In Re Emmons

26 N.W.2d 560, 316 Mich. 674
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1947
DocketDocket No. 85, Calendar No. 43,465.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 N.W.2d 560 (In Re Emmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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 Emmons, 26 N.W.2d 560, 316 Mich. 674 (Mich. 1947).

Opinions

On June 19, 1946, three circuit judges sitting en banc in the circuit court of Wayne county, after due hearing, entered an order whereby Harold H. Emmons was disbarred as an attorney-at-law, his license to practice law in this State was revoked, and his name ordered stricken from the roll of attorneys; but with a stay of the order not to exceed 20 days, pending an application for leave to appeal. Leave having first been obtained, Harold H. Emmons, hereinafter referred to as defendant, has appealed from the order of his disbarment.

This disbarment proceeding was instituted and prosecuted under the State Bar rules. After service upon defendant in 1940 of charges preferred, an extended hearing was had before a grievance committee of the third judicial circuit. At the conclusion of the hearing in 1946 the committee filed its report, recommending that defendant be disbarred. In accordance with proper procedure the matter came on for hearing before the three circuit judges and on review of the record made before the grievance committee the result first above noted followed. The appeal now before us is under Supreme Court Rules governing leave to appeal and that portion of Rule No. 15 of the Supreme Court Rules adopted for the State Bar of Michigan, which in part reads:

"Any final order entered (in disbarment proceedings before circuit judges) shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court in its discretion on the law and the facts." *Page 676

Briefly stated, the charges preferred against the defendant are that while acting in a fiduciary capacity incident to probating the estate of George H. Cummings, deceased, and ultimately, in conducting the affairs of a testamentary trust provided in the Cummings' will, defendant was guilty of misconduct in the following particulars:

(a) Failure to give $120,000 bonds as testamentary trustee as required by court order entered by probate judge Hulbert June 19, 1928, incident to allowing defendant's final account as surviving executor and assigning the residue of the estate to him as surviving testamentary trustee for the benefit of crippled children; concealment of such failure; wrongful assumption of the office of trustee and misrepresentation in procuring an order from a successor judge (Judge Murphy) in 1935 for reduction of the required trustee bonds.

(b) Self-dealing with trust funds and misrepresentation and concealment thereof in accounts filed in 1935 and 1936.

(c) False sworn statements in his answer as a defendant in a chancery accounting proceeding (King v. Emmons, 283 Mich. 116 [115 A.L.R. 564]), commenced in 1936, concerning his failure to give the required bonds and defendant's alleged self-dealings.

Understanding of the factual background in consequence of which the order of disbarment was made renders necessary recital of the following. George H. Cummings died testate in June, 1920. By his will the residue of his estate together with accruals and additions thereto were left in trust to the executors named in the will for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a home for the care, maintenance and education of crippled children who otherwise are destitute of the proper and necessary means for their care, medical attention and education. *Page 677 The will named as executors testator's sister, Nellie G. Rockafellow, and Harold H. Emmons, and they were so appointed in July, 1920. They filed an account as executors which was allowed in December, 1924. Nellie G. Rockafellow died the following month, and thereafter Harold H. Emmons continued to administer the Cummings estate as the sole surviving executor. For some further details see King v. Emmons, supra.

The earlier proceedings in the Cummings estate were before Judge Durfee who died in 1927. He was succeeded by Judge Hulbert who resigned April 1, 1934. Judge Hulbert was succeeded by probate judge Thomas C. Murphy. In June, 1928, probate proceedings in the estate of George H. Cummings, deceased, were closed, and on petition of the defendant herein the proceeds of the estate were, by the order of Judge Hulbert, assigned to defendant as sole surviving trustee. In his 1928 petition for closing the estate the defendant herein stated under oath that the assets of the estate were valued at upwards of $1,250,000. In the June, 1928, order of Judge Hulbert it was provided that Emmons should give three bonds. Two of them, each in the sum of $10,000 pertained respectively to two other testamentary trusts under the Cummings will, and a bond in the sum of $100,000 was ordered incident to the administration of the testamentary trust for crippled children. It is admitted that none of the bonds so ordered were given. Nonetheless, the record discloses that the defendant herein took over the assets of the estate and continued to manage its affairs until 1935 without giving any of the ordered bonds. After Thomas C. Murphy became probate judge and on application of defendant herein in 1935 the amount of bonds ordered in 1928 *Page 678 was reduced to $100 each, and furnished by defendant. As above noted, one of the charges preferred against defendant in the instant proceeding is his failure to give bonds as testamentary trustee in accordance with the June, 1928 order of Judge Hulbert, the concealment of such failure, wrongful assumption of the office of trustee and misrepresentation in procuring an order from a successor judge in 1935, whereby the amount of the trustee's bonds was reduced.

There is credible support in the record for defendant's contention and it will be assumed that at the time of George H. Cummings' death his estate was insolvent. This was due to the fact that his possessions mainly consisted of something like 80 equitable interests in real estate practically all of which were heavily encumbered, and on foreclosures the estate would have been liable for deficiencies, and because of the then somewhat depressed real estate market the encumbered equities were not salable, and the income from the estate was not sufficient to meet carrying expenses. However, a few months after the death of Mr. Cummings real estate values in and about Detroit took on a boom aspect. By May, 1924, incident to their return for the purpose of fixing the Federal estate tax, the co-executors under oath reported the net value of the Cummings estate as being $377,954.54. Defendant testified that in the summer of 1920 he discussed the matter of the Cummings estate with probate judge Durfee and that the latter advised defendant to wind up the estate as insolvent. In this connection defendant's testimony in part was:

"I said, `In this estate there are three pieces out Woodward avenue totalling about 800 acres.' * * * I mean three parcels as we finally segregated them. * * * I said, `of course, the building *Page 679 boom in Detroit is here, in full force and effect, and some of these real estate fellows I have talked to have said if we could subdivide those properties and sell them at retail, they can go out and sell them at retail, they can go out and sell them as lots.'

"He (Judge Durfee) says, `You know you can't do that as an executor.' And I said, `Sure, I know it. All we can do, as executor, is sell exactly what the dead man owned when he died; file a petition to sell each piece.' * * *

"I said, `Judge, if we could get them out of this estate somehow or other and subdivide them, and these men could sell them, and I think they can, we might get enough out of this to pay these Negroes off, that have been swindled out of this money (referring to Negroes who prior to the death of George H.

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Related

In Re Block
158 N.W.2d 49 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1968)
In Re Emmons
47 N.W.2d 620 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W.2d 560, 316 Mich. 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-emmons-mich-1947.