Application of Kellar

401 P.2d 616, 81 Nev. 240, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 224
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1965
Docket4577
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 401 P.2d 616 (Application of Kellar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Kellar, 401 P.2d 616, 81 Nev. 240, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 224 (Neb. 1965).

Opinions

[241]*241OPINION

By the Court,

Wines, D. J.:

Charles L. Kellar has shown the court 39 years of irreproachable conduct while living in Brooklyn, New York. For some 20 of these years he was engaged in the practice of the law and had an established practice when [242]*242he left New York to make his home in Las Vegas, Nevada, in the spring of 1960. Lawyers and judges with whom he dealt in his practice, have written letters commending his professional competence, sense of ethics and civility. His affiliations portray him as a communicant who attends his church regularly, a party man active in the affairs of his political party, a Negro man sensitive to the problems of his people and persistent in his efforts to solve these problems. His many civic activities while living in New York mark him as a responsible member of his community. He has always been a shrewd and successful investor. He has raised a family of two boys, though the mother of those children and he are now divorced and he has remarried and has two children by his present wife. That he is a scholar of the law is attested to by his having taken and passed the Nevada Bar examination.

The Board of Bar Examiners recommended that he be not admitted on the ground that he had failed to meet character standards. After reviewing the record supplied us we would not have so recommended. We acknowledge that we have the benefit of hindsight and a record supplemented since the time of the board’s recommendation, and the supplementary information favors the petitioner. We apprehend too that the members of the board and of the Local Administrative Committee for District 1 in their investigation of his character were handicapped in their performance and in their duty to this court by a lack of power of subpoena and by a nice observation of our Rule 57. This rule was drafted on the premise that admission to practice in this state is a matter of grace and favor, a notion we are now obliged to discard. Willner v. Committee on Character and Fitness, 373 U.S. 96, 83 S.Ct. 1175, 10 L.Ed.2d 224. Our rule has a function. Confidential reports may properly be used to apprise of but should not be used in the trial of issues as to character.

Here we perceive the mischief of the rule and admit it invites error. When the petitioner could not find his name among the successful applicants of the bar he [243]*243made inquiry. He was informed that the board had sought and obtained leave to file a supplemental report and a recommendation. Further inquiry elicited from the Secretary of the State Bar that it was the policy of the board to obtain a report on the activities of the applicant if he had practiced in another jurisdiction.

When, several months later, the Local Administrative Committee took up the matter the committee had information that the petitioner had associated with subversive organizations and persons in New York, in several instances practiced law in this state, was guilty of impropriety in a real estate transaction, had attempted submission of spurious items to an adjuster of an insurance claim, and had drafted a letter for another person’s signature addressed to Robert Kennedy, Attorney General, charging discrimination in the matter of his application.

At this point we believe the petitioner should have been seasonably and fully advised of these charges, of the intent of the committee to hold a hearing and to take testimony from witnesses and the names of the witnesses should have been endorsed on the notice. Also, at this juncture, counsel should have been appointed to investigate, evaluate, and present the evidence against the petitioner. Having thus removed themselves from the contest the members, not personally involved, could have judiciously ruled upon the issues. At the hearing it is implicit that the petitioner would have been confronted by the witnesses against him, given opportunity to cross-examine, and should have been permitted to call witnesses on his behalf. This is what we read in the text on due process.

Instead, the petitioner was not so noticed nor advised. He was not permitted to confront and cross-examine witnesses against him and did not present any witnesses on his behalf. The committee members interrogated the witnesses and the petitioner and two members were sworn and gave testimony. In this exchange tempers soured and petitioner and the members were soon trading criticisms.

[244]*244The board and the committees while hearing such issues should adjudicate and not advocate. Advocacy predicates assuming and attempting to sustain a point of view and cannot be reconciled with adjudication.

Confidential reports and the testimony of witnesses taken without confrontation and cross-examination and without notice to the applicant as to the issues cannot prevail against an established good character and the testimony of the petitioner.

Proceedings before the Board of Bar Examiners were conducted in the same manner except that the board' heard a number of witnesses who appeared voluntarily to testify on the petitioner’s behalf and were cross-examined by the board. The board did not take any evidence against petitioner and apparently relied on that taken by the Administrative Committee.

We do not intend reading the members of the Administrative Committee and the Board of Bar Examiners a lesson on due process. The record reflects their concern with this aspect of the hearings. Nor do we ignore these facts. At the time of the hearing the board did not have power to subpoena and no funds for retention of counsel. We have, in effect, written a new rule and redefined an old rule so as to comply with the ruling in the Willner case.

Before the opinion in the Willner case was handed down, we had denied a preliminary motion by the petitioner Kellar in the instant matter, to disclose the confidential written reports submitted by the National Conference of Bar Examiners and by other persons. Ex parte Kellar, 79 Nev. 28, 377 P.2d 927. At that time the disclosure would have served no purpose. As a practical matter, the hearings before the committee and the board had served to give the petitioner notice of the issues on the subject of his fitness and character.

He was given an opportunity to deny, to explain, and to discuss the charges reflecting on his character and fitness and he did in the course of the hearings. By this [245]*245court he was granted leave to supplement the record and submit his affidavits and those of other persons having a firsthand knowledge of the facts. This procedure did not afford the petitioner nor the members of the committee and the board opportunity to confront and cross-examine the witnesses. This approach is not tolerable any longer. But we persist in our previous conclusion that we are not required to disclose confidential written reports by the Willner case. That case would require us and other persons acting as arms of the court, if issues result from a study of the confidential reports, to state the charges against the applicant, and if challenged to produce for confrontation and cross-examination, all witnesses on the issues.

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303 N.W.2d 663 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1981)
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447 P.2d 658 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1968)
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Petition of Schaengold
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Application of Kellar
401 P.2d 616 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
401 P.2d 616, 81 Nev. 240, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-kellar-nev-1965.