Bar Rules Comm. of the State of Ark. v. Richardson

150 S.W.2d 953, 202 Ark. 417, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 21, 1941
Docket4-6304
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 S.W.2d 953 (Bar Rules Comm. of the State of Ark. v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bar Rules Comm. of the State of Ark. v. Richardson, 150 S.W.2d 953, 202 Ark. 417, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 188 (Ark. 1941).

Opinions

McHaney, J.

Appellant, the Bar Buies Committee of the state of Arkansas, filed charges of unprofessional conduct against appellee, a licensed attorney at law of Walnut Bidge, Arkansas, in the office of the clerk of the Lawrence chancery court and sought his disbarment as a member of the bar of this state. The charges consisted of two counts in the form of a complaint. We find it necessary to consider only the first count which is as follows: “Said Boy Bichardson, on or about September 5,1939, and during the term of circuit court at Walnut Bidge, in session about said date, represented E. G. Fooks, plaintiff, in a suit in the Lawrence circuit court for the eastern district, No. 1906, against D. F. Jones Construction Company, Inc., defendant, which suit resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for personal injuries and an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of Arkansas, where the cause was reversed on January 29, 1940, D. F. Jones Construction Co. v. Fooks, 199 Ark. 861, 136 S. W. 2d 487, the appeal being taken and the decision on appeal rendered in two consolidated canses covering the same alleged injury.

“Also at the same term he represented one Hathcoat in a suit for personal injuries against one Sloan, which also resulted in a verdict and judgment from which an appeal was taken, and by said court decided, Sloan v. Hathcoat, 199 Ark. 530, 134 S. W. 2d 873, 136 S. W. 2d 1020, being affirmed on condition of remittitur.

“Prior to convening of said court the said Boy Biehardson and his agents, Clyde Bobbins and others, approached prospective jurors offering inducements to such jurors to attend and act as jurors and not to seek excuse and promising remuneration and favors for verdicts favorable to said Boy Biehardson. For further details of such approaches and dealings with jurors, reference is made to the affidavits of Fred A. Isgrig, Harry C. Bobinson, C. F. Grigsby, H. C. (Pud) Hutchinson, W. M. Fallis, Dent Brady, and Clyde Bobbins, which are contained in the bill of exceptions in the case of Fooks v. D. F. Jones Construction Company, Inc., and such affidavits are further referred to in the opinion of Chief Justice Grieein Smith, MoHaney and Baker, Justices, concurring.”

To this complaint appellee filed a general demurrer and motion to transfer to the circuit court, both of which were overruled at the conclusion of the evidence. Appellee answered with a general denial and a plea of res judicata on the grounds, 1, that the matters charged were adjudicated in the motions for new trials in the Fooks and Hathcoat cases; and, 2, had recently been investigated by the prosecuting attorney and grand jury, who refused to indict him.

Trial before Chancellor J. M. Shinn, on exchange of circuits, resulted in a judgment dismissing the complaint for want of sufficient proof to support the charges laid, hence this appeal.

This disbarment proceeding is the aftermath of two personal injury cases tried in the Lawrence circuit court and appealed to this court late in 1939 and early in 1940, the first being Sloan v. Hathcoat, 199 Ark. 530, 134 S. W. 2d 873, 136 S. W. 2d 1020, and the second being D. F. Jones Construction Co., Inc., v. Fooks, 199 Ark 861, 136 S. W. 2d 487. A reference to these cases and particularly to the latter, both the original and concurring opinions will be enlightening* and will obviate the necessity here of quoting the evidence produced in the trial below in ex-tenso. As stated in the brief of the Bar Rules Committee: ‘ ‘ The duty to present charges against lawyers is naturally most unpleasant and the committee approaches such matter with regret. However, in view of situation developed in the case of D. F. Jones Construction Company, Inc., v. Fooks, 199 Ark. 861, 136 S. W. 2d 487, it became very plainly the duty of the committee to file charges and in fact such charges were practically demanded by public sentiment of the profession.” We appreciate the sentiment of the committee thus expressed and were gratified to hear counsel for appellee say in oral argument that the committee had been very kind and considerate of them and their client" in the prosecution of the case, and that no rancor or ill feeling exists towards them.

Clyde Robbins, the self-confessed tool of appellee, employed by him to fix jurors at the March, 1939, term of the Lawrence circuit court, testified substantially as he did on the motion for a new trial in the Fooks case, to the effect that appellee was to pay him $5 for every juror he interviewed and $5 more if the verdict was favorable; that he was employed “To talk to them and see if they were all right.” To “see if they were for the Richardsons.” He was asked and answered as follows: “Q. What promises did he have you to make them? A. That they would be treated right in some of the cases and in one case he promised two per cent, of the verdict.” The witness talked to prospective jurors Dent Brady, Pud Hutchinson and Peyton Lately, and Brady and Hutchinson told him they wquld stand “hitched.” This witness was very successfully impeached and the trial court apparently put no credence in his testimonj7’ and we cannot say that he should have been believed in view of his bad reputation and his criminal record, although he is corroborated in the fact that he did interview both Brady and Hutchinson in an attempt to “fix” them for appellee by both of them. Bnt he stands alone in saying he was employed to do so by appellee. Bnt conceding that Robbins is not worthy of belief, still we have the testimony of jurors Charley Grigsby and W. F. Fallis to consider. Grigsby testified that he is a school teacher, was in appellee’s office a few days before the March, 1939, term of circuit court convened, and talked with appellee in the office. He said: “Well, I was in there and he said something- about me being on the jury, and I told him ‘yes, I was, but I didn’t guess I would get to serve’ and he wanted to know the reason. I told him that I was teaching school and didn’t have any one to take my place. He suggested to me that I could let his wife take my place and me go ahead and serve, and I told him that I didn’t think they would do it. . . . He wanted to know if my wife could take my place. . . . I told him I didn’t know whether I could do it or not, that she needed to be at home, and what I would get up here wouldn’t justify me to stay out-of the schoolroom and let her leave her work.” He said he and appellee had always been good friends and that he had supported him in his campaigns for office. “He said he would like for me to serve if I could, that he felt like I was a friend to him and would treat him right ... I believe he said that he felt like I would be capable of rendering a fair verdict, and after I heard the evidence in the eases that he had, that he felt like that I . . . said that after I heard the testimony in the cases that he had that he felt sure I would see fit to render him a verdict. . . . He asked me if I knew any one else on the jury that was not a friend to him, that might not give him a fair trial; to let him know if there was any one else I could talk to that would not be fair, and to let .him know.” He testified he talked to juror- Fallis, a second cousin, and told him appellee had a case coming up for trial and would expect “us” to treat him right. He admitted that he had had a drink on that day, but denied he was drunk. Appellee denied that he had any such conversation with Grigsby, but admitted that the prospective juror was in his office and was drunk at the time. The fact that they were close personal and political friends is not disputed.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W.2d 953, 202 Ark. 417, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bar-rules-comm-of-the-state-of-ark-v-richardson-ark-1941.