Mark Edward Madison is an active member of the California Bar and was admitted 8th June 1992. Mark graduated from Western State University COL.

Lawyer Information

NameMark Edward Madison
First Admitted8 June 1992 (32 years, 11 months ago)
StatusActive
Bar Number158786

Contact

Current Email[email protected]
Phone Number714-449-3365
Fax Number714-242-9790

Schools

Law SchoolWestern State University COL (Fullerton CA)
Undergraduate SchoolOccidental Coll (Los Angeles CA)

Address

Current Address1440 N Harbor Blvd Ste 900
Fullerton, CA 92835-4122
Map

History

22 May 2008Active (16 years, 11 months ago)
23 March 2008Not eligible to practice law in CA (17 years, 1 month ago)
Discipline w/actual suspension 07-PM-13676
15 December 2006Discipline, probation; no actual susp. 05-O-01797 (18 years, 4 months ago)
8 June 1992Admitted to the State Bar of California (32 years, 11 months ago)

Discipline Summaries

March 22, 2008

MARK E. MADISON [#158786], 50, of Fullerton Probation was revoked, the previous stay of suspension was lifted and he was actually suspended for 60 days and placed on two years of probation. The order took effect March 22, 2008.

Madison failed to comply with probation conditions attached to a 2005 discipline: he submitted three quarterly probation reports and three certified public accountant reports late and he did not timely meet with the bar’s probation office after the discipline was imposed.

He was originally suspended because he did not maintain a client’s funds in trust or maintain a record of her money, subjecting the client to potential liability. He also failed to promptly release her file.

In mitigation, Madison had severe family problems — his son was diagnosed with leukemia and faces a potential bone marrow transplant, his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent four surgeries and chemotherapy and his father had surgery to remove one-third of his lung.

December 15, 2006

MARK EDWARD MADISON [#158786], 49, of Fullerton was suspended for one year, stayed, placed on two years of probation and was ordered to take the MPRE within one year. The order took effect Dec. 15, 2006.

Madison stipulated that in a personal injury matter, he failed to perform legal services competently, promptly return a client file or properly maintain client funds in trust or keep proper records of his client trust account.

When Madison’s office received a settlement check for the client, the deposit was not recorded. Because he was unaware of the deposit, the insurance company was not reimbursed for more than a year for a medical payment it had made; Madison made the payment using his own funds.

In mitigation, Madison’s bookkeeping problems occurred after his office was burglarized twice and his son was diagnosed with leukemia and his wife with breast cancer. He now uses an accountant to handle his bookkeeping.