In re Eaton

62 N.W. 597, 4 N.D. 514, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 48
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 62 N.W. 597 (In re Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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 Eaton, 62 N.W. 597, 4 N.D. 514, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 48 (N.D. 1895).

Opinions

Bartholomew, J.

This was a proceeding for the disbarment of a duly licensed attorney at law residing and practicing his profession at Grand Forks, in the First District. Four specific charges were made against defendant in the District Court of Grand Forks County. It appears that defendant, as attorney for the receivers of the National Cordage Company (hereafter we will not mention the receivers,) brought an action aided by attachment against Mast, Buford & Burwell Company, a Minnesota corporation, to recover a large sum of money. The papers and correspondence in the case are signed “Eaton & Higbee,” but Mr. Higbee, as we understand, resided in another district, and had no personal relation whatever to the case, and we shall not connect him with it further. The defendant in the action, by Messrs. Bangs & Fisk its attorneys, served notice of a motion to discharge the attachment. Hon. C. F. Templeton, Judge of the First District, issued the order for hearing on the motion, but he was subsequently taken sick, and the motion was heard at the [515]*515office of Bangs & Fisk, in Grand Forks, before Hon. D. E. Morgan, Judge of the Second District, acting for Judge Temple-ton. All the charges are connected with the hearing of this motion, and, briefly stated, are as follows: I. That on January 13, 1894, at Grand Forks, etc., the defendant, Robert A. Eaton, committed falsehood in the court, and before a judge thereof, by stating that he did not know the whereabouts of a certain affidavit pertaining to the motion then on hearing, which statement he well knew to be false; (2) that at the same time and place the defendant was guilty of practicing deceit upon the court, and falsifying evidence to be produced before the court, by seeking to establish his standing in court by an affidavit of service made by one Squires, of St. Paul, Minn., which affidavit stated, among other things, that the complaint in the action of the Cordage Company v. Mast, Buford & Burwell Company had been served upon the defendant in said action, when in fact said complaint had not been served, and said Eaton well knew it had not been served; (3) that the defendant was further guilty of deceit upon the court in that at the said date, and at Grand Forks, the defendant took from the files of the office of the clerk of the court an affidavit of service in the case before mentioned, which affidavit had been regularly filed with the said clerk, and substituted another and different affidavit, some of the allegations of which he well knew to be untrue, particularly the allegation concerning the service of the complaint as mentioned in the preceding charge; (4) that said Eaton is guilty of willfully destroying, defacing, altering, falsifying, and fraudulently removing and secreting a paper filed and deposited in a public office, to-wit, the affidavit of service which was removed from the files of the clerk of the court, as stated in the third charge. These charges, when presented to the court, were based exclusively upon the joint affidavit of Mr. Bangs and Mr. Fisk, and an affidavit of George C. Squires and L. K. Hassell, the clerk of the court. Mr. Squires is an attorney, who originally held the claim against Mast, Buford & Burwell Company, and who placed it in [516]*516the hands of a collection, agency, by whom it was sent to Mr. Eaton, at Grand Forks. When these charges were presented, the court, as we understand the record, ordered their prosecution in due form.

The proceeding is special, but highly criminal in its nature. Section 473, Comp. Laws, reads as follows: “The following are sufficient causes for revocation or suspension: I. When he has been convicted of a felony, or of a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, in either of which cases the record of conviction is conclusive evidence. 2. When he is guilty of a willful disobedience or violation of the order of the court, requiring him to do or forbear an act connected with, or in the course of, his profession. 3. For a willful violation of any of the duties of an attorney or counselor as hereinbefore prescribed. 4. For doing any other act to which such a consequence is by law attached, or upon conviction for any of the offenses mentioned in sections 6400, 6403, 6410 and 6411 of the Penal Code.” An examination of the charges in this case discovers that they can come only under subdivision 3 of that sction. Under subdivision 3 of section 465, a portion of the duties of an attorney are declared to be “to employ for the purpose of maintaining the causes confided to him, such means only as are consistent with truth, and never to seek to mislead the judges by any artifice or false statement of law or fact.” The statutory proceedings for disbarment or suspension will be found in the section following (section 473.) The trial is by the court. The answer is “guilty” or “not guilty.” An acquittal in the trial court is final, but upon conviction in the lower court the defendant may appeal to the Supreme Court. In the trial court all the evidence must be reduced to writing, and filed and preserved; and in case of an appeal it all goes to the Supreme Court, to be “there considered and finally acted upon.” We think the reasons which induced the legislature to make this proceeding an exception to the general rule, and require the Supreme Court to pass upon the facts, are readily discovered. Disbarment proceedings always attract local interest, and arouse [517]*517local feelings and prejudices. The sacred character of the trust confided to an attorney, as well as the nature of the oath that he takes, fully justify the average judgment of mankind in demanding and expecting of him an exceptionally high standard of personal and professional integrity. A suspicion, much more a sworn allegation, of professional misconduct on the part of an attorney, at once makes him an object of dislike, reprobation, and contempt in the community in which he lives. The public pulse is extremely sensitive on that point, and we would not have it otherwise. The legislature doubtless concluded that cases might arise when the ends of justice would require that the facts be reviewed by a tribunal where local prejudices, all the more dangerous when unperceived and unrecognized, could by no possibility affect the result.

While the result of a conviction is cases of this nature, in so far as the defendant is concerned, is purely punitory, yet the purpose of the proceeding is the protection of the court and the high character of the bar. Hence we should not invoke the strict rules of evidence in criminal cases, that require.all material facts to be established beyond reasonable doubt. Further, learned counsel for the prosecution having raised the question in this court that, in so far as the statute authorized a hearing de novo in this court, it is inconsistent with the appellate character of this court as fixed by the subsequently adopted constitution, and hence no longer in force, we shall,'without deciding the point raised, treat this case as an ordinary appeal in a case tried by the court when there are exceptions to the findings of fact, which counsel admits we can properly do on the record as it stands. Thus taking the case, counsel invokes, in support of the judgment below, the rule so often 'discussed, that requires us to affirm in cases when the findings are supported by any legal evidence. The rule established by this court is, perhaps,' somewhat broader than the general rule. Under our statutes we have declared it to be our duty to reverse a finding, based upon written evidence, when it reasonably appears that the finding is against the weight of [518]

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Related

In Re Disbarment of Eaton
235 N.W. 587 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)
Rasmussen v. Chambers
204 N.W. 178 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1925)
Griffith v. Fox
156 N.W. 239 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
State v. Boyd
144 N.W. 232 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
In Re Saddler
1913 OK 179 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)
State Bar Commission Ex Rel. Williams v. Sullivan
1912 OK 527 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Ex Parte Gadsden
71 S.E. 952 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1911)
In re Whittemore
105 N.W. 232 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1905)
In re Elliott
100 N.W. 431 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1904)
In re Eaton
74 N.W. 870 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1898)
Tyler v. Shea
61 N.W. 468 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 N.W. 597, 4 N.D. 514, 1895 N.D. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-eaton-nd-1895.