In Re Everett

293 P.2d 928, 80 Ariz. 124, 1956 Ariz. LEXIS 187
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1956
Docket6099
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 P.2d 928 (In Re Everett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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 Everett, 293 P.2d 928, 80 Ariz. 124, 1956 Ariz. LEXIS 187 (Ark. 1956).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This disciplinary proceeding directed against respondent, O. Ellis Everett, a member of the State Bar of Arizona, stems from the following letter, admittedly written by respondent on August 14, 1950, to his client, one Francis Platt, of Salt Lake City, Utah, viz.:

“A man has offered me One Thou-, sand Five Hundred ($1,500.00) Cash for the Compressor which I had trucked in. It cost me Fifty ($50.00) Dollars to have it brought in. So, if you will have the enclosed Bill Of Sale properly executed and return it to me, I will send you One-half of the One Thousand Five Hundred ($1,500.00) Dollars minus my Fifty ($50.00) Dollars which will be Seven Hundred ($700.00) Dollars net to you.
“Please expedite this Business because I do not want to miss the Sale which will give us a little money. * * * ” (Emphasis supplied.)

According to complainant Platt’s version of the affair he subsequently learned from the purchaser of the compressor that $2,-000 had been paid for it, and being unable to effect a settlement with respondent he reported the matter to the State Bar of Arizona. This complaint was referred to Local Administrative Committee for District No. 1, and on June 8, 1951 the following charges of professional misconduct were made against respondent, viz.:

“Item 1: — That you advised the complainant, representative of your said clients, by letter dated August 14, 1950, that you had been offered $1,500.-00 in cash, for a compressor, which was for sale by reason of the suit above mentioned and proceedings therein, when in truth and in fact, you were offered and subsequently received $2,-000.00 for said compressor.
*125 “Item 2: — That you retained $500.-00 of the $2,000.00 payment above described, without any authorization so to do from your clients.”

Chronologically the proceedings against respondent were as follows:

June 15, 1951 Preliminary hearing,

August 22, 1952 First order to show cause issued,

September 16, 1952 Formal hearing thereon, before three committee members but no decision made,

* * • * * * * * *

July 21, 1954 New complaint (on identical charges) filed by new chairman of administrative committee, and another order to show cause issued,

September 13, 1954 Hearing held,

September 22, 1954 Findings of fact and recommendations as to discipline made, signed by five members of committee,

October, 1954 Administrative committee record lodged with State Bar Secretary,

November 4, 1954 Respondent notified of their finding,

June 11, 1955 Hearing before Board of Governors, and matter decided same date,

July 6, 1955 Record certified to this court.

It will be noted that more than four years elapsed between the initiation of this proceeding and the filing of the record thereof with this court. This delay on the part of the Local Administrative Committee, in our opinion was inexcusable and constitutes a reflection on the State Bar of Arizona. Certainly it was not in keeping with either the letter or the spirit of our rules governing such matters. Rule 35(a) provides:

“ * * * the committee shall proceed with the hearing unless for good cause shown they shall continue the hearing. No continuance shall be for a longer period than thirty days nor for periods aggregating more than ninety days without the approval of this court.”

and Rule 35(d) provides:

“Upon conclusion of the formal hearing, the committee shall promptly determine whether the charges shall be dismissed or the member disciplined.”

Until the matter was lodged here we were not even aware that such a proceeding was pending. This court at no time had approved of any continuances in the proceedings below. It appears that this delay was due in part to the fact that the chairman in charge of the first hearing moved away. However, the matter “slumbered” for a period of twenty-two months with the local administrative committee, and counsel for respondent had a hard time convincing the committee, then acting, that the formal hearing required under the rules had already been held. His motion to dismiss the second proceeding for undue harassment was denied. Finally the matter was decided upon written documents admitted in evidence and the testimony given by respondent at the prior hearing held on September 16, 1952, coupled with the depo *126 sition of complainant. In the meantime however three new members had been added to the committee and necessarily their decision was based solely upon the written record.

It was the unanimous decision of the five members of the Administrative Committee :

“(11) That Respondent has been guilty of professional misconduct by being dishonest, and by retaining and converting to his own use funds belonging to his client; * *

and they recommended that the respondent “be suspended from his right to practice law.” The Board of Governors “by a vote of a majority of the Board” approved the above-quoted findings of the Administrative Committee and recommended that respondent “be indefinitely suspended from the practice of law”.

While we appreciate the labors of the Committee and the Board of Governors and are sure that they all acted in the matter according to their best judgment, nevertheless in disciplinary proceedings in the final analysis it is the duty of this court to sit as triers of both fact and law. In re Sweeney, 77 Ariz. 138, 267 P.2d 1074, and cases therein cited. Hence we are not bound by their findings but must determine for ourselves whether the evidence in a given case is so “clear and convincing” as to warrant disciplinary action.

When we look to the merits of the charge it at once becomes apparent that a question of veracity is involved. Who are we to believe, Platt or respondent? Francis Platt stands as the complainant and the accuser, and upon his word largely depends any censure of respondent. Apparently none of the committee or Board were brought face to face with the accuser or had personal knowledge of Platt’s reputation for honesty and integrity. At least there is nothing in the record before us on this point. Nor was he ever subjected to the searching scrutiny of cross-examination. Nevertheless, evidently his version of what occurred, as given in the deposition taken in Salt Lake City by Platt’s own attorney, was fully accepted without question, even though he was impeached as to certain of his statements on minor matters by other irrefutable evidence.

Respondent gave this version of the affair : back in 1946 he was employed through complainant as an attorney to foreclose a mortgage covering certain mining properties and machinery at an agreed fee of $1500; during the course of this foreclosure unexpected complications arose that he was asked to handle and it was then agreed that his fee should be increased to $3,000. These matters were successfully handled, judgment was entered, and the property foreclosed upon and sold at sheriff’s sale.

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Related

Matter of Carroll
602 P.2d 461 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1979)
In re Stone
295 P.2d 839 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
293 P.2d 928, 80 Ariz. 124, 1956 Ariz. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-everett-ariz-1956.