In Re Fallon

16 So. 2d 532, 204 La. 955, 1943 La. LEXIS 1119
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1943
DocketNo. 37040.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 So. 2d 532 (In Re Fallon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Fallon, 16 So. 2d 532, 204 La. 955, 1943 La. LEXIS 1119 (La. 1943).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Henry E. Fallon, a member of the Bar of this State, has interposed an exception of no right or cause of action to the petition of the Louisiana State Bar Association seeking his disbarment. The plaintiff association is appearing through its duly appointed Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances, which is charged with the duty of instituting and prosecuting such suits. See Article 13 of the Articles of Incorporation of the Louisiana State Bar Association.

The petition for the defendant’s disbarment alleges, in substance, that defendant who was admitted to the Bar of this State on June 13, 1924, has demeaned himself in a manner inconsistent and at variance with the oath subscribed by him as an attorney at law and has disregarded the ethics, duties and obligations which he assumed as a member of the Bar, and, by reason thereof, he should be disbarred from the further practice of his profession.

The petition alleges that due investigation has been made of the conduct of the defendant as provided by section 3 of Article 13 of the Articles of Incorporation of the Louisiana State Bar Association, and that, in the opinion of the Committee, sufficient cause exists for the filing of charges for defendant’s disbarment.

The petition further alleges that this Court has condemned the practice of the defendant as unethical and collusive; that the defendant unlawfully and in collusion with the parties and J. Claude Meraux, formerly judge of the Twenty-fifth Judicial District Court for the Parishes of St. Bernard and Plaquemines, procured illegal divorces in fourteen cases in which neither plaintiffs nor defendants were residents of the Parish of St. Bernard and the' collusive acts appear in the pleadings and notes of evidence filed in the cases whereof the court was not vested with jurisdiction either of the parties or of the subject-matter; that in many of the cases where the alleged cause for divorce was adultery, services were accepted and citations were waived by the defendants, which were noted on the petitions several days before they were filed; that in other cases the defendants executed affidavits which are attached to the .answers in which they collusively admitted the allegations of adultery contained in the petitions, many of the affidavits being made before the suits were filed; that in many of the cases the notices of trial were prepared by the attorneys for the plaintiffs and service thereof accepted by the defendants and filed for the purpose of securing a speedy rendition of judgment by the trial judge in collusion with the defendant herein and the parties to the suit; that invariably judgment was rendered in the absence of the defendants who-had only accepted service.

*959 Tlie petition represents that this Court held in the case of Perez, District Attorney, v. Meraux, Judge, 201 La. 498, 9 So.2d 662, 677, as follows: “Then, too, the striking similarity in the method employed in the handling of these cases by the four principal attorneys who are involved should, in our opinion, have placed him on his guard.” That the defendant, who filed fourteen of the cases, was one of the attorneys referred to by the Court. Petitioner then mentions eleven cases and the reasons for petitioner’s charge that defendant colluded with the former trial judge and the litigants in those cases.

The petition represents that in many of the cases mentioned therein it is clearly shown that the district court was without jurisdiction and that a casual examination •of the entire record in the case of Perez, District Attorney, v. Meraux, Judge, will show that fact; that all the cases taken as a whole exhibit collusion on the part of defendant with the trial judge and the litigants. Petitioner represents that in a large number of the cases the records show collusion and fraud were used to obtain ■divorces and annulments and that in all of them occurred glaring defects and errors which should not have gone unnoticed; that all the cases taken together are sufficient to •show that the defendant had knowledge ■of the collusion; and that the trial judge claimed that in most of the cases he did not read the pleadings and relied upon the statement of the defendant; that if the evidence offered in any of the cases was not in conformity with the pleadings, the defendant is guilty of misrepresenting the facts to the trial judge.

The petition finally shows that all the cases referred to in the petition are on file in this Court as evidence in the matter of Perez, District Attorney, v. Meraux, Judge, 201 La. 498, 9 So.2d 662, which records are annexed to and made part of the petition.

At the hearing on defendant’s exception, which is the only issue presented for the decision of the Court, a note of evidence was made consisting of the testimony of Mrs. Irene Ricks Pluche Henry, plaintiff in one of the suits for divorce mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and a special offering by defendant’s counsel of the minutes of the Committee and the several notices which the Committee served on the defendant. It was agreed by counsel in open Court that the testimony of Mrs. Henry and the records of the Committee, referred to in the note of evidence, should be considered by the Court in connection with the petition in disposing of the exception of no right or cause of action.

The defendant, under his exception, contends that the allegations of the petition and the investigation conducted by the Committee, as evidenced by its minutes, show that plaintiff has no right or cause of action against him.

It appears from the note of evidence in the record that the Committee of the plaintiff association notified the defendant to appear before it on three occasions — January 30, 1942, April 8, 1942, and August 20, 1942. The defendant was informed by the notices that the Committee was investigating his alleged improper conduct in obtaining judgments of divorce in various *961 cases filed in the Parish of St. Bernard. Defendant was also informed in the notices that he might produce before the Committee any witnesses or documentary evidence that he desired to offer in his own behalf. A hearing before the Committee took place on January 30, 1942, and the defendant and his attorneys were present at the hearing. The note of evidence taken before the committee on that occasion shows an agreement was entered into between the parties admitting that seventeen cases, specifically referred to by number and title, were filed by defendant in the Parish of St. Bernard and that “if Judge Meraux was called and placed as a witness on the stand and the same questions were propounded to him now, as were propounded to him in the hearing of Case No. 35,755 of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, entitled Leander H. Perez, District Attorney of the Twenty-fifth Judicial District Court of Louisiana for the Parishes of St. Bernard and Plaque-mines versus J. Claude Meraux, Judge of the 25th Judicial District Court of Louisiana for the Parishes of St. Bernard and Plaquemines [201 La. 498, 9 So.2d 662], his answer would be the same as given in that proceeding.”

The stipulation with regard to the testimony Judge Meraux would give if present was entered into with the reservation to defendant of the right to examine Judge Meraux at a later date and to produce any additional witnesses that he might desire.

Following the enumeration of the cases filed in St.

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Louisiana State Bar Ass'n v. Martin
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Bluebook (online)
16 So. 2d 532, 204 La. 955, 1943 La. LEXIS 1119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fallon-la-1943.