Case of Burr

1 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 503
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMay 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 503 (Case of Burr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case of Burr, 1 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 503 (uscirct 1823).

Opinion

Cranch, Chief Justice.

In the argument of a cause in this court, Mr. Burr was charged, by counsel of great respectability, with practices unbecoming a practitioner at the bar. It was said that those charges were not made unadvisedly, and could be supported. Mr. Burr denied the truth of the allegations, and challenged an investigation. The court thought it important to the character, both of the accused and the accusing party, as well as to the purity of the administration of justice, that charges so deliberately made, should not pass without notice.—

They, therefore, requested the gentleman who had made the accusation, to state the charges in writing. This was done in the form of a letter to Mr. Burr in these words :

Charges,

“Sir: The circumstances which I considered as justifying and obliging me to make the observations I did to the court to-day, are these : My own observations of your conduct in Alexandria, relative to the letter of Benjamin F. Clarke, produced in the trial of that cause, which you stated, resembled the writing of a letter in your possession, from a man of that name. Information which I have received this term, from Mr. G. H. Gloyd, and several other persons, relative to your advising a man in jail, who was either a recognized witness or defend[504]*504ant, for whom some person was special bail, to run away.

Information received from Mr. Beale and others, relative to your instituting a suit or suits against a Mr. Henshaw for some person, without any authority from the said plaintiff for so doing.

Information received from Mr. Van Ness, and several others, and confirmed by the appearance docket of this term, of your bringing many frivolous and vexatious suits, and many of them for persons utterly insolvent.

Information received from Mr. Ringgold, Mr. Dawson, and others, of your soliciting Capt. Crabb for his business, and appearing for him without authority; and, particularly, for Charles Bums, as stated by him.

Information from Mr. Golding, and the evidence of his boy, about the account in bar filed by you against his account against you, in the case in which you were warranted.

Information from Mr, Van Ness, as to your purchasing in a lot, at a trustee sale of Patrick Nicholson, an insolvent’s estate, under unfair and improper circumstances.

Information from Mr. Bea,le, and Mr. Waters, as to your making fictitious claims, and bringing suits, with a vew to extort money ; also, to taking a bill of sale from -, who was about to be distrained for rent by Thady Hogan, to prevent such distress; and taking an order 'from Patrick Nicholson, on the Corporation, for 80 or 90 dollars, for writing his insolvent papers, he, the said Nicholson, being in jail, and imposed upon in obtaining said order.

Information as to your conduct in soliciting business at the jail, and of other persons, and general reputation as to your ill conduct in your profession.

[505]*505Above I have stated the circumstances and reports to which I have alluded, and if you can explain them, or show them to be ill-founded, I will gladly acknowledge that I have done you injustice.

Yours,

P. S. KEY.

April 26th, 1823.”

The court supposing that the only ground of their jurisdiction to investigate the matter, by an examination of witnesses, was its discretionary power to admit Attorneys and Counsellors to practice in the court, and to exclude them from practising for improper cond uct, made the following order :

The foregoing suggestion of charges having been made to this court, of the improper conduct of Levi S. Burr, one of the Attorneys of this Court. It is ordered, that the said Levi S. Burr show cause, on the third day of May next, why his name should not be struck off the roll of Attorneys of this court.”

Order of the

Remonstrant

On the 5th of June (there having been an intervening adjournment of the court) the cause came on to be heard ; and, before the examination of witnesses, Mr. Burr read to the court á paper which he termed a representation and remonstrance, in which he stated that he objected to the investigation, because the charges were not exhibited against him upon oath ; but did not object to the investigation of charges properly brought before the court.— He seemed to think that the power of the court is limited to his official acts as an attorney, and perhaps to such only as should have been committed in-violation of some express rule of court. To the first charge, he objected that it contained no specific allegation of any thing improper. To the second, that it was contradictory and [506]*506absurd in ritself; and denied that he advised any witness or other person to run away. To the third, which related to his bringing an action against Mr. Henshaw without authority from the plaintiff, he answered that he conceived himself to have been authorized by the plaintiff so to do, or he would not have done it; and that the plaintiff has sustained no injury. To the fourth allegation, which charges him with having brought many frivolous and vexatious suits, for insolvent persons, he answers, that the question whether the suits were frivolous and vexatious, cannot be ascertained until they shall have been tried. To the fifth allegation, which charges him with soliciting business from Capt. Crabb, and appearing for him and' other persons without authority, he answers, that it is no offence to solicit business, and that he supposed himself authorized to appear in the cases referred to; that no improper motive is charged, and no injury alleged to have been sustained by any person. To the sixth, which relates to the account in bar, filed in Golding’s case, he answers, that the judgment of the justice of the peace was in his favor, and that this court reversed the judgment, because it had been decided by this court that a counsellor’s fee for advice could not be recovered in a suit at law, and, therefore, did not form a legal set-off to the plaintiff’s demand. He states that he had no knowledge of such a decision ; but supposed he had a good right to make the set-off. To the seventh, which relates to his purchasing a lot at the trustee’s sale of P. Nicholson’s estate, he objects, that it is a charge against him as a private citizen, and not as a member of the bar ; and that J in regard to it, he cannot be deprived of his trial by jury —he objects, also, that the nature of the unfair and improper circumstances” is not stated. To the eighth, [507]*507which relates to his making fictitious claims, and bringing suits with a view to extort money—the taking a bill of sale to prevent the distress of T. Hogan for rent—and imposing upon P. Nicholson, by taking an order from him on the corporation for 80 or 90 dollars, for writing his insolvent papers ; he objects, that the first allegation is too vague and - indefinite to be answered. That the other two allegations contained in this charge, relate to him as a citizen, and not as an attorney of this court, and involve facts which pan only be ascertained by jury, and that if either of those persons has been injured, redress is open to him in the common way.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-of-burr-uscirct-1823.