative Tribunal (WA) found legal practitioner Martin Lee Segler guilty of three counts of unsatisfactory professional conduct (breaches of s 230(1) and s 237(1) of the Legal Practice Act 2003 and failure to advise a client about taxing a bill) and three counts of professional misconduct (sending a letter with improper threats, knowingly and intentionally misleading a magistrate that a client had a criminal record, and neglect in failing to file a defence/inform the client). The tribunal, applying Kyle, treated knowingly misleading the court as dishonest conduct. It rejected the LPCC's push to strike him off, finding he remained a fit and proper person, and instead suspended his practising certificate for two months (concurrent with a one-month suspension), reprimanded him, imposed fines totalling $7,500 to the Legal Practice Board, and ordered $8,000 costs to the LPCC.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Extensive prior disciplinary history including earlier suspensions, reprimand and fines
  • Elements of repetition (earlier finding regarding a similar threatening letter)
  • Misleading the court went to the heart of a practitioner's duty as an officer of the court
  • Persistent failure to discontinue proceedings over many months despite reminders and after payment received
  • Conduct caused material prejudice to second client (default judgment entered)

Mitigating factors:

  • Practitioner expressed unreserved contrition and remorse and demonstrated insight into his conduct
  • Genuine fear for his safety following grossly abusive and threatening voicemail messages from the client (who was later convicted), providing context for the court-misleading conduct
  • Letter conduct occurred within six weeks of an earlier similar letter, before the earlier disciplinary decision was delivered
  • Breach of s 230(1) was initially only a technical breach as client had agreed the fee and been given counsel's memorandum
  • Practitioner already suffered significant consequences (closure of sole practice, loss of livelihood) and was in poor health and impecunious

Duties engaged

Other decisions involving this respondent

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Documents

Source: https://www.lpbwa.org.au/getmedia/e88f5464-6f25-45e2-b150-f9c594dd81c1/register_of_disciplinary_action.pdf