In re Chartz

29 Nev. 110
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1906
DocketNo. 1687
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 29 Nev. 110 (In re Chartz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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 Chartz, 29 Nev. 110 (Neb. 1906).

Opinions

By the Court-,

Talbot, J.:

Respondent was commanded to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt for having, as an attorney of record in the Matter of the Application of Peter Kair for a Writ of Habeas Corpus, filed in this court a petition for rehearing in which he made use of the following statement:

"In my opinion the decisions favoring the power of the state to limit the hours of labor, on the ground of the police power of the state, are all wrong, and written by men who have never performed manual labor, or by politicians and for politics. They do not know what they wrote about.”

Respondent appeared in response to the citation, filed a brief, and made an extended address to the court in which he took the position that the words in question were not contemptuous, disavowed any intention to commit a contempt of court, and, further, that, if the language was by the court deemed to be objectionable, he apologized for its use and asked that the same be stricken from the petition.

In considering the foregoing statement, it is proper to note that in the briefs filed by respondent upon the hearing of the case in the first instance he used language of similar import, which this court did not take cognizance of, attributing its use to overzealousness upon the part of counsel, but which was of such a nature that the attorney-general in his reply, brief referred to it as insinuating that the legislature in enacting, and this court in sustaining, the law, were being [112]*112" impelled or controlled by some mythical political influence or fear which exists only in the pyrotechnic imagination of counsel." Also, the case and its condition at the time the objectionable language was used should be taken into consideration. The proceeding in which this petition was filed had been brought to test the constitutionality of a section of an act of the legislature limiting labor to eight hours per day in smelters and other ore reduction works, except in cases of emergency, where life or property is in imminent danger. (Stat. 1903, p. 33, c. 10.) This act had passed the legislature almost unanimously and had received the governor's approval.

At the time of filing the petition respondent was aware that this court had previously sustained the validity of this enactment as limiting the hours of labor in underground mines (Re Boyce, 27 Nev. 327, 75 Pac. 1, 65 L. R. A. 47), and in mills for the reduction of ores, smelters, etc. (Re Kair, 28 Nev. 127, 425, 80 Pac. 464),. and that similar statutes had been upheld by the Supreme Court of Utah and the Supreme Court of the United States in the cases of State v. Holden, 14 Utah, 71, 86, 46 Pac. 757, 1105, 37 L. R. A. 103, 108; Holden v. Hardy, 169 U. S. 366, 18 Sup. Ct. 383, 42 L. Ed. 780; Short v. Mining Co., 20 Utah, 20, 57 Pac. 720, 45 L. R. A. 603, and by the Supreme Court of Missouri, in Be Gantwell, 179 Mo. 245, 78 S. W. 569. It may not be out of place here, also, to note that the latter case has since been affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, and more recently the latter tribunal, adhering to its opinion therein and in the Utah, cases, has refused to interfere with the decisions of this court in Be Hair.

It would seem, therefore, a natural and proper, if not a necessary, deduction from the language in question, when taken in connection with the law of the cases as enunciated by this and other courts, that counsel, finding that the opinion of the highest court in the land was adverse, instead of favorable, to his contentions, in that it specifically affirmed the Utah decision in Holden v. Hardy, which sustained the statute from which ours is copied, and that all of the courts named were adverse to the views he advocated, had resorted [113]*113to abuse of the justices of this and other courts, and to imputations of their motives. The language quoted is tantamount to the charge that this tribunal and the- Supreme Courts of Utah, Missouri, and of the United States, and the justices thereof who participated in the opinions upholding statutes limiting the hours of'labor in mines, smelters, and other ore reduction works, were misguided by ignorance or base political considerations.

Taking the most charitable view, if counsel became so imbued and misguided by his own ideas and conclusions that he honestly and erroneously conceived that we were controlled by ignorance or sinister motives, instead of by law and justice, in determining constitutional or other questions, and that these other courts and judges and the members of the legislature and the governor were guilty of the accusation he made because they and we failed to follow the theories he advocated, and that his opinions ought to outweigh and turn the scale against the decisions of the four courts named, including the highest in the land, with nineteen justices concurring, nevertheless it was entirely inappropriate to make the statement in the' brief. If he really believed or knew of facts to sustain the charge he made, he ought to have been aware that the purpose of such a document is to enlighten the court in regard to the controlling facts and the law, and convince by argument, and not to abuse or vilify, and that this court is not endowed with power to hear or determine charges impeaching its justices.

On the other hand, if he did not believe the accusation, and made it with a desire to mislead, intimidate, or .swerve from duty the court in its decision, the statement would be the more censurable. So that taking either view, whether respondent believed or disbelieved the heinous charge he made, such language is unwarranted and contemptuous. The duty of an attorney in his brief or argument is to' assist the court in ascertaining the truth pertaining to the pertinent facts, the real effect of decisions and the law applicable to the case, and he far oversteps the bounds of professional conduct when he resorts to misrepresentation, false charges, or vilification. He may fully present, discuss, and argue the evidence and the [114]*114law, and freely indicate wherein he believes that decisions and rulings are wrong or erroneous, but this he may do effectually without making bald accusations against the motives and intelligence of the court, or being discourteous or resorting to abuse which is not argument nor convincing to reasoning minds. If respondent has no respect for the justices, he ought to have enough regard for his position at the bar to refrain from attacking the tribunal of which he is a member, and which the people through the constitution and by general consent have made the final interpreter of the laws which he, as an officer of the court, has sworn to uphold and protect. These duties are so plain that any departure from them by a member of the bar would seem to be wilful and intentional misconduct.

The power of courts to punish for contempt and to maintain decency and dignity in their proceedings is inherent, and is as old as courts are old. It is also provided by statute. By analogy we note the adjudications and penalties imposed in a few of the many cases.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Nev. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chartz-nev-1906.