Allen v. State Bar

21 P.2d 107, 218 Cal. 19, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 450
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1933
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13945.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 107 (Allen v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. State Bar, 21 P.2d 107, 218 Cal. 19, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 450 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Local administrative committee number eight, State Bar of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, upon a hearing duly had, found that the petitioner, William G. Allen, had committed acts of gross moral turpitude and had. violated his oath as an attorney and counselor at law, and basing its conclusions upon said findings recommended to the Board of Governors of The State Bar that he be disbarred and that his name be stricken from the roll of attorneys of the state of California. The Board of *21 Governors of The State Bar, on July 15, 1932, acting upon the findings of said local administrative committee approved and adopted the same as the findings of said Board of Governors, and recommended to this court that said William G. Allen be disbarred from the practice of the law in the state of California.

Petitioner was employed by Mrs. Anna Hoagard, wife of James W. Hoagard and an aged lady, who was injured in an automobile collision, to prosecute her claim against Melvin Pepper, a minor, and J. C. Ferguson, on account of personal injuries sustained by her as the result of the negligence of the two persons last named. James W. Hoagard, her husband, is totally blind in one eye and has but a small percentage of vision in the other eye. Judgment went for Mrs. Hoagard against s^-id minor, Pepper, and Ferguson in the sum of $1500, and costs taxed at $49.

Approximately thirty days after the judgment was entered petitioner collected upon said judgment the sum of $500, and entered a partial satisfaction. Some five or six months thereafter petitioner collected the further sum of $750, and satisfied the judgment in full without the knowledge or consent of his client. She was in need of financial assistance and had repeatedly interviewed petitioner as to the unpaid balance, and upon each occasion he told her that it was not collectible, as the defendants had become bankrupt, and their estates were in the hands of a receiver. Mrs. Hoagard discovered some months thereafter that petitioner had collected an additional sum of $750 by a chance meeting with a person who had actual knowledge that two other persons who were injured in the same accident had been paid the amounts awarded to them under a similar judgment. She thereupon investigated the record and discovered that petitioner had satisfied in full the judgment rendered in her favor for the sum of $1549 upon payment to him of the sum of $1250. The whole of said sum of $750 had been appropriated to his own use in the manner herein related.

Petitioner claimed that his agreement, which was oral, allowed him forty-five per cent of the amount collected, while Mr. Hoagard, who made the agreement with petitioner, said that the understanding was that he was to receive forty per cent of the amount collected. That petitioner did not consult his client as to the advisability of satisfying her *22 judgment in the sum of $1500, plus $49 for costs, is not contradicted. The satisfaction of said judgment was kept from her by deliberate falsehoods which were the invention of petitioner’s dissembling mind. Petitioner admitted that he had not informed either his client or her husband that he had collected said sum of $750, or that he at any time contemplated, or that there was any reason to seek, a compromise of said judgment. His conduct in this respect stands out absolutely indefensible. At the hearing he made a feeble attempt to justify himself in retaining all of the $750 payment by relating three other matters in which he claimed to render some indefinite service. One had to do with a quiet title action to 160 acres of land situate in Riverside County, in which Mrs. Hoagard had some interest. He claims to have written several letters for her, and held a telephone conversation with the party pressing the claim against her, and, according to his statement, by advising Mrs. Hoagard to pay $100, the litigation resulted favorably to her.

Mrs. Hoagard testified that in addition to giving him the $100 above mentioned, she was required to raise an additional sum of $160 for the advantage that came to her out of the transaction, whatever may have been its value or benefit, which is not mentioned. The petitioner was unable to give any positive information as to the transaction, and was uncertain as to whether the proceeding was an action to quiet title or foreclose a mortgage. It would seem most likely from Mrs. Hoagard’s reference to the matter that an attachment had been levied on her property on account of her unpaid bills. His testimony shows very clearly that he performed no service that was more than a trifle in value, and he himself was really conscious that he had not performed any service worth making a charge for. He drew no pleadings, he did not appear in court, and just what convincing force his letters contained does not appear, as he made no attempt to produce them. This transaction occurred after he had collected and appropriated said sum of $750, and before his client had made the discovery of those facts. His client said that she mentioned the matter in a casual way and petitioner at once volunteered his services without cost. The second matter brought in as a defense was that petitioner upon one occasion furnished Mr. Hoa *23 gard with a blank form prescribed by the state for persons making application for a pension for the blind. Hoagard denies that petitioner even furnished the blank, but petitioner admitted his services did not extend beyond furnishing said blank. Mr. Hoagard’s application for a pension was denied.

The third service alleged to have been rendered by petitioner consisted of an effort made by Mrs. Hoagard to resist an order of cancellation by the government of a homestead entry of land in New Mexico made by her deceased son under the Veterans’ Act. At the contest held at New Mexico the homestead entry was canceled. No opposition was pressed by Mrs. Hoagard, as she was informed by an experienced lawyer in such matters that the land was not worth the cost of the contest. Mrs. Hoagard also had had correspondence with a lawyer residing in New Mexico on the subject. Petitioner makes out a sorry case by his own statement. None of the attorneys were paid a fee. Indeed, it does not appear that any felt that he had earned a fee. Petitioner, in this transaction, as in the other two, had no contract of employment with Mrs. Hoagard, and had never rendered her a bill or in any way claimed that she was indebted to him for said services until after he was called to account in this proceeding by his client, and threatened with criminal prosecution by the district attorney of the county of Los Angeles. It was then that he tardily began to build up earned fees as an offset to the moneys he secretively obtained on a judgment and appropriated to himself without making a pretense of accounting to his client.

As a matter (of fact when he first appeared before the local committee he said that all services outside of his fee in the negligence case would not exceed the sum of $20. An examination of the record will amply justify the above statement as to the value of said services. Early in the investigation of his conduct he stated that he had spent the money in taking his wife into Canada, as she was illegally in this country, and the government was about to deport her to England.

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 107, 218 Cal. 19, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-state-bar-cal-1933.