Commonwealth Ex Rel. Pike County Bar Ass'n v. Stump

57 S.W.2d 524, 247 Ky. 589, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 434
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 524 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Pike County Bar Ass'n v. Stump) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Pike County Bar Ass'n v. Stump, 57 S.W.2d 524, 247 Ky. 589, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 434 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the CottRt by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

On October 23, 1930, the Pike County Bar Association in the name of the commonwealth of Kentucky, filed in the Pike circuit court, an information in which there were embodied 11 distinct charges or grounds, which, if true, exhibited such conduct as that the informants concluded were sufficient to authorize the court to revoke respondent’s license to practice law, and the court was asked to issue its rule against him to an- *590 pear and show cause why lie should not he disbarred'. The rule was issued as prayed for, and respondent appeared and denied in toto each ground preferred in.thé information; but he also interposed two pleas against the right of the court to entertain the motion or proceeding, and which are: (a) That in August, preceding the date of the filing of the information, a similar one was filed in the court by the same movant asking for the same relief, i. e., the issuing of a ride against respondent to show cause why his license to practice law should not be revoked, and that upon a hearing thereof the court overruled the motion and declined to issue the rule, and respondent relies thereon in bar of the present proceedings ; and (b) that respondent was at that time the commonwealth’s attorney for the Tfiirty-Eifth judicial district in the commonwealth, and that if the. rule should be made absolute on final hearing and a judgment of disbarment entered it would ipso facto disqualify him from holding the office to which he had been elected, and thereby result in his impeachment, which he contended could not be done, except in the manner pointed out in the constitution, i. e., a preferment of impeachment charges by the lower House of the General Assembly, and a trial and conviction therefor by the Senate; and which he also relied on in defense of the disbarment proceeding. It will be seen that both of those pleas are in bar of a hearing of the charges on the merits, and in discussing them they will be referred to by our designations. It will be necessary to dispose of them in advance of a consideration of any of the .grounds alleged in the information.

In disposing of plea (a) we deem it necessary to only call attention to the ground upon which it is based, including the record upon which it was made. All that was before the court at the hearing, following the filing of the first information, was that document. Its contents were all that was necessary for the court to examine or consider in determining whether or not he would issue the rule prayed for therein. Such a proceeding is closely analogous to the filing of an affidavit before an officer authorized to issue a warrant of arrest for the purpose of procuring one against the person therein named, in which case it is the duty of the officer to issue the warrant if sufficient facts therefor are contained in the affidavit. The rule asked for in this case does not imply that the respondent named therein is *591 guilty of the charges preferred against him in the information any more than is the defendant arrested under the warrant thereby presumed guilty of the offense charged in it or the affidavit to procure it. The guilt or innocence of the one charged in either case is to be subsequently determined upon proper arraignment for that purpose. Therefore, in this case the court, when the first information was filed against respondent, should have only examined the grounds, stated in the information, and, if any one of them were sufficient to authorize an investigation, to then issue tbe rule citing respondent to appear and defend, after which, if issue was made, would be the only proper time to investigate and adjudicate the merits of such charge or charges. Therefore, the denial of the rule at the time it was first applied for no more involved the merits of the case than would a refusal of the court to-.issue a warrant upon a sufficient affidavit bar the right of the same or another court to later issue a warrant upon the same facts contained in another affidavit; and that, too, regardless of whether or not the defendant in the one case, or respondent in the other, attempted to inject into or force upon the court a meritorious defense in opposition to issuing the warrant in the one-case or the rule in the other. We therefore conclude .that this plea (a) was and is unavailable.

Our conclusion is that plea (b) must share the same-fate. In the annotation found in 9 A. L. R. on page 189, but beginning on page 197, the annotator says “Acts of a prosecuting attorney in violation of his oath of office and against good morals are sufficient to justify his disbarment or suspension from practice.” In support of that statement the annotator cites these cases: Re McGowan, 175 Cal. 51, 170 P. 1100; People ex rel. Colorado Bar Asso. v. Anglim, 33 Colo. 40, 78 P. 687; People ex rel. Stead v. Phipps, 261 Ill. 576, 104 N. E. 144; Re Norris, 60 Kan. 649, 57 P. 528; Re Disbarment of Lyons, 162 Mo. App. 688, 145 S. W. 844; Re Simpson, 9 N. D. 379, 83 N. W. 541; Re Voss, 11 N. D. 540, 90 N. W. 15; Re Sitton, 72 Okl. 13, 177 P. 555; Re Jones, 70 Vt. 71, 39 A. 1087, 1090, and State v. Hays, 64 W. Va. 45, 61 S. E. 355, 356.

They all sustain the principle embodied in the general statement of the inserted excerpt from the annotation, and which the court in each case fortifies by tbe *592 most logical and convincing reasoning. In doing so they point out that the loss of the office in case of disbarment is only an incident thereto, which results as a consequence of the loss of the right to practice law, since the prosecuting attorney is, most generally at least, required to he a member of the bar and have license to practice law as a prerequisite to holding his office, and if he is deprived of such license he is no longer qualified to fill the office. They also correctly hold that the purpose and object of the disbarment proceeding is not to deprive the respondent of his office, but only to take away from him a necessary qualification to hold it, and which is no more an impeachment proceeding than if the officer should remove from the state and become a nonresident, thereby disqualifying him from holding the office, and a controversy should subsequently arise as to whether or not there was a vacancy in his office. In that case the result of a determination by the court of the permanent removal of the officer from the jurisdiction would necessarily result in the forfeiture of his office as effectually as if he had been impeached; but surely it could not be insisted that the agency of government who had the right to appoint a successor, or a court who might be called upon to determine whether or not there was a vacancy, would be deprived or barred from performing such duties, because the result would be as effectual to deprive the incumbent of his office as would follow a finding of guilty on a charge of impeachment.

Both in the illustration, and in a disbarment proceeding, such as we have here, the officer and respondent would be the producer of his own disqualification, and the following investigation would be only for the purpose of ascertaining and determining whether or not the disqualification existed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 S.W.2d 524, 247 Ky. 589, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-pike-county-bar-assn-v-stump-kyctapphigh-1933.