Hunter used the fake names to hire two moving companies, including Crown Relocations, as he moved his possessions from Waipukurau to Hastings in October 2012 and from Ashurst to Waipukurau in April 2012.
The companies were left with bills owing of $5434 and $2600, after they believed they were in contact with the ghost identities of the solicitors.
Judge Down also ordered Hunter to pay $2600 in reparation to Crown Relocations.
In January, Hunter was sentenced to 300 hours' community work, after he pleaded guilty to one charge of operating an aircraft without the required documentation.
He had previously appeared in court for offences under the Civil Aviation Act and the Crimes Act.
In November 1998, he was convicted for operating an aircraft without appropriate and current documents, fraudulently making documents, placing others in unnecessary danger and falsely representing himself as a pilot with an instructor's rating.
His lawyer, Philip Jensen, said yesterday his client came from a poor background, was not a "mental case" but a complex character.
Judge Down said Hunter had many sentences of imprisonment in the past but was reluctant to send him back to jail because it may be "damaging or reinforcing of the opinions you hold of authority".
"However, it must be in the public interest given the extent of his fraudulent history," Judge Down said. He said Hunter was a querulous complainer who had been abused as a child and "not taken care of as he should have been". Judge Down suspected punishment would not deter Hunter from future offending and his only real hope of reducing his criminal activities was to address his "deep-seated issues".
"I do not detect any sense of remorse ... but I do take into account your personal circumstance," he said.
Hunter was jailed five times in the 1990s and was first convicted in Wellington in 1974.