In re Bowers

138 Tenn. 662
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 138 Tenn. 662 (In re Bowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bowers, 138 Tenn. 662 (Tenn. 1917).

Opinion

Me. Justice Lansden

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case was before the court at the last term, and the action of the court upon the matter is shown in the case of In re Bowers, 137 Tenn., 189, 194 S. W., 1093. The matters in controversy were referred to the state board of law examiners for their report.' That board has filed a report in which it goes into the matter at great length, and concludes. that Mr. Bowers is not such a man as should be licensed to practice law. Exceptions have been filed to the report. These exceptions are in form assignments of error to the action of the state board, and this court is invited to consider the evidence which that hoard examined and revise its findings of fact. Other exceptions present the question that the hoard erred as a matter of law upon certain matters not necessary to he set out in the view that we take of the case.

A brief summary of the case is that Mr. Bowers appeared before the state hoard of law examiners and made application to he admitted to the practice of law in this State and took the examination prescribed by the hoard. The board graded his papers produced upon the examination, and had before- it a certificate of the' county court of Davidson county certifying that Mr. Bowers is a man of good [664]*664moral character, and upon this showing the hoard certified to this court that he should he licensed to practice law. This court signed, hut did not deliver, his license. Before a delivery was made the Nashville Law & Library Association, a corporation, filed a petition in this court in which it was alleged that •Mr. Bowers disregarded the ethics of the legal profession, and had so disregarded it before he was licensed to practice law, in that he solicited business for a member of the bar at this place, and later, upon being remonstrated with by certain other members of the bar, he devised a form of power of attorney by the terms of which the prosecutive litigant employed Bowers as attorney in fact and agreed to pay fifty per cent of whatever amount should be realized from the proposed litigation to Bowers as com-piensation for his services. This ^ amount seems to have been fixed regardless of whether the case was compromised or litigated to final judgment. Objection was made to his being admitted to practice, and the court was asked to refer the matter to its clerk. The petition was answered, and reference was had to the clerk of this court, but upon exceptions to the report raising the question, and after further consideration, the court was of opinion that the jurisdiction invoked by the petition of the library association was original, and thereupon the matter was referred to the state board of law examiners. In re Bowers, 137 Tenn., 180, 194 S. W., 1093.

[665]*665This hoard is composed of Hons. W. Gr. M. Thomas, F. T. Fancher, and James L. McBee, three of the leading attorneys of this State, who were appointed by the court because of their known intelligence, learning, and probity. The report referred to goes into the evidence very extensively, and shows that Mr. Bowers, although a man of mature years at the time when he “made up his mind to become a student of the law and an attorney at law,” did not “know anything about the ethics of the legal profession,” and thought it was “a wide-open business like selling cigars, and if he could get work to do, it was up to him to do it.” The report further says that he denies that he entered into a partnership arrangement with an attorney to solicit personal injury and other legal business and to share the fees. About this time his attention was called to the case of Ingersoll v. Coal Co., 117 Tenn., 263, 98 S. W., 178, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.), 282, 119 Am. St. Rep., 1003, 10 Ann. Cas., 829, and he says that after reading this decision, he doubted his right to recover in'cases which he had solicited, and abandoned the practice of having prospective litigants employ him, and devised the power of attorney above referred to.

The board reports that the evidence shows that Mr. Bowers is a man of good general reputation, but it is of opinion, after an examination of the testimony, that he has failed to conceive the nature of the duties of an attorney, and has no proper conception of the ethics of the profession; and for these reasons the [666]*666board is of opinion, and so certifies to this court, that be should not be admitted to practice law.

We concur with the board in its statement that the ideals of the legal profession must be kept to the highest mark, and that its members must have a proper conception of the ethics of the profession and must be required to live up to these standards. The reasons for this. requirement have been stated in many cases in this court and the canons of legal ethics have been formulated by the practitioners themselves. There is something more than mere sentiment in professional ethics, as there is something more than a proper administration of the law. One who fails to live up to the -ethics of his profession is likely to break down morally when great pressure is placed upon him. lie may have a high standing in his community in all other respects, but failure to live up to the ethics of his profession indicates a latent defect of character.

In addition, lawyers have been aptly termed the “unbonded agents of society.” Matters of the greatest business import are intrusted to them, with no security except their honor. It speaks well for the profession that so few have fallen short of expectations and-have failed to respond to the last farthing for all matters intrusted to them. A consideration of the nature of the profession and the relationship between attorney and client forbids irresponsible men being turned loose upon society, or intrusted with this high office and the special learning which it im[667]*667plies. Society at large would pay an unspeakable penalty if such were the case. The courts have ever maintained the highest standards for the legal profession, and we cannot lower them.

The foregoing general observations' are in substance submitted to the court by the state board of law examiners by their report in this case. We heartily and cordially concur in them as all members of this court have done heretofore. But in addition it is our duty to consider and construe chapter 247, Acts 1903, creating the board of law examiners and defining its duties.

Section 1 provides:

“That any person applying to be admitted as an attorney or counselor in the courts of this State may be licensed to practice law only as herein prescribed.”

There has been no other legislative enactment upon this subject since the passage of the law under consideration. From it it will be perceived that there is no other way for one to be admitted to the practice of the law than the -way set forth by the legislature in the act. Section 2 of the act creates the state board of law examiners-. Section 3 directs the board to sit at Knoxville, Nashville, Jackson, and Lebanon, and at such other places and times as the supreme court may direct. In these sittings there is to be an examination of persons applying for license to practice as attorneys and counselors of law in this State. The supreme court is required to prescribe rules providing for a uniform system of examinations for the [668]*668government of the hoard of law examiners.

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138 Tenn. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bowers-tenn-1917.