Brooks v. Laws

208 F.2d 18
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1953
DocketMisc. 310
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 208 F.2d 18 (Brooks v. Laws) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Laws, 208 F.2d 18 (D.C. Cir. 1953).

Opinions

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

The matter before us is a motion filed by Homer Brooks asking our leave to file in this court a complaint. In the proffered complaint he would pray for an order directed to the Chief Judge and the Associate Judges of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. The order thus sought would require the District Court to accept and file a notice of appeal which Brooks sought to lodge from an “order” (actually in form a letter) alleged to have been [19]*19entered by that court on October 11, 1951. So the matter before us is in effect a request for our permission to bring an action for mandamus.1

The facts, both procedural and substantive, as they are presented in the papers before us, are in such volume and detail as to be complicated. We treat the two kinds of facts separately.

Procedural facts. On or about March 4, 1948, Brooks filed with the District Court, for the attention of the Secretary of ^ its Committee ^ on ^ Admissions and Grievances, an application for admission, upon motion, to tne bar of tnat court. He executed and filed the questionnaire and affidavit required of an applicant,. The Committee gave Brooks a hearing on April 23, 1948, and denied the appli-cauon. Thereafter, on November 5, 1949, Brooks wrote the Chief Judge of the District Court a letter, asserting his right to be admitted to the bar, and on April 20, 1950, applied to the Committee for reconsideration of his application. On April 28, 1950, the Committee upon reconsideration and additional data again rejected the application. On May 24, 1950, the Chief Judge wrote Brooks that the judges of the District Court had concluded that the Committee should be sustained.

_ . , On August 30, 1951, a year and three ,, , , T, , ’ . . ,. -p.. , . , months later, Brooks filed m the District „ . ’ , . . , , Court a motion which sought (1) recon- „ , . a sideration of his application for admis- ., f. „ . j, sion, (2) consideration of new informa- . . , tion, and (3) an order admitting him to ,, . ' „ . ,,, , the bar. On October 9, 1951, he filed .,, n o. i- 4.-with the District Court an application „ . j • i • for an order granting his motion (that ... , of August 30, 19ol).

_ On October 11, 1951, the Chief Judge wrote Brooks that the District Judges had considered his application in executive session and that the action of the court was to sustain the Committee.

On November 2, 1951, Brooks handed to the Clerk’s Office of the District Court a notice of appeal from the “order” of October 11, 1951. Thereafter one of the carbon copies of that notice was returned to him with the following notation:

»The Court being of opinion that its action in denying the application 0f Homer Brooks for admission to the bar was taken pursuant to its administrative powers and is not ap-pealable, the right to file this notice of appeal is denied. [Signed] Bo-litha J. Laws, Chief Judge.”

Thereupon, on November 6, 1951, groo]jS jn this court the motion now bcfore US; naming himself as plaintiff and y,e Qbjef judge and Associate Judg-e3 0£ yle j)istrict Court as defendants, Attached to the motion is the proffered complaint. The defendant judges filed a motion to dismiss Brooks’s motion. Attached to their motion were a number of exhibits. Both motions were set for oral argUment and were heard,

Substantive facts. In his questionna:'re an<^ affidavit Brooks stated that he was born in Evergreen, Alabama; that hi® only residences had been in Evergreen, Birmingham, and Washington, D. O.; that he had not attended college; that he had an LL.B. degree from LaSalle, Chicago, having taken special courses at Birmingham; and that he had had “No actual private practice . . , ... , , , „ T alone — since admitted to bar. In re- , . , ,. , . sponse to an instruction to Make a , , , , , „ ,. „ complete statement of your practice of „ , , ,, , . , , the law , Brooks wrote that he had as- . , , . . sisted William G. Black, Esquire, of Bir- . . . . ,. ,. mmgham, m research m spare time— , ,. „ , ,, , , , , , and gratis and that he had been m .... , ,. „ 4.1114.0! Government practice on the legal stair „ ,, T , A • A „ ■ of the Office of Inter-American Affairs and the Department of State, which Government service he dated as from April 1; 1945; to March 15> 1947 (23½ months). At another point on the questionnaire and in a letter which accompanied, or preceded, it, he made reference to work in the Claims Division of the General Accounting Office from October 1, 1942, to April 1, 1945, but it is not [20]*20clear that by those references he was claiming that work as the practice of the’ law. On the questionnaire he stated that from December 1, 1926, to October 1, 1942, he was employed by the Southeastern Express Company and its successor, the Railway Express Agency, at Birmingham, as a clerk and “in different capadties”. He stated that he had been admitted to the Mississippi Bar March 2, 1942, to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi and the Mississippi State Supreme Court in March, 1945, and to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in 1946. He made no entry on either of the two items of the questionnaire which called for statements of “every applica-fion presented and examination taken by you for a license granted by the state or an official position, the procurement of which reqúired proof of good character”' and “every application for admission to the bar made by you EXCEPT those covered by your answers to question 9” (which answers were those relating to admission in Mississippi, etc.). In answer to the question “Have you ever been a party to or had or claimed any interest in any civil proceeding?”, he wrote “No.” On the questionnaire he said: “Due to coming with the Federal Government in 1942 immediately after passing the bar. I was not in a position to begin practice, but If [sic] I had not accepted the position here I would have actually been in private practice. I deem the Government practice equivalent to. such actual practice in Mississippi. The State of Mississippi grants the privilege of reciprocity.” Attached to the questionnaire were a certificate of the Board of Bar Admissions of Mississippi dated March 2, 1942, stating that Brooks was “in all things duly qualified” to practice law in all courts of the State; certificates of the clerks of the courts to which he had been admitted; a copy of his degree from LaSalle Extension University; and the certificate of its Dean, with Brooks’s marks -in his law courses,

In his “Motion for Reconsideration” Brooks said that he claimed credit for seven months-of private' practice from March 2, 1942, to October 1, 1942, and he also attached evidence as to- his legal duties in his position as clerk to the Chief Judge of the Municipal Court for the- District of Columbia. He also then, stated that he was a member of the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States, of this court, and of the United States Emergency Court of Appeals. Attached to that motion was an affidavit of Brooks, in which he described his claimed private practice as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
208 F.2d 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-laws-cadc-1953.