Barnes v. Kyle

306 S.W.2d 1, 202 Tenn. 529, 6 McCanless 529, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 436
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 306 S.W.2d 1 (Barnes v. Kyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Kyle, 306 S.W.2d 1, 202 Tenn. 529, 6 McCanless 529, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 436 (Tenn. 1957).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swepston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This phase of the above-styled case is before us on writ of certiorari.

*531 This opinion deals only' with the question whether Hallie K. Biner should have been allowed to intervene in the principal case.

That case was commenced by Katherine Gr. Barnes filing her original hill for the purpose of removing as a cloud upon her title the claim of the City of Elizabethton under various and sundry conveyances. She based her claim to some 200 lots located in the City of Elizabethton on a tax deed she had obtained from the State.

The city filed an answer and cross-bill- against Mrs. Barnes and her husband, Howard Maxwell Barnes, asserting title to the same lots and attacking Mrs. Barnes ’ title on numerous grounds, including fraud on the part of Mr. and Mrs. Barnes.

The Chancellor and the Court of Appeals made a concurrent finding of facts with regard to the fraud and we denied the petition for certiorari filed by Mr. and Mrs. Barnes to this Court and concurred in the result.

The principal case was heard on depositions and the cross-defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Barnes, did not themselves testify nor did they offer any other testimony but relied solely on the deed from the State to Mrs. Barnes. After the case had been submitted to the Chancellor for decision, Miss Hallie K. Biner, a practicing and duly licensed attorney, filed an intervening petition for the purpose of obtaining a hearing before the Chancellor on alleged charges and imputations of fraud on her part while acting as State Land Agent of Carter County and to clear her professional name of any and all such charges. The petition was dismissed by the Chancellor without a hearing and Miss Biner prosecuted a writ of *532 error to the Court of Appeals, which Court reversed the Chancellor and held that Miss Riner had a right to intervene to protect her reputation because of the imputations of fraud charged against her in the cross-bill by the City of Elizabethton, to which she was not made a party nor in which proceeding was she called as a witness. The cdy has filed its petition for certiorari which was granted and we now dispose of the matter.

Her intervention petition is predicated on the theory that her professional standing as an attorney and the incidental right to enjoy the confidence and respect of the Courts, of which she is an officer, and of the fellow-members of the Bar and her right and moral competence to practice her profession and earn a livelihood and property rights which she is entitled to have protected. It is charged that these rights have been seriously infringed upon and damaged in this case by the imputations and charges of fraud made by the city without notice of an opportunity to. be heard, and that she has been thus effectually deprived of her rights without due process of law as vouchsafed to her by the Constitutions of the United States, Amend. 14, and of the State of Tennessee, art. 1, sec. 8; that these rights cannot be vindicated in any other Court proceeding because of the privilege of immunity which cloaks judicial proceedings.

The Court of Appeals, in upholding her right to intervene, stated that it found no evidence that the city acted malevolently in injecting petitioner’s name in this contest between third parties; that it is merely a case where a material and important issue could not be developed without involving the professional conduct of a member of the Bar; that petitioner being without remedy other *533 wise when so caught up by circumstances beyond her control should be entitled to seek vindication in the very proceedings in which the injury occurred; that the right to practice a profession is a property right, citing State Board of Medical Examiners v. Friedman, 150 Tenn. 152, 263 S.W. 75; Janeway v. State Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 33 Tenn.App. 280, 231 S.W.2d 584, that deprivation or invasion of the right should not be left to chance and beyond the pale of legal remedies.

The opinion then cited the case of Dobb v. Reese, 216 Ind. 449, 24 N.E.2d 995, 128 A.L.R. 574. This is the only case found by counsel or the Court where intervention was allowed under- similar circumstances. That was a suit to set aside for fraud a decree of adoption alleged to have been procured through the fraud of Dobb, who acted as attorney for the adoptive parents, wherein Dobb was not made a party to the suit but was allowed to intervene for the purpose of protecting his reputation and standing. This case will be referred to infra.

The Court of Appeals was further of the opinion that the right to intervene could well be predicated on the interest of the public in the integrity of the Bar as well as upon the duty of the Courts themselves to enforce the observance of ethical standards by attorneys who are officers of the Court; that it is not in the public interest for an attorney to practice under a cloud of suspicion.

The Court then said:

“This Court in Ingle v. Ingle, referred to in Ingle v. Kivett, 30 Tenn. App. 1 [201 S.W.2d 545], upon its own motion took note of grave unprofessional conduct of an attorney and referred the matter to the Tennessee Bar *534 Association wliicli resulted in the disbarment suit of Ingle v. Kivett, supra, and, more recently, in Motor Ins. Corp. v. Mallarcher, Hamilton Equity, we recognize the right of an attorney to complain of a finding reflecting upon his professional conduct.”

The Court of Appeals then states correctly that petitioner has no interest in the subject matter as provided in T.C.A. sec. 20-116, that is, that her rights are not in any way connected with the property involved in the principal case, but holds that her rights derive from an entirely different source and are protected by Art. 1, sec. 17, of the Constitution of Tennessee, providing as follows :

“That all Courts shall be open; and every man, for an injury done him in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial, or delay * * *.”

The Court then again refers to Dobb v. Reese, supra, in which the Indiana Court applied in similar fashion the almost identical constitutional provision.

With all deference to the able Court of Appeals we are of opinion that this constitutional provision cannot be given the broad and perhaps unlimited construction found in the Court of Appeals opinion. The phrase “an injury done him” necessarily means a legal injury, that is, a violation of his legal rights in some way, or a violation of law that affect him adversely.

hi 11 Am. Jur. 1124, section 326, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
306 S.W.2d 1, 202 Tenn. 529, 6 McCanless 529, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-kyle-tenn-1957.