Disbarment Proceedings v. Burke

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350 (Disbarment Proceedings v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Disbarment Proceedings v. Burke, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

In this matter two charges have been made against Vernon H. Burke.

First, with having been guilty of misconduct in office as an attorney-at-law of the state of Ohio, and

Second, with having been guilty of unprofessional conduct involving moral turpitude.

Under these charges are three specifications:

The first is, that Vernon H. Burke and one Frank E. Dellenbaugh on January 1. 1895, and thence afterwards at all the dates and times mentioned and thence continuous^ thereafter to the present time were and still are, each of them, attorneys-at-law of the state of Ohio licensed as such and practicing as such attorneys in the county of Cuy[351]*351ahoga and state' aforesaid and in. this Honorable court. That on or about January 30. 1895, said Frank E. Dellenbaugh as such attorney was duly employed and retained in his capacity as such attorney in said county, by one Edith Manning of said county, then the wife of George A. Manning, to render to her his professional assistance and advice in relation to matters growing out of alleged illicit relations then and theretofore and thereafter existing between the said George A. Manning and one “Jane Doe,” of said county, and to obtain evidence of said relations, and to advise in relation to legal proceedings to be taken upon obtaining said evidence, and to prosecute such legal proceedings. That thereafter, about April 22, 1895, said Frank E. Dellenbaugh was appointed and qualified and assumed the office and duties of judge of the court of common pleas of the Third sub-divisions of the Fourth Judicial District of the state of Ohio, and thereafter andduring all the time hereinafter mentioned, the said Frank E. Dellenbaugh continued to be and act as such attorney for said Edith Manning in said matters, under his said employment and retainer; but desiring to conceal the fact that he still was, and was still acting as such attorney-at-law in said matter for said Edith Manning, he did on or about July 1, 1895, solicit and procure said Vernon H. Burke as such attorney-at-law to become the ostensible attorney for said Edith Manning in said matter, and to render the professional assistance and advice to said Edith Manning in and about said matter.

The said Vernon H. Burke as such attorney, then well knowing all and singular the premises aforesaid by the solicitation and procurement, and as the agent of said-Frank E. Dellenbaugh as .such attorney-at-law, did on or about the first day of July, 1895, accept such employment, retainer and agency, and thereupon as- such attorney-at-law, and by the solicitation, procurement and. at the request and as the agent of said Frank E. Dellenbaugh on or about July 6, 1895, in his professional capacity as attorney-at law, did wrongfully, corruptly and unprofessionally threaten the sai d ‘ ‘J ane Doe’ ’ to publish and expose the said illicit relations between her and the said George A. Manning and thereby to bring scandal and disgrace upon her, the said “Jane Doe,-” and did then and there agree with the said “Jane Doe’-’ that in the event that-she paid the sum of money them demanded of her, to wit: • ten thousand dollars, that she should be. shielded and protected from exposure and disgrace and her name suppressed and concealed in case divorce proceedings were thereafter commenced by said Edith Manning against her husband George A. Manning, and by means of said threats and said agreements the said Vernon H. Burke did then and .there gain-and receive from said “Jane Doe” on or about July 8; 1895, the sum of five thousand dollars in cash and her promissory notes, ¡one for th.e-sum of two thousand dollars; payable in ten days'after that date,- and six promissory notes for the sum-of'five hundred dollars each', and payable respectively in three, six, nine, twelve, fifteen and eighteen months from said date, all of which notes-were'afterwards.paid, and-the said Vernon H. Burke did charge and receive as a professional fee for said acts the sum of $3,300.00, and on July'8, 1895, at said county,-did pay $1,.000.00 thereof and on July 18, $100.00-'’thereof, to the said-Frank E. Dellenbaugh. He-, the said Vernon- H. Bu'rke,-then-and there did. all of, said acts by him done as aforesaid, in the manner aforesaid,-for the sake of gain and to-conceal the fact that, the said Frank E. -Dellenbaugh was interested, retained, [352]*352employed or concerned in said matter while being such judge, as aforesaid.

Now, considering the evidence under this specification given in the Dellenbaugh case, we said that as to the time when Judge Dellenbaugh employed Burke in the case, there was some doubt; the preponderance of the evidence tending to show that Judge Dellenbaugh employed Vernon H. Burke to act as attorney in the case on or about July 1, 1895. There was in that case some evidence introduced tending to show that Judge Dellenbaugh employed Vernon H. Burke in the case as early as the latter part of April, 1895, and that he himself had nothing to do with the procurement of the money as alleged in the specification after the time of the employment of Vernon H. Burke, and this evidence tended to show that after the employment of Burke in the latter part of April, Dellenbaugh took no active part in the case so far as obtaining this money is concerned. Upon this state of evidence in that case, we held that the specification was not so clearly made out as against Judge Dellenbaugh that we could say that it was proven beyond a reasonable doubt, that it ■ was clearly and satisfactorily proven, although we did determine in that case and so announced, that the weight of the evidence was that Judge Dellenbaugh remained in the case until after the settlement was made and the money received, and until all the acts charged under specification one to have been done by Dellenbaugh and Burke were completed. We were satisfied in that case without any doubt that Judge Dellenbaugh did receive the $1,100.00 of the money received from the party named in the specification as alleged therein, as one-third of the fees received by him and Burke for the procurement of the money.

As the evidence now stands before us in this case, Judge Dellenbaugh is not on trial in this hearing, and the evidence that raised the doubt in the minds of the court is not now before us, but as the matter now stands in this hearing, the evidence shows that Judge Dellenbaugh and Vernon H. Burke acted jointly and together as attorneys for Mrs. Manning throughout as charged in the first specification. I mention this matter here because in treating the evidence now before the court, it must be treated as though Dellenbaugh and Burke acted together in all that is charged to have been done under specification one. And while thus treating the testimonjr, we would not have it inferred that we mean to say by so treating it that Judge Dellenbaugh, as a matter of fact, was fully and completely connected with all the acts charged in specification one, but only as bearing upon the character of the acts of Vernon H. Burke under said charge.

I will not undertake to rehearse here all the testimony connecting Vernon H. Burke with the acts and things named in the specification which I have recited, but only such testimony as is necessary to determine the nature and character of the act or acts which the testimony shows him to have done, and the part which he has shown by the evidence to have taken in the procuring of the money named in the specification.

The evidence shows in this case, that a party by the name of Hickox went to Judge Dellenbaugh sometime in the spring of 1895 and told Judge Dellenbaugh that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disbarment-proceedings-v-burke-ohcirctcuyahoga-1899.