In re Anonymous No. 2 D.B. 82

22 Pa. D. & C.3d 627
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 8, 1982
DocketDisciplinary Board Docket no. 2 D.B. 82
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Pa. D. & C.3d 627 (In re Anonymous No. 2 D.B. 82) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Anonymous No. 2 D.B. 82, 22 Pa. D. & C.3d 627 (Pa. 1982).

Opinion

REPORT OF HEARING COMMITTEE [ ]

Summary of Nature of the Case

This report will cover two charges filed against respondent to no. 2 D.B. 82.

The charges filed to no. 2 D.B. 82 arise from a personal loan made by respondent and his wife to Justice [A] from a savings passbook account held as tenants by the entireties in response to a personal request from Justice [A]. Respondent is charged with professional misconduct involving the lending of money to a Judge and fading to report the request for such loan and acceptance thereof to a tribunal or other authority empowered to investigate such alleged violation of Disciplinary Rules by Justice [A],

Petition for discipline was filed January 20, 1982 and service accepted by respondent January 30. 1982. Answer to the petition for discipline was filed Febuary 12, 1982. Petition for discipline was then [628]*628assigned to hearing committee [ ]. Hearing was fixed for March 31, 1982 at 1:00 p.m. and rescheduled for April 16,1982 at 1:00 p.m. for the convenience of the parties and the hearing committee. The resignation of [ ], both chairman and a member of the hearing committee by letter dated March 1, 1982 was accepted by the Disciplinary Board and hearing having been scheduled and rescheduled prior to the appointment of [ ] to hearing committee [ ], [ ], and [ ], sat as the hearing committee with respect to the petition for discipline filed to no. 2 D.B. 82 against respondent.

STATE OF CHARGES AND DISCIPLINARY RULES ALLEGED TO HAVE BEEN VIOLATED

The petition for discipline filed January 20. 1982, alleges violations of the following Disciplinary Rules of the Code of Professional Responsibility:

(a). 1-103 - dealing with a lawyer who possesses unprivileged knowledge of professional misconduct by another lawyer or judge.

(b). 7-110 (A) - dealing with a lawyer giving or lending anything of value to a judge.

RULINGS ON ADMISSION OF EVIDENCE

Petitioner offered in evidence Paragraphs one, two, three, four, five, five (a), seven, seven (a), seven (b), eight, nine, and ten of the petition for discipline. Respondent having no objections such paragraphs were admitted in evidence.

Respondent offered in evidence respondent’s exhibits A, B, and C, and there being no objection by petitioner, respondent’s exhibits were admitted.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Petitioner is the Office of Disciplinary Coun[629]*629sel andis invested with the power and duty to investigate all matters involving alleged misconduct of an attorney admitted to practice law in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

2. Respondent [ ], being 56 years of age was admitted to practice law in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1953, and his office is located at [ ].

3. In 1978, the Honorable [A] was a lawyer and a Justice sitting on the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.

4. From the time of his admission to practice law in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1953 to the present, respondent has been engaged in the practice of law in the Commonwealth.

5. The Office of Disciplinary Counsel is not pursuing the alleged violation of Disciplinary Rule 1-103 as alleged in Paragraph 11 of the petition for discipline.

6. Respondent’s firm is engaged in the general practice of law, involving domestic relations, corporate representation, negligence work, compensation work, real estate, estate planning, probate work and some tax work.

7. Respondent has not argued a case before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in the past ten years and never argued a case before Justice [A] and at the time of the loan had nothing in which his firm was involved which would lend itself to appellate consideration by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

8. Respondent first became well acquainted with Justice [A] when Justice [A] opened a practice of law in the city of [ ] across the river from [ ] where respondent has maintained his practice and such acquaintanceship became a friendship both professionally and socially which became exclu[630]*630sively social after the elevation of Justice [A] to the Appellate Bench.

9. In early November, 1978, Justice [A] made a telephone request to respondent for a personal loan of $12,000 which he proposed to repay in a short period of time.

10. On or about November 8, 1978, respondent and his wife made a loan of $12,000 to Justice [A], withdrawing the funds from a passbook savings account owned by respondent and his wife as tenants by the entireties.

11. Respondent made no effort to hide or conceal the fact of his loan to Justice [A].

12. Subsequently Justice [A] sent to respondent a judgment note in the sum of $ 12,000 with interest at ten percent.

13. The loan made by respondent and his wife to Justice [A] was made in a purely personal and friendship context from funds totally separate from monies used in Respondent’s professional practice and without thought of any violation of any Disciplinary Rule or Canon of Ethics.

14. At the time of the loan by respondent to Justice [A], respondent was in fact aware of the Disciplinary Rules but not aware of the prohibition of D.R. 7-110 (A).

15. After the death of Justice [A] respondent notified the executor or administrator of Justice [A’s] Estate of the existance of such note and made a demand upon the Estate for payment.

16. At the time of the loan by respondent and his wife to Justice [A] there was no intention or motivation to curry favor with Justice [A] is his official position and no thought that an appearance of having sought to do so might arise.

17. The Estate of Justice [A] is, in fact, insolvent and the loan by respondent has never been repaid. [631]*63118. Respondent is now serving as Chairman of the Rules Committee of the [ ] County Bar Association having in the past served as a member of the Disciplinary Committee of such Association as well as a member of the Executive Committee and President of the [ ] County Bar Association.

19. Respondent has served on the Board of the Chamber of Commerce of [ ] and is currently on the Board of Directors of the [ ] Progress Council, a member of the Board of Directors of the United Way, Chairman of the N.A.A.C.P. Scholarship Committee, member of the Board of Trustees of [ ] and [ ] College and a member of the Executive Board of the [ ] of the Boy Scouts of America.

20. Respondent’s Exhibit A is a letter from [B], Esq., President of the [ ] County Bar Association setting forth respondent’s fine and unimpeachable reputation as a person and an attorney in [ ] County and setting forth that the writer would be willing to appear and testify in this respect.

21. Respondent’s Exhibit B is a letter from [C], Executive Director of the [ ] Y.M.C.A. setting forth his personal knowledge of respondent’s services to the public in various organizations over a period of 15 years and seven years experience serving on the [ ] Area School District of which respondent is the solicitor and setting forth the writer’s willingness to testify on respondent’s behalf.

22. Respondent’s Exhibit C is a letter from the Reverend [D], Pastor of [ ] Evangelical Lutheran Church [ ], Pa.

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22 Pa. D. & C.3d 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-anonymous-no-2-db-82-pa-1982.