Bar Ass'n of the City of Boston v. Casey

100 N.E. 658, 213 Mass. 549, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1018
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 658 (Bar Ass'n of the City of Boston v. Casey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bar Ass'n of the City of Boston v. Casey, 100 N.E. 658, 213 Mass. 549, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1018 (Mass. 1913).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

The petition for the disbarment of the respondent alleged among other things that he “has not observed the require[550]*550ments of his said oath of office” and “has not continued to be and is not of good moral character, and has been guilty of deceit, malpractice and other gross misconduct.”

After a full hearing the judge found that the respondent had “fraudulently appropriated to his own use a considerable sum of money belonging to his client,” and ordered that he be disbarred. The respondent appealed from the order of disbarment, which appeal seems not to have been prosecuted, but instead thereof, at his request, the presiding judge reported the case to this court upon the question “whether the order of disbarment was justified as a matter of law.” Upon this report it was adjudged by this court that the findings were warranted by the evidence. In giving the opinion of the court Morton, J., further says: “There can be no doubt that the fraudulent misappropriation by the respondent of money belonging to his client constituted a violation of his oath of office, and rendered him guilty of malpractice and justified as matter of law his disbarment. We do not mean to intimate by anything that we have said that Bruce [the client] could not legally have agreed with the respondent that he should have the $800 for such services as he might render, however much in excess that sum would be of a reasonable compensation for what was done. But the presiding judge found as a fact that no such agreement was entered into, but that the money was received by the respondent as attorney for Bruce, and that the respondent fraudulently appropriated to his own use his client’s’ money, and it was on this ground that the disbarment was ordered.”

The opinion further proceeds as follows: “The respondent contends that there was a variance between the allegations of the petition and the proof. No question, however, of variance seems to have been raised at the hearing, and it was, of course, too late to raise it for the first time at the argument of the exceptions in this court. But while the particulars in respect to the matter relied on were not stated with entire accuracy in all- respects, it clearly appears, we think, that the respondent was fully informed as to the substance of the charge against him and had the fullest opportunity to present such facts and evidence bearing upon it as he desired. We discover nothing prejudicial to his rights in the way in which the proceedings were conducted. Boston Bar Association v. Greenhood, 168 Mass. 169. The petition was [551]*551properly presented by the bar association.” Boston Bar Association v. Casey, 196 Mass. 100, 110, 111.

After the rescript affirming the order of disbarment was sent down, and before judgment, the respondent filed in the Superior Court (1) a motion that he be allowed “further time for filing a motion for a new trial” “for the reason that there has been a mistake in law in the finding of facts by the court and rendition therein and for the reason of newly discovered evidence,” and “upon questions of law existing before the finding of the court against the respondent as well as since;” (2) a motion to “vacate the order or judgment of disbarment of the respondent” upon the grounds (a) that the judgment “was premature and without authority of law;” (b) that after the findings made by the court on March 10, 1896, there was no hearing upon the question of sentence or judgment before the same was made and ordered; (c) that there was a material variance'between the allegations of the petition and the findings of the court against the respondent affecting the jurisdiction and authority of the court to make the findings without amendment .to the petition; (d) that the “preliminary findings of fact and the general finding of fact adverse to the respondent cannot be identified with any one or all of the allegations in the petition;” (e) that the respondent was entitled as a matter of right to a separate and formal hearing on the question of the final sentence or judgment, which was not given him; (f) that the petitioner is not entitled “to any judgment of the court in the premises,” nor (g) is it entitled “to any relief or remedy, general or special;” (/¿) that the court has made no findings on the charges concerning the want of moral character of the respondent and concerning the question whether the respondent obtained the money and assignment from Bruce by .false representations, and (i) that the finding that the respondent intended to appropriate the money was based upon his conduct in his interview with the sheriff and since that time; (3) a motion for a new trial (a) because of a mistake of law made by the court in the decision of the case; (6) because the findings of the court were against the evidence and the weight of the evidence; (c) because of newly discovered evidence, and (d) because of “all reasons at law for which a new trial may be granted.” In support of this last motion so far as respected the newly discovered evidence the respondent [552]*552filed a writing entitled “Partial specification under the third ground of the motion for a new trial,” specifying twenty distinct parts of the evidence which he expected to show to be erroneous, of which some were entirely immaterial to the issue tried and the others had only the most remote bearing upon it; he also filed several affidavits of the persons whom he desired to call as witnesses and his own affidavit of four pages as printed in the record before us. While many of the matters contained in his affidavit have only the most remote bearing, if any, upon the real merits of the case, it does contain some statements showing the work done by him as attorney for Bruce and bearing upon the value of his services as such, and also the statement that Bruce, well understanding the meaning and effect of the written assignment made by him to the respondent, intended thereby “that the whole $800-should become absolutely the property of the respondent if the respondent could recover the same from the Commonwealth.”

The respondent further filed a motion to amend the record so that it would show the respective days of the week of certain days of the month therein stated, and also would show that there “was no hearing before the court upon the question of sentence, or judgment, before the. same was made and ordered,” and that “no notice, verbal or in writing, was ever given to the respondent, or his attorney, that there would be any hearing” on this question. This motion was accompanied by an affidavit of the respondent in which he says that he never has received from any source “any notice ... of any hearing to be had upon the judgment of disbarment by the court in said case, or any notice from the court itself; and that in fact ... [he never has] . . . had a hearing or been heard upon the question of . . . [his] . . . disbarment.”

All these four motions were heard by Fox, J., before whom the case originally was heard and by whom was made the order for disbarment; and on September 16, 1908, they were all denied. In denying the motions the judge placed on the record the following memorandum:

“Memorandum on Motion of the Respondent to Vacate and Arrest Judgment, Motion to Amend Record, Motion for New Trial and Motion to Extend the Time for Filing a Motion for New Trial.
“The respondent was given the fullest opportunity to be heard, [553]

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 658, 213 Mass. 549, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bar-assn-of-the-city-of-boston-v-casey-mass-1913.