Chattanooga Bar Ass'n v. Harry Berke

437 S.W.2d 532, 59 Tenn. App. 69, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 5, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 437 S.W.2d 532 (Chattanooga Bar Ass'n v. Harry Berke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattanooga Bar Ass'n v. Harry Berke, 437 S.W.2d 532, 59 Tenn. App. 69, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 329 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

THE CASE

SHRIVER, P. J. (M.S.).

The record before us involves a citation for contempt against Irma Dennard Parmes, who was called as a witness in the case of Chattanooga Bar Association and Tennessee Bar Association against Harry Berke, heard in the Criminal Court of Hamilton County, Tennessee before Chancellor Glen W. Woodlee, sitting in place of the regular Trial Judge by designation of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee.

When the respondent, Irma Dennard Parmes, was first called as a witness in the Berke disbarment case on May 30, 1966 she repeatedly invoked the Fifth Admendment to the U. S. Constitution as a basis for refusing to answer questions. After declaring a recess and giving the respondent certain instructions, Judge Woodlee resumed the hearing on June 27, 1966 in Hamilton County where he gave the respondent, appellant here, and her attorney additional instructions and, upon her further refusal to answer certain questions, he held her in contempt of court and levied a fine of $50.00 and ordered that she be confined to jail for 10 days.

[72]*72From this order and decree the respondent appealed to this Court and has assigned errors.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

The appellant, who will hereafter he referred to as respondent, assigns several errors which assert that the proof and the record do not warrant the finding of the Court and that she was within her rights under the Federal Constitution in refusing to answer the questions propounded to her; that the Court erred in overruling the motion of respondent to make more specific the charges against her and erred in overruling the plea in abatement filed by her because the jurisdiction to hear the cause was exclusively in Hamilton County, whereas, the Trial Judge heard arguments and imposed sentence in Rhea County.

THE FACTS

The facts briefly stated are as follows:

Irma Dennard Parmes was first called as a witness in the Harry Berke disbarment case on May 30, 1966 when she repeatedly invoked the Fifth Amendment as a basis for refusing to answer questions. At one point in the hearing the Court asked the witness certain questions and she answered as follows:

“THE COURT: (Interposing) You are still pleading your rights under the Fifth Amendment, I take it, to the Constitution of the United States?
THE WITNESS: Yes, sir.
Q. Did you not on that—
THE COURT: (Interposing) And that is just — you are pleading that all the way to every question he is going to ask you, is that true?
[73]*73THE WITNESS: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: Whether it is the time of day or whether the sun is shining or whether it is night or morning?
THE WITNESS: Yes, sir, without my attorney knows.
THE COURT: Any other questions, Mr. Arnett?’'’’

The Court then declared a recess and had a conference with attorneys in the case and upon reconvening stated, among other things, as follows:

“In other words, the simple issue is whether Mr. Berke, on the trial of this case initially was correct when he told what occurred in his office. It is the insistence of the State and Chattanooga Bar that what he said is not true.
There is one witness, apart from others, who knows better than anyone whether that is true or not and it was obvious that the State and the Chattanooga Bar were relying upon this witness, Mrs. Dennard, now Parmes, relying upon her testimony to support the charges of the supplemental bill, but when the State calls her to the stand she pleads the Fifth Amendment and, of course, in response to the Court’s question she said she would plead it regardless of what the question involved.
Well, as we lawyers all know, she can’t plead it on immaterial matters or any matter that would not tend to incriminate her. It is the Court’s opinion at this point, however, that she can plead it with respect to any and all matters that would tend to incriminate her.”

[74]*74The Court then, ordered the filing of a written statement that Mr. Berke had tendered initially and which had been refused by the Court. It is a statement that was taken in his office, supposedly under oath, and supposedly repudiating what Mrs. Parmes testified to in Chancellor Curry’s Court. The Chancellor stated that the refusal to allow it to be filed initially was because at that point it was incompetent, but that it was being ordered filed, along with a subsequent statement that was given before the Commissioner appointed by the Supreme Court of the State in which Mrs. Parmes reaffirmed or restated what she had, in substance, testified to on another occasion. The Court further stating that he had not seen the statements and did not know what attitude the respondent was in but that there was one thing certain, if she had made two conflicting statements under oath in Court it would not go unnoticed by him. The statements above referred to were filed and marked Exhibits “AM and “B” in the transcript. Exhibit “A” is a statement of Irma Dennard Parmes given to Mr. John K. Morgan in the offices of Mr. Harry Berke on December 2, 1965, and it appears that the circumstances surrounding the taking of this statement in Mr. Berke’s office is the basis of the Supplementary Petition in the disbarment proceedings against Mr. Berke. Exhibit “B” is a statement of Irma Dennard Parmes given to Mr. McAfee Lee on March 4, 1966, he being a Field Commissioner appointed by the Supreme Court of Tennessee to deal with this matter.

The respondent next appeared before Judge Woodlee in Hamilton County on June 27, 1966, and at that time he gave her and her attorney additional instructions pointing out that she had given testimony in the case of [75]*75Dennard v. Berke when it was being tried in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County, wherein she testified to certain facts. The Judge stated that he had carefully read the statement which the respondent gave in Mr. Berke’s office on December 2, 1965 in the presence of Mr. John J. Morgan, after having been sworn by the Court Reporter who took the statement; his statement continues:

“Just for all practical purposes in that statement made in Mr. Berke’s office you did a 180-degree turn and in so many words just more or less repudiated what you had said.
# # # * # #
Well, first, what you testified in the Chancery Court and yet in the third statement made to the Commissioner appointed by the Supreme Court, you repudiated what you said in Mr. Berke’s office and said what you were saying were the facts, all of which, of course, was consistent with what you testified to in the Chancery Court of this county before any written judgment was had against Mr. Berke for a sum of money, including punitive damages in the amount of $2,000.
Now, what I am coming to is this: As this Court interprets the law, both Federal and State, the fact that you gave a statement in Mr. Berko’s office under oath, and the fact that you are now called upon to testify in this court and relate again what happened as between you and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
437 S.W.2d 532, 59 Tenn. App. 69, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chattanooga-bar-assn-v-harry-berke-tennctapp-1968.