Gibson v. Lee

181 S.E. 192, 51 Ga. App. 594, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 416
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 2, 1935
Docket24816
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 S.E. 192 (Gibson v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Lee, 181 S.E. 192, 51 Ga. App. 594, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 416 (Ga. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

Guerry, J.

On November 2, 1934, A, B. Spence, then solieit- ' or-general of the Waycross circuit, on information received and at the instance of the grievance committee of the Atlanta Bar Association, presented a petition to the Hon. M. D. Dickerson, Judge of the Waycross circuit, to revoke an order passed April 2, 1934, ad[595]*595mitting Robert Stewart Lee, a nonresident lawyer, to practice law in this State. A rule nisi was issued and the matter set for a hearing on December 8, 1934-, but on motion of counsel for Lee it was continued until January 8, 1935. By amendment John S. Gibson was substituted as party plaintiff, he being then the solicitor-general of the Waycross circuit. After the hearing the judge took the matter under advisement, and, on February 22, passed this order: '“Dpon consideration of the pleadings, including the demurrers, and of the evidence adduced upon a hearing of the above-stated case, it is considered, ordered, and adjudged that the prayers of the petition be denied. At Chambers, Douglas, Ga., on this February 22, 1935.” The petition alleged and the evidence showed that Robert Stewart Lee filed a petition for admission to the bar of this State on'April 2, 1934, before Judge M. D. Dickerson at Douglas, Coffee County, Georgia, but did not attach to the petition any certificate from the clerk and the Chief Judge of the Supreme Court of, Indiana, the State from which he came. Prior to the act of 1933 such a certificate was not required, but a practitioner from another State might be admitted to the practice in this State on the certificate of the circuit or district court of the State whence he came. Dnder the present law, he must present a certificate from the clerk and the chief judge of the highest court in the State from which he comes, certifying that he is actively engaged in the practice and has been for at least five years, and that he is of good private and professional character, and the application must be filed in the superior court of the applicant’s actual or intended residence. The petition filed did have attached to it a certificate which would have been sufficient prior to the act of 1933. The petition for revocation alleged that the order was granted by reason of a fraud practiced, in that the petitioner knew when he presented his application that he was not complying with the statute made and provided in such cases, and that he fraudulently concealed such fact from the judge of the superior court of Coffee County and from the attorney at that bar who endorsed his application. It was also pleaded and shown that on February 23, 1934, Lee presented to Judge Davis of the Stone Mountain circuit a petition for admission to the bar of this State, to which there was attached a certificate from the clerk and the Chief Judge of the Supreme Court of Indiana, which certified as to his admission to that court and as to [596]*596his private and professional character. Judge Davis testified that he noticed that the statement in such certificate as to the applicant’s character was written on a typewriter different from that on which the rest of the certificate was written, and that, although applicant insisted that the order attached thereto be signed that day, he told him to come back later, and, when Lee left, he (Davis) wired the Hon. Curtis W. Eoll, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Indiana, in reference to the matter. Lee came back the next day before Judge Davis had received a reply to his telegram, and Judge Davis still refused to sign the order, and pointed out that it failed to comply with the Georgia statute. Lee then took the certificate away with him and stated he would return later with a proper certificate. Soon afterwards Judge Davis received a reply to his telegram as follows: “Clerk says no certificate to private or professional standing issued.” Judge Davis testified also that Lee stated to him that he would open a law office in Decatur, Georgia ; that the petition left with him by Lee was attached to his affidavit, and that it was not filed in the clerk’s office for the reason that no order had been signed thereon; though it was presented to him for signing. Chief Justice Eoll of the Supreme Court of Indiana testified that a certificate was issued from the Supreme Court of Indiana that Eobert Stewart Lee had been admitted to the Supreme Court there in 1911', but “this court made no certificate as to the private and professional character and standing of the said Eobert Stewart Lee. On the contrary, the court directed the clerk to inform Mr. Lee that the court was not sufficiently acquainted with Mr. Lee to issue the certificate of character, and that it would be necessary to refer the matter to the State board of law examiners.” Fred B. Pickett, clerk of the Supreme Court of Indiana, made affidavit to the same state of facts. John W. Bennett, of Waycross, who signed the applicant’s endorsement, testified that he did not know Lee, but that on April 2 Lee came to see him in Way-cross, Georgia, and presented to him a letter from a lawyer friend in Miami, Florida, asking him to help Lee. His recollection was that Lee showed him a certificate from the Supreme Court of Indiana, as well as a certificate from a district or circuit court in Indiana, and that, acting on the letter sent him, and said certificates, he signed the recommendation and directed Lee to go to Douglas to see Judge Dickerson; that he told Lee to file the cer[597]*597tifLcates with the application, and Lee stated that he would do so; that “the Acts of 1933 were not mentioned and had entirely slipped my mind; if I had thought of the Acts of 1933 I would not have signed the certificate;” that he made inquiries as to the filing of these certificates and did not find them.

Lee denied that he had ever formally filed any application for admission with Judge Davis. He testified that upon advice of counsel he determined that with the letters he had as to his character from Indiana and the certificate of the Circuit Court of Indiana, he could be admitted under the law of Georgia, and he contended that the act of 1933 was directory merely, and that the requirement that the Chief Judge of a sister State certify under oath that his private and professional character was good was unreasonable, arbitrary, and unjust. Judge Dickerson signed the order admitting him and the same was filed with the clerk of the superior court of Coffee County. Lee came to Atlanta on April 4, and was immediately' offered a place as counsel for the American Bond and Share Corporation by B. B. Bradley, its president, and he now holds that position. He testified that this proceeding was instigated by a lawyer in Atlanta with whom he had a personal misunderstanding; that the grievance committee of the Atlanta Bar Association called on him to appear and answer charges, but that he did not appear; that the application for admission was submitted to Judge Davis only for his consideration as to its sufficiency. He denied that he was told the petition would be passed on the following week, or that he ever stated he intended to become a resident of Decatur, but he testified that “at the time of my application for admission, I fully intended to locate in Coffee County, Georgia, or at least in the Waycross circuit.” The chairman of the grievance committee of the Atlanta Bar Association testified that the members thereof made an investigation, at the request of Judge Davis, and they had no personal knowledge of any differences with any other members or knowledge of any differences between Lee and other members of the Atlanta bar. Bemster E.

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Related

Bradley v. Simpson ex rel. Georgia Bar Ass'n
2 S.E.2d 238 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1939)
Williford v. State
194 S.E. 384 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1937)
Payne v. State
183 S.E. 638 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.E. 192, 51 Ga. App. 594, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-lee-gactapp-1935.