In Re Applicants for License

55 S.E. 635, 143 N.C. 1, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 309
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 55 S.E. 635 (In Re Applicants for License) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Applicants for License, 55 S.E. 635, 143 N.C. 1, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 309 (N.C. 1906).

Opinions

Hoee, J.

At tbe beginning of tbe present term, when tbe Court was about to enter on tbe examination of applicants for license to practise law, we found on file, signed by members of our profession, of bigb standing and deserved repute, protests against tbe admission of three of tbe applicants on tbe alleged ground tbat they did not bave good moral characters.

[2]*2As the applicants were here, ready, we determined to proceed with the examination; and the question being of the first importance, we took the same under advisement; and two of these applicants having passed excellent examinations, the question of the protest is fairly presented.

After giving the matter our best consideration, the Court is of opinion that under the law, as it now stands, Revisal 1905, ch. 5, an applicant for license who, on his examination, shall satisfy the Court of his competent knowledge of the law, is entitled to receive his license, and that an investigation into his general moral character is no longer required or permitted. Prior to the enactment of this Revisal the law was otherwise.

Under the Code of 1883, the Revised Code, and the Revised Statutes, it was provided:

“That applicants for license shall undergo an examination before two or more Justices of the Supreme Court, and on receiving certificates from such Justices of their competent knowledge of the law and upright character, shall be admitted to practise in the courts.”

By clear inference from the language of this statute, power is given the Court or Judges who acted in the matter, and perhaps the duty imposed, of satisfying themselves that the applicant’s character was good. Under a rule or custom, the certificates of two practising attorneys of good standing as to the character of the applicants were accepted as evidence sufficient ; but this was only prima facie, and on protest filed, as in this case, and under The former law, we think the Court would clearly have had the power to examine into the question. But under the Revisal, the sections controlling the question are as follows:

Section 208: “Before being allowed to stand an examination each applicant must comply with the following conditions :

[3]*3“1. He must be twenty-one years of age, or will arrive at that age before the time for the nest examination.

“2. He must file with the Clerk of the Court a certificate of good moral character signed by two attorneys who practise in that Court. An applicant from another State may have such certificate signed by any State officer of the State from which he comes. • *

“3. - He must deposit with the Clerk twenty-one dollars and fifty cents.”

And sec. 207: “No person shall practise law without first obtaining license so to do from the Supreme Court. Applicants for license shall be examined only on the first Monday of each term of the Supreme Court. All examinations shall be in writing, and based upon such course of study, and conducted under such rules, as the Court may prescribe. All applicants who shall satisfy the Court of their competent knowledge of the law shall receive license to prac-tise in all the courts of this State.”

This statute presents no question, sometimes mooted by the courts, as to whether the certificates of the attorneys to the character of the applicants is prima facie or conclusive. This certificate, to be signed by two practising members of the Court, is only a formal matter, fixing the status of an applicant. When this is done, and the other preliminaries complied with, sec. 207 requires that the applicant shall be examined, and if he satisfies the Court of his competent knowledge of the law he shall be licensed.

The change from the former law is too pronounced to pass unnoticed, and the meaning too plain for construction.

Says Black, in Interpretation of Laws, sec. 26: “The meaning of a statute must first be sought in the language of the statute itself.”

And further: “If the language is plain and free from ambiguity and expresses a simple, definite, and sensible mean[4]*4ing, that meaning is conclusively presumed to be tbe meaning which the Legislature intended to convey.”

And in Lewis’s Southerland Statutory Construction (2 Ed.), sec. 267, it is said: “When the intention of the Legislature is so apparent from the face of the statute that there can be no question as to its meaning, there is no room for construction.”

It was not seriously contended in the able argument made by the protestants, in compliance with the request of the Court, that this change has not been wrought by the Revisal of 1905; but the validity of the statute is assailed on the ground that the same is unconstitutional, because—

1. It violates sec. 8 in our Declaration of Rights, to the effect that “The legislative, executive, and supreme judicial powers of the government should be kept separate and distinct.”

2. Sec. 12 of Art. IV, which ordains that “the General Assembly shall have no power to deprive the judicial department of any power or jurisdiction which rightfully pertains to it,” etc. The argument being (a) that the admission of attorneys to practise is a judicial act, and the statute, requiring, as it does, that an applicant be admitted when found to have competent knowledge of the law, is an unwarranted exercise of judicial power prohibited by sec. 8 of the Declaration of Rights; (6) that attorneys, when admitted, are officers of the Court, whose appointment and conduct are under the control of the Court as one of its inherent powers, and the act is an unlawful attempt to deprive the judicial department of a power which of right belongs to it.

We do not think, however, that either of these positions can he sustained.

True, it is generally held, uniformly, so far as we have examined, that the admission of an applicant to the practice of the law is a judicial act.

[5]*5In several decisions on tbis question a mandamus to control tbe action of an inferior court was denied by an appellant tribunal because tbe admission to tbe bar was an act involving judicial discretion, and tbat sucb discretion, as a rule, could not be directed by tbis writ.

We do not deduce from tbis principle and these decisions, as some authorities have done, tbat because admission to tbe bar is in some sense a judicial act, “tbat a Legislature has no power, therefore, to provide tbat any person, possessing certain qualifications, must be admitted, as tbis would be to assume judicial power.”

It is well established and sustained by tbe weight of authority tbat tbe Legislature has tbe íúght to establish tbe qualifications to be required of one to become a practising membei of tbe bar.

As said in Ex parte Garland, 71 U. S., at p. 379: “Tbe Legislature may undoubtedly prescribe tbe qualifications for tbe office of an attorney, to which be 'must conform; as it may, when it has exclusive jurisdiction, prescribe qualifications for tbe pursuit of any of tbe ordinary avocations of life.”

Tbe right to establish sucb qualifications rests in tbe police power — a power by virtue of which a State is authorized to enact laws to preserve tbe public safety, maintain tbe public peace and order, and preserve and promote tbe public health and public morals.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 635, 143 N.C. 1, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-applicants-for-license-nc-1906.