Application of Sedillo

347 P.2d 162, 66 N.M. 267
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1959
Docket6564
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 347 P.2d 162 (Application of Sedillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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 Sedillo, 347 P.2d 162, 66 N.M. 267 (N.M. 1959).

Opinion

CARMODY, Justice.

This is an original proceeding by C. B. Sedillo, asking that he be granted, on motion, a license to practice law.

The precise question involved is whether the legislature or the court has the power to determine the qualifications of a person seeking to practice law.

Applicant does not question, and actually admits, the inherent power of the court to grant or withhold the rights of admission to the practice of law. In fact, the following statement is made in his brief :

“The petitioner is aware of, and accepts, the generally conceded rule that the power to admit a person to the practice of the law is inherent in the judiciary and that such power is not subject to- legislative control.”

However, the position of the applicant is that this court has long acquiesced in the exercise by the legislature of the promulgation of rules for and qualifications of those seeking to be admitted to practice law, and that in view of this the court should not disturb this long-standing policy.

By Chapter 100, Session Laws of 1925, the integrated bar was established in New Mexico. This chapter, as amended, appears commencing at § 18-1-2, 1953 Compilation. For the purpose of this case, it need only be noted that § 18-1-7 provides as follows:

“The Supreme Court may annul or modify any rule, regulation or by-law adopted by the board relative to discipline or admission to the bar.”

§ 18-1-8 provides as follows:

“With the advice and approval of the Supreme Court, the board shall have power to constitute and appoint five (5) members of the state bar as a special committee to examine candidates for admission to the bar as to their qualifications, and to recommend such as fulfill the same to the Supreme Court for admission to practice under this act. The approval by the Supreme Court of such recommendations shall entitle such applicants to be enrolled as members of the state bar and to practice law, upon taking oath to support the Constitution and laws of the United States and the state of New Mexico. Such special committee shall be known as the state board of bar examiners and, until its appointment, its powers and duties shall be exercised and fulfilled by the present existing board of bar examiners, and, until the adoption of rules prescribing the requirements for admission to the bar, such requirements shall be as prescribed by the board of bar examiners.”

Pursuant to the above two sections of the statute, rules governing admission to the bar were adopted, and it appears that in every case, either of adoption or amendment thereto since 1934, the rules were specifically approved by order of the supreme court.

The authority granted by statute to the board of commissioners is supplemented, if not completely embraced, by the adoption by the supreme court of its rule No. 3, compiled as § 21-2-1(3), which gives to the board of commissioners the power to determine and prescribe by rules the qualifications and requirements for admission to practice law. Pursuant to the authority granted, the commission promulgated certain rules, the only one of materiality to this case being in its present form as follows:

“2. No person, other than those admitted on certificate from other states, shall be granted a license to practice law in this state or shall be entitled to take examination for admission to the Bar unless such person shall have graduated from a law school approved by the American Bar Association as meeting the standards of that Association.”

The above rule was adopted by the board of bar commissioners on January 9, 1934, although it did at that time have an additional provision relating to those who had commenced a course of study at variance with the rule prior to its adoption date, but this was subsequently eliminated. However, the supreme court, by a formal order entered on January 12, 1934, which set out the above and other rules, approved their adoption. Since 1934, the court, on at least nine occasions, by a formal order entered in its records, has adopted and approved amendments, not only to the above quoted rule, but to other rules recommended by the board of commissioners. Mention of these matters is made to show that the court, for at least the last twenty-five years, has participated actively in the establishing of the qualifications of prospective members of the bar.

The applicant here is apparently unable to meet the educational qualification of the rule, but bases his request for admission on motion upon § 18-1-26, N.M.S.A., 1953 Comp., as amended, being Chapter 106, § 1, of the Session Laws of 1957, which provides, insofar as material, as follows:

“Provided further that nothing in this act shall be construed to prohibit persons who are citizens of the United States and of the state of New Mexico, and who. have resided in the state of New Mexico for more than twenty [20] years, and who shall have studied law for more than three [3] years in a law office and under the direction of some member of the bar of this state, or in a law school, and who shall have practiced before one [1] or more of the United States land offices in this state and the general land office of the department of the interior from time to time for twenty [20] years or more, and who shall be vouched for as to his integrity, honesty and respect for moral ethics, by six [6] reputable lawyers of the state of New Mexico who are members of the bar of this state in good standing; and the board of bar examiners on application of any person who possesses the qualifications herein specified shall recommend to the Supreme Court his admission to the bar on motion and the Supreme Court shall issue to such person a license to practice law in all the courts of the state.”

It is obvious that the legislative act established educational requirements which were less than those provided for by the rule. Legislation of this type is held to be an invasion of the power of the judiciary in at least sixteen jurisdictions, and there are perhaps three holding otherwise. See 144 A.L.R. 150 for a very comprehensive annotation of cases up to 1943. Two more recent cases on the subject have been decided by the Supreme Courts of Washington and Idaho, and, although applicant seeks to distinguish these cases, from a careful examination of not only these decisions but of the statutes and rules of the courts involved, we feel that they are almost what might be termed “red cow” cases.

In Application of Levy, In re Warnock, 1945, 23 Wash.2d 607, 161 P.2d 651, 654, 162 A.L.R. 805, the Supreme Court of Washington had before it a similar problem to that which is before us, in that the legislature had, by act, provided for the admission to the bar of war veterans on the basis of certain factual requirements at variance with those provided in the rule for admission. It should be mentioned that Washington has an integrated bar just as we do, and, although there is some difference in the wording of their statute, to all intents and purposes it is almost identical.

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Bluebook (online)
347 P.2d 162, 66 N.M. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-sedillo-nm-1959.