In Re Disbarment of Decaro

262 N.W. 132, 220 Iowa 176
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 17, 1935
DocketNo. 43027.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 262 N.W. 132 (In Re Disbarment of Decaro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Disbarment of Decaro, 262 N.W. 132, 220 Iowa 176 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

This is a proceeding brought to disbar Joseph F. DeCaro and revoke his license to practice as an attorney in the state of Iowa, and was commenced by an accusation filed on the 30th of July, 1934, in the district court of Clinton county, Iowa, by the Clinton County Bar Association. The charge contained six grounds or counts. A contest court composed of Hon. D. W. Hamilton, Hon. Ralph IIasner, and the Hon. Norman D. Hays was appointed by the court, and the matter came on for hearing- before said contest court, and on the 5th day of January, 1935, it was decided by said court that grounds 2, 3, and 4 were found not to have been sustained by the evidence, and were dismissed, and as to grounds 1, 5, and 6 the court found that the charges were established, and it ordered that DeCaro be disbarred from the practice of law in the state of Iowa, and that his license to so practice law be revoked. Proper exception was taken to this order and entry, and on the 11th day of January, 1935, notice of appeal to the Supreme Court was served by DeCaro. The case was thus appealed to this court.

On the outset of the case, and as set out in the brief of the prosecution, the question was raised as to whether or not this ease should be tried on errors assigned, or whether it was triable de novo in this court. As that question confronts us throughout the case, it logically seems to be the first, question to decide.

This court in, In re Disbarment of Cloud, 217 Iowa 3, 250 N. W. 160, had something to say on this subject. On account of *178 a question raised by Cloud’s attorney, it was ruled by the contest court that the action should be tried as an action of law, and this was concurred in by the attorney for the prosecution. This court in that case said: “We have held that special proceedings are generally triable as law actions, and that on appeal the issues are to be determined on errors assigned,” and also called attention to the opinion of the court in Norman v. Bennett, 216 Iowa 181, 246 N. W. 378, in which the court said, speaking through Justice Kindig,

“There being a conflict, then, in the evidence on the questions under consideration, this court, in this special proceeding, is bound by the finding of the municipal court. * * * On appeal in cases arising under a special proceeding of the kind in question, the controversy is determined on errors assigned. ’ ’

In the Cloud opinion, it was said on page 11:

“However, notwithstanding the record made below by agreement of counsel that this proceeding be tried as a law action, under our prior holdings, a special proceeding for disbarment is an exception to the general rule and is triable here de novo, and we are so considering the present appeal.” However, further on the court says: “As to whether or not the amendments to the statute providing for a special court of three judges to try and determine cases of this kind disposes of the exception mentioned, we do not now decide. ’ ’

We think it is time it be determined whether or not this action is triable de novo or whether or not it is triable on error as an ordinary action. Section 10936 provides as follows:

“In ease of a removal or suspension being ordered, an appeal therefrom lies to the supreme court, and all the original papers, together with a transcript of the record, shall thereupon be transferred to the supreme court, to be there considered and finally acted upon. A judgment of acquittal by a court of record is final. ’ ’

In the Cloud case, the court, citing from the case of State v. Mosher, 128 Iowa 82, 103 N. W. 105, 5 Ann. Cas. 984, says:

“Special proceedings are generally triable on errors, but the statute makes an exception in the case of disbarment pro *179 ceedings. Tlie only object in directing' tlie -preservation of the evidence, and on appeal having ‘all the original papers with the transcript of the record’ transferred to the supreme court ‘to be there considered and finally acted upon,’ as required by section 329 [10936] of the Code, is to enable this court to hear the case de novo.”

What does section 10936 mean as to an appeal in such proceedings, to the supreme court, when it says ‘‘all the original papers, together with a transcript of the record, shall thereupon be transferred to the supreme court, to be there considered and finally acted upon”? What is considered? All the original papers and a transcript. For what purpose is this done? That this court may act upon the same literally when an appeal is taken, and when all the directions of the statute are carried out this court is called upon to act on the record before it. Then, though there be no abstract, no argument, literally the statute calls for action by the supreme court. How then does this court act? Clearly on the records, and it has the power, and it is its right and duty, to examine into the right of the matter and to act as if it were considering the ease as a trial court. Under no other way can the full intent of the statute be carried out.

As the statutes now stand, by section 10907, the power to admit persons to practice as attorneys and counselors in the courts of this state, or in any of them, is vested exclusively in the supreme court. It is elementary that a court having the power to admit, has the power to disbar the attorney from that court. And as the supreme court has the power to admit to all courts of the state, it logically follows that it has the power to disbar not only from practicing before it, but before all other courts in the state.

Going then to the question of whether or not the creation of the present form of contest court removed the matter passed on by it from the exception mentioned in the Mosher case to the general rule in hearings upon an appeal of a special proceeding, we see nothing that in any way removes any hearing in this court in disbarment proceedings from the rule laid down in the Mosher case.

Norman v. Bennett, 216 Iowa 181, 246 N. W. 378, has no bearing upon this ease whatever, for the reason that it was a special proceeding commenced under section 11608 of the Code *180 to recover from tire defendant, an attorney who had collected for the plaintiff from a cheek on the Marshalltown municipal court. It was in no sense a disbarment proceeding. True, it was a special proceeding, but the exception in the Mosher case goes only to disbarment proceedings, and is not applicable to such a case as the one of Norman v. Bennett.

The present form of contest court was first created by chapter 220 of the Forty-second General Assembly, and first appears in our Codes in the Code of 1927, being there divided, as in the present Code, into nine sections, running from 10934-bl to 10934-b9, inclusive. The effect of this act is simply to transfer the trial of these cases from the judge of the district court, or from the district court itself, to the special tribunal created by the statute. The exact language of section 329 of the Code of 1897 was originally in the Code of 1873 as section 223. From there it went into section 329 of the Code of 1897, and it is found also in section 10936 of the Code of 1924 and in subsequent Codes.

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Bluebook (online)
262 N.W. 132, 220 Iowa 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-disbarment-of-decaro-iowa-1935.