In re Evans

130 P. 217, 42 Utah 282, 1913 Utah LEXIS 8
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1913
DocketNo. 1227
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 130 P. 217 (In re Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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 Evans, 130 P. 217, 42 Utah 282, 1913 Utah LEXIS 8 (Utah 1913).

Opinions

STRAUP, J.

In May, 1900, an information or accusation was filed in this court to disbar David Evans and L. R. Rogers, members of tbe bar of this court, wbo theretofore were copart-ners in the practice of the law at Ogden, Utah. The matter was referred to a master or referee, who took the testimony and reported findings which exonerated Evans and Rogers of the charge. After a, submission of the cause on the findings and the record, the court made additional findings, upon which, and the conclusions stated upon them, Evans and Rogers were adjudged guilty and deprived of the-right to practice in any of the courts of this state until they paid into court the sum of $1793 for the use and benefit of one Mrs. Nellie Nelson and her minor children, the costs of the proceedings, $175 referee’s fee, and a stenographer’s fee of fifty-four dollars. It was further adjudged that, upon their failure to pay such sums within sixty days, they be permanently disbarred and their names stricken from [289]*289tbe roll of attorneys. Tbe case, In re Evans & Rogers, is reported in 22 Utah, 366, 62 Pac. 913, 53 L. R. A. 952, 83 Am. St. Rep. 794, where tbe findings of tbe referee, tbe additional findings of tbe court, and its opinion and tbe judgment are set forth. TJpon tbe filing of the decision Evans and Rogers complied with tbe order by paying the moneys as directed, and there tbe matter was at rest until in April, 1912, when they filed a verified petition in this court for a rehearing and a review and re-examination of tbe record and tbe judgment. Tbe Attorney-General, and counsel there-toforb appointed; in tbe former proceedings as friends of tbe court and to conduct tbe prosecution, by written stipulation, consented that tbe petition, if tbe court were so advised, be entertained. Such counsel were thereupon reappointed by us as friends of tbe court. TJpon their request that they be relieved from further participation in tbe matter, we appointed other counsel for such purpose, who consented to act, and who have rendered us much assistance.

Tbe petition sets forth tbe former proceedings, tbe findings of the referee, tbe additional findings of tbe court, portions of its opinion, and tbe judgment. It is further averred that there are manifest errors apparent on tbe face of tbe record and judgment, in tbe particulars that tbe additional findings made by tbe court are inconsistent with each other; that material portions of such findings, as appear on tbe face of them, are based, not on tbe evidence, but upon misapplied legal fictions, and were made by a resort to methods qt variance with tbe forms and practice of tbe court and contrary to law, and that they do not support tbe judgment; that upon tbe face of tbe findings the petitioners were not guilty of tbe charge; that tbe court adjudged them guilty of matters not within tbe issues, and upon which they bad not bad their day in court; and that tbe petitioners, since tbe rendition of tbe judgment, removed to tbe State of California, where Evans resumed tbe practice of tbe law, and where Rogers intends to do so, and that tbe judgment and tbe opinion, as they now stand, impeach and [290]*290prejudice, and will continue to impeach and prejudice,-their good name and their social and professional standing, and hinder and embarrass, and will continue to hinder and embarrass, them in obtaining business and employment, especially in California and elsewhere, where the circumstances of the controversy are not known as they are in IJtah. For these reasons the petitioners pray for a rehearing and reexamination of the record, and for an annulment or a modification of the judgment.

At the threshold counsel amici curiae advise us that, in their opinion, we are without jurisdiction or power to5 now review the record, or to set aside or modify the judgment; for, while the proceedings resulting in the judgment complained of were special and summary, nevertheless, the judgment is res adjudicada of the whole issue, and cannot be inquired into, except on a motion for new trial or rehearing as by law provided for rehearing of causes, or for legal reasons for maintaining a bill in the nature of a review which, as they advise us, are not sufficiently made to appear. Our attention, therefore, is called to the statute permitting the filing of petitions for -a, rehearing of causes determined by us on appeal, our rules requiring such a petition to be filed within twenty days after the filing of the opinion, and to the failure of the petitioners thereunder to invoke the action of the court, as they, within such time, might have done, and upon these considerations are we advised that they should not now be heard to complain and be permitted to invoke such action more than eleven years after the rendition of the judgment. We are further advised that if the petition be regarded as in the nature of a bill of review, and as designed to invoke in the broadest and most comprehensive manner all the powers possessed by us to correct error, nevertheless, since it is not grounded on newly discovered matter arising since the judgment, nor upon fraud, but on error, not of law appearing on the face of the record, but of fact and alleged errors resulting from a misconception or misapplication of the evidence, or conclusions deduced therefrom, the petition cannot be entertained on that theory.

[291]*291On the other hand, it is contended by counsel for petitioners that the petition invokes the summary jurisdiction of the court, and not its original or appellate jurisdiction in respect of either its common law or equity jurisdiction, and therefore the general rules of criminal and civil procedure prescribed by the Code do not apply, and that such summary jurisdiction over its officers is inherent in the court and exists of necessity; that the exercise of such a jurisdiction is wholly different from that of the ordinary common law and equity jurisdiction, and, in the absence of direct legislative enactments or constitutional provisions, such summary jurisdiction may be exercised and such procedure adopted and such remedies applied as, of necessity, may be required to protect the integrity and dignity of the court and its officers in respect of matters wholly between the court and them; and that within such limitations the power of the court is complete, continuing, and plenary. Counsel for petitioners further contend that, though the petition be regarded as in the nature of a, bill of review, yet, as alleged in the petition, there are manifest errors of law appearing on the face of the record for which not only such a bill will lie, but which also' render the judgment a nullity, and subject to both direct and collateral attack.

Before passing to a consideration of these divergent views, it may be well first to notice, as have counsel, the nature and substance of the accusation and the admitted transactions as disclosed by the record out of which it arose, the findings of the referee, and the additional findings of the court upon which the judgment was based. In 1892 Charles A. Nelson, then a resident of Nevada, while transporting and accompanying live stock on a train of the Southern Pacific Bail-way Company, was, near Truckee, Cal., knocked off the train in a snowshed and killed. He left surviving him a widow and two minor children, also then residing in Nevada. Shortly thereafter they moved to Oakland, Cal. One of the deceased’s brothers, Alfred H. Nelson, was a lawyer practicing his profession at Ogden, Utah. Another brother, Thomas Nelson, resided in Nevada. The widow commu-

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 P. 217, 42 Utah 282, 1913 Utah LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-evans-utah-1913.