In Re Application of Koenig

204 A.2d 33, 152 Conn. 125, 1964 Conn. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 14, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 204 A.2d 33 (In Re Application of Koenig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Application of Koenig, 204 A.2d 33, 152 Conn. 125, 1964 Conn. LEXIS 331 (Colo. 1964).

Opinion

Shea, J.

In July, 1959, upon a presentment to the Superior Court by the grievance committee of the Fairfield County bar, the petitioner was suspended from the practice of law “until further order of the court but in no event is the suspension to be for less than one year.” 1 On April 3, 1963, he filed with the Superior Court an application for reinstatement, which was referred to the standing committee on recommendations for admission to the bar. Practice Book § 25. The committee, after holding a hearing thereon, rendered a report to the court recommending that the application be denied. The court overruled the recommendation of the committee, granted the application and reinstated the petitioner to the bar. The committee has appealed from the judgment.

Prior to the presentation of the present application, the petitioner had applied for reinstatement on three separate occasions, viz., June 1, 1960, February 14, 1961, and October 19, 1961. Each of these applications was referred to the standing committee on recommendations for admission to the bar, which, after due notice, held a hearing and *128 rendered to the court a report recommending denial of the application. Practice Book § 25. On each of the first three applications, the court accepted the report of the committee and denied the application. The committee has made the files in the previous applications a part of its report in the present proceeding.

The petitioner was admitted to the bar in July, 1947. He was suspended because he had taken unconscionable advantage of an elderly client who was mentally ill by charging a fee of about $2500 for minor and insignificant services. This charge was exorbitant. At the time of the hearing on his first application for reinstatement, in November, 1960, Koenig told the committee that he had turned back $500 of the fee charged to Ms client by giving her a check for that amount. No effort had been made to repay any of the remaining fee. The petitioner, before his suspension, had been a partner in a law firm, and his name was printed in large gold letters on the door and windows of the Bridgeport office occupied by the firm. He was also listed in the directory and classified section of the 1960-61 telephone book. He did nothing to cause the removal of Ms name as an attorney from the office door or windows until long after the date of his suspension. He continued his listing in the telephone book after that time and paid a regular montMy charge for this listing. His name still remained on the windows in an office in Greenwich where he had also conducted a practice. At the first hearing, he told the committee that he was not conscious of the presence of Ms name on the office doors and windows, although he had frequently been in and out of the Bridgeport office.

Before his admission to the bar, the petitioner *129 had been convicted of assault and breach of the peace. During his trial on those charges, the presiding judge expressed a belief that the petitioner’s defense was predicated on a lie. While he was a student at law school, he attempted to bribe an .attorney who had brought snit on behalf of a client against the petitioner’s father. In the trial of that action, evidence was offered to prove that the petitioner had obtained a general release from the plaintiff in that case by the use of threats of physical violence and a small consideration in cash and personal property. The petitioner’s testimony at that trial was branded by the court as deliberate perjury.

In the latter part of February, 1961, the committee was notified by letter from the petitioner’s attorney that the listing of the petitioner’s name as an attorney had been ordered removed from the telephone directory. In the same letter the committee was notified that the petitioner had sent to .his former client from whom he had exacted the exorbitant fee a check in the amount of $1800 as a further adjustment of his fee. The petitioner’s name was removed from the office door and windows at some time after the hearing on Ms first application. A short time before the hearing on the second .application, the committee was informed for the first time that the petitioner’s check for $500 given to his former client in 1960 as a purported refund •of part of Ms fee had never been paid. At the time he filed his second application for reinstatement in February, 1961, the petitioner knew that this $500 •check had not been paid, that the bank had refused to honor it because of its age and that he had been requested to replace it with a new one. He did not .honor this request until April 13, 1961, three days *130 after the hearing on his second application. Until this time, the committee had been led to believe that the $500 had long since been refunded to the client.

At the hearing on the third application, there was evidence to show that the petitioner had not been truthful with the committee in explaining his failure to remove his name from the office door and windows. The committee, in its report to the court on his third application, concluded that “his difficulties stem from either a deficiency in moral sensitivity or an inability to recognize ethical concepts until these are impressed upon him by repeated disciplinary action.” To this third report, the petitioner filed a remonstrance, alleging, inter alia, that the committee had acted improperly, with prejudice, unreasonably and unfairly and that the proceedings before it were inconsiderate, humiliating and lacking any real sense of justice. The remonstrance was overruled by the court, and the application for reinstatement was denied.

At the hearing on the present application, the petitioner presented no evidence but pleaded that he was remorseful and repentant and that he had suffered severe emotional distress and great financial hardships. In its report to the court, the committee stated (1) that “the petitioner is unable to recognize when an ethical concept is involved, and to distinguish between what is ethically right and ethically wrong, and the reasons therefor,” and (2) that “he is not a safe and fit person to engage in the practice of law.” The committee again recommended that the petition be denied.

In the absence of a finding, we turn to the memorandum of decision of the trial court to ascertain the conclusions upon which it based its order. Rockville v. Public Utilities Commission, 146 Conn. 1, *131 6, 146 A.2d 916; State ex rel. Haverback v. Thomson, 134 Conn. 288, 291, 57 A.2d 259. In overruling the committee’s recommendation, the court stated that the two reasons advanced by the committee for recommending the denial of the application were “without merit and substance as of this time.” The court pointed out that the petitioner had been under suspension for four years and stated that the language of the order of suspension conclusively indicates that after one year the petitioner “was to be considered eligible for reinstatement to the bar” in the absence of subsequent conduct on his part demonstrating lack of moral fitness to resume the practice of law.

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Bluebook (online)
204 A.2d 33, 152 Conn. 125, 1964 Conn. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-koenig-conn-1964.