In re Collins
This text of 452 P.2d 84 (In re Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Petitioner applied for and was denied admission to the Alaska Bar under the provisions of ch. 47, SLA 1965.1 The certification of the Board of Governors states:
L In the opinion of the Board of Governors “it is not in the best interests of those served by the legal profession” that any applicant, or this applicant, be admitted to practice law in Alaska under the provisions of AS 08.08.130(6) at this time, and the application of Richard B. Collins has been and the same is hereby denied.
Finding of Fact No. 21 of the Board of Governors states:
21. As a whole, the applicant’s limited general practice from February 16, 1955 through March 25, 1955, his foreign study, his failure to pass the Alaska Bar [85]*85examination on three different occasions, the limited experience and knowledge obtained while a district magistrate and district judge and in a relationship other than attorney and client from February 13, 1961 to the present, indicate that the applicant should not be permitted to practice law in the State of Alaska without a showing by examination that the applicant is qualified to serve the public as an attorney.
The Board of Governors concedes that the applicant had satisfied all of the requirements then in force with one exception — that in the opinion of the Board he had failed to demonstrate how “it is in the best interests of those served by the legal profession that he be admitted” to practice law in Alaska.
Petitioner contends that since the Board concedes that he has satisfied all of the requirements of Sec. 1 of ch. 47, SLA 1965 except that of public interest, that he be admitted on the authority of this court’s decision in Application of James A. Hanson.2 Petitioner argues that the facts of his case are identical with those before the court in Hanson and that in the final analysis, under the specific provisions of subsection (6) (E) of Sec. 1 of ch. 47, SLA 1965, it is this court which must determine whether or not it is in the best interests of those served by the legal profession that he be admitted.
In Application of Houston3 this court stated that it assumed jurisdiction of admission matters under that provision of the Alaska Constitution which vested judicial power of the state in the supreme court and under the rule followed by the great majority of states holding that the supreme court of a state has the inherent and final power and authority to determine the standards for admission to the practice of law in that state. We stated:
In adopting the majority rule, we-recognize that the legislature may enact laws governing admission to practice law but hold that it may not require this court to admit on standards other than those accepted or established by the court.
In Application of Brewer4 this court stated that whether or not it would accept legislative standards or rules for admission to the practice of law depended upon whether they had a rational connection with an applicant’s fitness to practice law in Alaska. In that case it was held that there was a rational connection between the legislative standard at issue and the applicant’s fitness to practice law in Alaska and the decision of the Board of Governors was upheld. In Application of James A. Hanson5 this court again recognized a legislative standard in overruling the decision of the Board of Governors.
In the matter now before us the sole question is whether or not it is in the best interest of those served by the legal profession that Richard B. Collins be admitted to the practice of law. The final determination of this question, by the specific wording of the statute, is the sole responsibility of this court. The provision is a statutory recognition of what this court has consistently held to be its inherent power with respect to admissions.
Petitioner was 34 years of age at the time of his application. He attended the University of Kansas from 1946 to 1950, receiving his B.A. degree. He continued his studies at that university and received his LL.B. degree in 1954. He served in the United States Navy from 1951 to 1953. He was admitted to the bar of Kansas in 1955. From 1955 to 1957 and again during the winter semester of 1958-1959 he was a student at the Graduate Institute of International Studies at Geneva, Switzerland. He has resided in Alaska since June of 1960 and has been continuously employed by the Alaska Court System since February 13, 1961, as a district magistrate and district judge.
[86]*86In this court’s opinion it is in the best interests of those served by the legal profession that petitioner be admitted to the bar of Alaska.
Concededly, his qualifications satisfied all of the formal requirements of the law as it read at the time of his application. His formal legal education exceeded that required for admission. For over seven years he had served as a judge in the busy Anchorage district court.6 In this capacity he sat as judge in the trial of criminal misdemeanor cases and in the trial of civil cases involving sums up to $3,000. His duties also required him to conduct arraignments in felony cases and handle juvenile matters. The steadiness and efficiency with which he discharged these highly responsible judicial duties over the years is evidenced in the record by the written testimony of superior court judges of the Alaska Court System and members of the Alaska Bar.
The Board’s principal objection to petitioner’s admission is that he took and failed three bar examinations in Alaska. These failures occurred prior to the cutoff date of June 30, 1965, established in subsection (6) (E).7
Petitioner’s failure to pass three bar examinations is a fact which must be considered to be adverse to his general qualifications. Under the particular facts of this case, however, it cannot be held to be controlling. Subsection (6) (E) of ch. 47, SLA 1965 provided by inference that if an applicant otherwise satisfied the requirements of that law, the fact that he may have failed a bar examination previous to June 30, 1965, would not be a bar to his admission. In Application of Brewer 8 this court held that the statutory cutoff date thus established had sufficient rational connection with an applicant’s general qualifications to be recognized by this court.
Since petitioner had met all of the formal requirements of the law at the time of his application for admission, and since it appears to be in the best interests of those served by the legal profession that he be admitted, his application for admission as an attorney at law to practice law in the courts of the state of Alaska and to membership in the Alaska Bar Association is granted.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
452 P.2d 84, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-collins-alaska-1969.