Application of Stone

288 P.2d 767, 74 Wyo. 389, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 42
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1955
Docket4-756
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 288 P.2d 767 (Application of Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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 Stone, 288 P.2d 767, 74 Wyo. 389, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 42 (Wyo. 1955).

Opinion

*390 OPINION

J. Norman Stone,

formerly known as Jack N. Stein-berg, was duly admitted to practice law in the District of Columbia and there practiced law for approximately ten years. Thereafter on January 7, 1955, he filed an application in this court to be admitted as a practicing attorney in this state. The petition was duly referred to the Board of Law Examiners as required by law. That board made an investigation and on August 8, 1955, filed in this court its report recommending to this court that applicant was not qualified to become a member of the bar of this state. Upon learning of the action of the board informally, applicant filed in this court a demand for a hearing in open court. Applicant asked that he be permitted to subpoena all the mem *391 bers of the Board of Law Examiners and examine them under oath. If the court should permit that every time the board makes an adverse report, we fear we should find no members of the bar of this state willing to serve on the board and perform their duties properly, onerous as they necessarily are.

This court entered its order directing the applicant to show cause in writing why the report of the members of the Board of Law Examiners should not be approved. The applicant has failed to show such cause. He has demanded a trial by jury. This court never summons a jury in matters pending before it. The district court has no authority in this matter. We know of no case where it has been held that an applicant for admission to the bar is entitled to have his application decided by a jury. The proceeding before us is not a disbarment proceeding in which an attorney at law is entitled to know the specific charges against him. Applicant takes the position that he is entitled to be admitted as a member of the bar of this state as a matter of constitutional right. He stated in a radio broadcast at Sheridan, Wyoming, on. September 18, 1955, that the law of this state provides that if a lawyer is a practicing lawyer in another jurisdiction and has a good moral character “he must, he must be admitted here in Wyoming as a lawyer.” Applicant is mistaken. The courts have held that he is not entitled to be admitted to the bar as a matter of right. 7 C.J.S. 708. To practice law is a privilege and not a right. The admittance to the bar in this state is a matter of judicial discretion. The Supreme Court of Oregon has a rule that no foreign attorney should be admitted without recommendation from three members of that state’s Board of Law Examiners. In Ex parte Keeley, 189 P. 885, it was held that while the court might dispense with such recommendation the reason therefor should be plain, the court saying: “Of course, the admission *392 of an applicant is ultimately and finally for this court, and is matter of broad discretion, and we could, no doubt, in a proper case, disregard or suspend the rule and admit an applicant without the required recommendation ; but it would have to be a plain case before we would feel justified in doing so. We do not feel that this is such a case.”

In the case at bar, there is not alone an absence of recommendation on the part of the board, but a positive recommendation that the applicant should be denied admission. Judging from the tenor of the decision, the Oregon court would doubtless refuse admission in such a case. In Mitchell v. State Board of Law Examiners, 155 Mich. 452, 119 N.W. 587, the court stated that to justify the court in refusing to follow an adverse recommendation of the board of law examiners, it must appear that the board has abused its discretion. In Spears v. State Bar of California, 211 Cal. 183, 294 P. 697, 700, 72 A.L.R. 923, the court stated: “While the powers of the committee of bar examiners are merely recommendatory and not binding upon this court, nevertheless, the committee of bar examiners was expressly created by statutory enactment for the definite purpose of relieving the court of the onerous duty of examining applicants for admission and investigating their fitness both as to legal learning and moral character to practice law in this state, and this court, recognizing this fact, will refuse to exercise its power in contravention to the adverse recommendation of the committee of bar examiners unless a convincing showing is made by the applicant to the court that such adverse recommendation is not based upon sound premises and valid reasoning.”

In this state we have five members on the Board of Law Examiners. They are all eminent and respectable members of the bar of this state, one of them having *393 served more than thirty years. There is no indication that these members are prejudiced or have made their recommendation without good cause. The legislature of this state has seen fit to create this Board of Law Examiners and has directed that all applications for admission to the bar shall be referred to that board to pass upon the qualifications of all applicants to be admitted to the bar. § 2-102 Wyoming Compiled Statutes, 1945. Inferentially at least the legislature has thus directed this court to depend, to a large extent at least, upon the recommendation of the board. We do not feel justified in disregarding that recommendation without a showing that the board has acted arbitrarily and abused its discretion. We find no such abuse.

We have examined the report of the board and the evidence submitted to it. Because of the distance of the District of Columbia from Wyoming, the board was unable to make ¿ firsthand investigation of certain matters brought to its attention. In consequence, it was compelled to seek the assistance of a nationally known investigational service which was available to them only under the express promise that all information communicated must be held as confidential. Under these circumstances, we are not privileged to state the source of that information. Applicant demands that he be furnished with the details of the information received by the Board of Law Examiners tending to show that he should not be admitted to practice law here. However, he signed and swore to the following, among other things, when he sought to be admitted, directed to The National Conference of Bar Examiners : “I, J. Norman Stone, hereby apply for a character report in connection with my application for admission to practice law in the State of Wyoming. I understand that I will not receive and am not entitled to a copy of the report nor to know its contents. I agree to give any further information which may be required in refer- *394 enee to my past record and consent to having this investigation made and such information as may be received reported to the examining authority.” In another part of the same application he stated: “I understand * * * that said report shall be strictly confidential to the examining authority.” That confidential information may be used to determine the fitness of the applicant to practice law in this state is recognized by § 2-208 Wyoming Compiled Statutes, 1945, which, while limited to information obtained from members of the bar of this state, should we think be construed as applicable in all cases.

A valuable case on the point before us is the case of In re O’Brien’s Petition, 79 Conn. 46, 63 A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 P.2d 767, 74 Wyo. 389, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-stone-wyo-1955.