Duke v. Committee on Grievances of the Supreme Court

82 F.2d 890, 65 App. D.C. 284, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3143
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 1936
Docket6362
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 F.2d 890 (Duke v. Committee on Grievances of the Supreme Court) 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
Duke v. Committee on Grievances of the Supreme Court, 82 F.2d 890, 65 App. D.C. 284, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3143 (D.C. Cir. 1936).

Opinions

MARTIN, Chief Justice.

An appeal by Jesse C. Duke from an order of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia disbarring him from practice as an attorney at law of that court.

The facts involved in this case arose in the course of a certain criminal prosecution theretofore tried in the lower court, wherein an indictment was returned against 36 defendants charging them with conspiring together to commit, and with committing, certain offenses in violation of the act prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors within the District of Columbia. Moder v. United States, 62 App.D.C. 65, 64 F.(2d) 703. Before the trial of that case twenty-one of the defendants entered pleas of guilty. Thirteen of the defendants went to trial, with the result that five of them were found not guilty and eight were found guilty. Five of these appealed to this court.

Mr. Justice F. Dickinson Letts, an associate justice of the lower court, presided at the trial, and Mr. Harold W. Orcutt, an assistant United States attorney, represented the government as chief counsel.

At the time in question the present appellant, Jesse C. Duke, was an attorney at law admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. He did not appear as an attorney in the conspiracy trial until after the verdict of the jury was returned. He then entered his appearance therein as attorney for Adolph Rudy Moder, one of the convicted defendants. As such attorney Mr. Duke assisted in preparing the assignment of errors filed in the case, and also a bill of exceptions which was submitted to the court for allowance. The trial justice found the proposed bill of exceptions to be inadequate and defective, and declined to sign the same. Whereupon the counsel for the prosecution moved to strike the proposed bill and to substitute therefor a bill of exceptions prepared by them. Mr. Duke as attorney for Moder objected to the allowance of this bill of exceptions; nevertheless the trial justice found it to be correct and allowed it.

An appeal was thereupon taken to this court, Moder v. United States, supra. In this appeal Mr. Duke as attorney for Moder complained of the action of the trial justice in signing the bill of exceptions in question and in refusing to admit the defendants to bail and filed a written motion for a writ of certiorari to require the trial court to forward certain of its records to this court and to compel the trial justice to admit the defendants to bail. In this motion Mr. Duke used the following language concerning the action of the trial justice:

“ * * * And thus the said trial justice has obstructed justice in the case of the appellants by denial of bail and by finally sending up to the Court of Appeals, when further delay was impossible, an inaccurate, incomplete and false bill of exceptions.

“15. Appellants, in view of all of the foregoing, charge that the said trial justice has intentionally and deliberately sent up to this Honorable Court a false, inaccurate, incomplete, deleted and diluted, bill of exceptions in this case, after being warned by counsel for appellants and after having access to the stenographic record and after full opportunity to read the same before certifying it to this court, and the United States Attorney stands equally guilty in this obstruction of justice, and falsification of records herein.”

A motion was thereupon filed in this court by the United States attorney to strike the language above quoted, on the ground that it was scandalous and defamatory. Whereupon Mr. Duke filed an opposition to the motion in which he used the following language:

“This is1 no time for technicalities. Only the production of the official stenographic record taken below, under and subject to the rule of court and now in the possession or under the control thereof, can decide whether the charges so made are justified. * * * It seems obvious that our charge that he [Mr. Justice Letts] ‘intentionally and deliberately sent up to this Honorable Court a false, inaccurate, incomplete, deleted and diluted, bill of exceptions’ is justified.”

This court granted the motion of the government to strike the language set [892]*892forth above, upon the ground that it was scandalous and defamatory.

Afterwards, Mr. Duke filed a motion for a rehearing of the foregoing order of the court in which he said:

“We most respectfully ask that the Court reconsider its ruling on the matter of bail in view of .the fact that in this motion and its accompanying papers, counsel for appellants conclusively and beyond possibility of dispute, in his opinion, shows to the Court of Appeals that the trial judge has destroyed any possible belief in either his judicial discretion or his judicial or personal integrity because of his falsification of the record in this case. It is respectfully urged that this Court should review the facts heretofore presented on the question of bail, and those appearing in the United States stenographic transcript to which the Court now has access, and modify paragraph two of its memorandum opinion because of the proof now presented to the Court as to the total absence of judicial discretion — and even the absence of judicial integrity — of this trial judge, Honorable F. Dickinson Letts.”

On August 3, 1932, in Moder v. United States, 61 App.D.C. 300, 62 F.(2d) 462, 465 we said:

“The charges made [by Mr. Duke] are conclusions rather than statements of definite facts, and, in a matter of this importance, we have been at pains to examine the bill of exceptions certified by the trial judge and we find that it'fully covers the assignments of error prepared and filed with the trial court by counsel responsible for the charges we are discussing. It may well be, as is "claimed in appellants’ petition, that it does not include all of the exceptions taken on the trial, but it is not argued on behalf of appellants that any omitted exceptions were ever brought to the attention of the trial judge. We are therefore faced with a charge without supporting facts on which to base it. If there are supporting facts, we are entitled to have them shown, and counsel should be afforded an opportunity to bring them to our attention. We can only act when this is done.

“We have- given careful thought and earnest consideration to the method and machinery by which this result can be accomplished, and have reached the conclusion that we should hear this aspect of the case separately from the merits of the appeal. To this end we shall appropriate for this purpose such time as is necessary at the convening of this court on January 3 next to enable counsel to present to us any facts which he may have to sustain the charge of deliberate falsity in the record on this appeal. A definite and succinct statement of facts supported by affidavits should be filed in the clerk’s office of this court not later than December 27. A copy of any papers filed pursuant to this permission should be delivered on the same day to the United States attorney. The hearing on January 3 will be confined to the single question whether the record in the appeal in this case is a deliberate and premeditated perversion of the facts of the trial. If the United States attorney cares to be heard, we shall, of course, afford him such an opportunity. The matter will thus be disposed of, and the regular hearing on the appeal will abide the result.”

In answer to the foregoing direction of this court Mr. Duke declined to submit any other papers and failed to appear when the case in which the foregoing order was entered was called to trial in regular course.

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Bluebook (online)
82 F.2d 890, 65 App. D.C. 284, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-v-committee-on-grievances-of-the-supreme-court-cadc-1936.