In Re Heard

141 So. 60, 174 La. 563, 1932 La. LEXIS 1702
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1932
DocketNo. 30797.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 So. 60 (In Re Heard) 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 Heard, 141 So. 60, 174 La. 563, 1932 La. LEXIS 1702 (La. 1932).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

The disbarment committee of this court instituted an original proceeding for the disbarment of Zachary Taylor Heard, a member of the bar of the city of Monroe, for alleged unprofessional conduct in connection with certain of his dealings with a negro woman named Stella Spencer. A citation and a copy of the petition were sent to the sheriff of Ouachita parish, at Monroe, for service on the defendant. The sheriff was unable to find the defendant, and, being reliably informed defendant had left the state, he made his return accordingly. Application was then made by the disbarment committee to this court for the appointment of a curator ad hoc, which was granted. The curator ad hoc thus appointed excepted to the form of the proceeding ; and, on his exception being maintained, the suit was dismissed. See In re Heard, 169 La. 559, 125 So. 593.

Subsequently, this court amended its rules so as to provide for the citation of absent defendants in disbarment proceedings. The present suit was then instituted on the same causes of action set forth in the previous suit; whereupon, after some delay, the defendant voluntarily appeared through his counsel and filed his answer.

*565 The petition to disbar defendant is predicated on two specific grounds of alleged professional misconduct.

Under the first ground, it is alleged, in substance, that the defendant appropriated to his own use $300, the proceeds of a policy or death benefit certificate in the Mosaic Templars of America, of Little Bock, Ark., which he collected in his capacity as an attorney at law for account of Stella Spencer, widow of Ide Spencer, the insured, who, together with her seven children, were the beneficiaries. That the Mosaic Templars of America did not at any time deny liability, but, on the contrary, evinced a willingness to discharge its obligation, subject only to the requirement that the payment in behalf of the minor children of the insured be made to their duly appointed guardian or tutor, and so advised Stella Spencer.

That, on or about September 26, 1927, Stella Spencer called on the defendant as an attorney at law, related to him the circumstances and informed him of her desire to collect the proceeds of the policy and of the necessity of procuring for the insurer evidence of her appointment as natural tutrix of her minor children, which appointment defendant had previously secured in Biehland parish for another purpose, and for which he had been paid. That defendant assured Stella Spencer he would secure the necessary evidence of her appointment as natural tutrix, and, in order to expedite the payment of the policy, he would forward the papers direct to the insurers, which defendant did, by procuring a copy of the letters of tutorship from the clerk of court of Biehland parish.

That on or about October 20, 1927, Stella Spencer called at defendant’s office in Monroe, where the defendant exhibited to her a voucher • check for $300 dated October 15, 1927, drawn by the Mosaic Templars of America on the Federal Bank & Trust Company, of Little Bock, Ark., made payable to Stella Spencer, individually and as tutrix of her minor children therein named, which check was issued in settlement of the insurance on the life of Ide Spencer. That defendant caused Stella Spencer to indorse the names of the payees on the reverse of the check, which, when done, was left at his suggestion with the defendant for collection. That, on the 'same day, defendant presented the check to the Ouachita National Bank, of Monroe, La., which bank paid defendant in currency $300, the face value of the cheek.

That thereafter Stella Spencer made repeated and unavailing demands upon defendant for the payment to her, in her individual and representative capacity, of the proceeds of the check; but that the defendant evaded payment, first on one pretext and then on another, until becoming weary of the delays and distrustful of defendant’s promises Stella Spencer sought other counsel, resulting in the making of a complaint which eventually reached the disbarment committee; and that no part of the proceeds of said check was ever paid to Stella Spencer.

Under the second ground, it is alleged, in substance, that during the investigation of the complaint, and after defendant was notified of the pendency thereof and requested to appear before the committee in his own defense, defendant attempted to stifle the investigation by tampering with the prosecuting witness, *567 Stella Spencer, and sought, by offering her a monetary reward, to influence her to withdraw the complaint and refrain from giving evidence against him before the committee or in any proceeding looking to his disbarment.

The defendant answered the petition, denying generally the specific acts of misconduct alleged, and, in substance, averred that Stella Spencer employed him to file suit to cancel an oil and gas lease on 160 acres of land in Richland parish ; that to do this it was necessary to open the succession of Ide Spencer, for which defendant was paid $25. That Stella Spencer had agreed to pay a fee of 50 per cent, of whatever sum was recovered as the result of the litigation over the oil and gas lease; that he expended more than $25 in costs and in making trips to Rayville, the parish seat of Richland, when Stella Spencer refused to go on with the suit.

That at the time he opened the succession of her husband, Stella Spencer informed him of the policy of $300 in the Mosaic Templars of America on the life of Ide Spencer, but that he then advised her the services of an attorney were unnecessary, and that she should take up the collection of the policy through the local lodge. That thereafter, to wit, September 26, 1927, Stella Spencer engaged his services to collect the policy of insurance because her own efforts and those of other attorneys of the Monroe bar had been ineffectual, his employment being, “on the basis of a 50/50 division of whatever amount he might recover, said arrangement being readily assented to by Stella Spencer, to repay defendant for the cash he had spent out of his own funds in opening the succession of Ide Spencer and for his services as attorney representing her in said matter, as well as collecting the policy which up to that time Stella Spencer had been unable to collect.”

Defendant then sets forth the extent of the services he rendered to effect the collection of the check and the manner in which he accounted to the widow of the insured for the proceeds, averring that, upon collection he immediately paid her 50 per cent, of the proceeds, less the expense of a telegram and of exchange, taking her receipt therefor in the presence of three responsible and reputable witnesses, “who saw the-settlement and saw Stella Spencer leave the office apparently perfectly satisfied; that said receipt has been lost or stolen.”

Defendant concluded his answer by averring that he was ready with his witnesses to appear before the committee to disprove the charges so unjustly made, but that the committee refused to permit him to do so, and that he filed with the committee the affidavits of-himself and of other witnesses, which were before the committee when the suit was filed without a formal hearing; and he.annexes to his answer copies of the documents which the committee lent his counsel for that purpose from its file, including the answer defendant filed to the complaint of Stella Spencer before the committee, and the affidavits attached.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 So. 60, 174 La. 563, 1932 La. LEXIS 1702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-heard-la-1932.