In Re Jones

249 P. 803, 68 Utah 213, 1926 Utah LEXIS 92
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1926
DocketNo. 4182.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 249 P. 803 (In Re Jones) 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 Jones, 249 P. 803, 68 Utah 213, 1926 Utah LEXIS 92 (Utah 1926).

Opinion

CHERRY, J.

After investigation by committee appointed by this court a petition for disbarment of Ricy H. Jones, a member of the *214 bar of this court hereinafter called defendant, was filed, in which formal charges of misconduct were set forth. An answer generally denying the charges Was filed by the defendant, whereupon Hon. George S. Barker, a judge of the Second judicial district, was appointed referee to take the testimony to be adduced by the respective parties and to report the same. Pursuant thereto the referee conducted a hearing of the matter at Brigham City, Box Elder county, on the 3d, 4th, and 5th days of November, 1925, at which the evidence offered for the respective parties was received and later certified to this court. The matter was argued orally at the February, 1926, term by respective counsel and submitted for our decision. In behalf of the defendant a written brief has been filed. The order of reference merely required the referee to take the evidence and report it. He was not required to and did not make any findings of fact upon the evidence.

There are five different charges formally and specifically alleged. Three of them pertain to appearing as attorney for parties without authority and may be condensed into one. The other two charges respectively relate to changing the name of a grantee in a deed after its execution and to deceiving the judge of the district court by obtaining his signature to certain findings of fact containing matter which the judge had previously ordered stricken. As so condensed, the charges, in substance, are:

(1) That defendant corruptly and wilfully, and without authority, appeared as attorney for John H. Burt,, Stohl Furniture Company, Brigham City, E. H. Jones, and William Davis in one or more of three civil action or proceedings commenced or pending in the district court of Box Elder county.

(2) That he wrongfully ánd unlawfully and with intent to hinder and delay and defraud his creditors, and after the same had been executed and delivered, changed the name of the grantee in a certain deed from Ricy H. Jones (his own *215 name) to Ricy W. Jones (the name of his son), and as so altered caused the deed to be recorded in the office of the county recorder of the county in which the land conveyed by the deed was situate.

(3) That he wilfully disobeyed and .misled the judge of the district court of Box Elder county and obtained the signature of said judge to certain findings of fact, etc., in a certain action which had been tried before and was to be decided by said judge containing certain specified matters which the judge had previously directed the defendant to eliminate and “bracket out” from the proposed findings, etc. That on account of such sharp practice the judge had directed a new trial in the action.

We have carefully examined the evidence taken and certified to us by the referee. The record is quite voluminous and contains much documentary matter exhibiting the various legal proceedings in which the alleged acts of misconduct were committed. The gist of the matter, however, may be briefly stated:

The principle accusation, and to which the most of the evidence was directed, is that the defendant without authority appeared as attorney for the persons named. The acts charged arose in the course of very bitter family litigation over the right to the property of a deceased brother of the defendant. Another surviving brother claimed the property by virtue of a will and a deed, both executed by the deceased shortly before his death. The defendant herein, with numerous other heirs and certain creditors, disputed the validity of the will and opposed its admission to probate. They also brought an action to set aside the deed, and brought a third action in the nature of a creditors’ bill seeking to set aside subsequent transfers, mortgages, etc. It is in these proceedings that the defendant is alleged to have made the persons named parties and appeared as attorney for them respectively without authority. Neither of them was a *216 necessary party, and in the case of the probate of the will those who were joined as creditors were not even proper parties. There were numerous parties to each of the proceedings, both heirs and creditors, ample to maintain the actions without the persons claimed to have been joined without authority.

The record shows that the relationship of the five persons named in the charges to the litigation and the manner in which they were made parties thereto were as follows: J. H. Burt was a half-brother of the deceased. He testified that he did not desire to engage in the litigation, and that he assigned his interest in the matter to his sister, Emma J. Stephens. In two of the actions the name of J. H. Burt appeared in the title as a party plaintiff, but in the body of the pleading in each case the fact of his assignment of his interest to Emma J. Stephens, who was an authorized party, was indicated. He testified that he gave no authority to the defendant to make him a party or to act as his attorney. Thereafter, upon his application to the court, the proceedings were dismissed as to him. Stohl Furniture Company was a creditor of deceased in the sum of $10, and Brigham City had a claim amounting to $15. It is undisputed that these claims had been presented to the defendant, and he was furnished with statements thereof with the request that he obtain the payment of them. In the legal proceedings mentioned these two creditors were made parties along with numerous heirs and other creditors. Thereafter, and when their claims had been paid by the parties sued, upon their application and the statement that their appearance had been unauthorized, the court dismissed the proceedings as to them. E. H. Jones, a brother of the deceased, testified that the defendant had authority to make him a party and to act as his attorney in the proceedings. W. E. Davis as assignee, was a creditor. He was an attorney at law. He was made a party. Afterwards, upon his application, the proceedings were dismissed as to him. He stated that “to the best of his recollection” he had not authorized the defendant to re *217 present him in the litigation. The defendant, on the other hand, positively asserted that Davis had authorized him to act and had advanced $5 or $10 for costs.

The litigation prosecuted by the defendant, and in which the persons named are alleged to have been made parties without authority, was generally successful. There was no injury whatever resulting to any of the persons by reason of the alleged acts of the defendant, and in each case there was, upon the facts, at least sufficient color of authority to preclude the conclusion that the defendant corruptly or wil-fully acted as attorney for either of them without authority.

Comp Laws Utah 1917, § 331, provides for the removal or suspension of an attorney, among other causes, for “corruptly or wilfully and without authority appearing as attorney for a party to an action or proceeding.” That the defendant appeared as attorney for some of the parties named without authority may be conceded, but there is nothing in the evidence or the circumstances of the case to support or justify a finding that such appearance was corrupt or wilful. For the reasons stated this charge is not sustained by the evidence.

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Related

Davis v. Ogden City
215 P.2d 616 (Utah Supreme Court, 1950)
Bartos v. United States District Court
19 F.2d 722 (Eighth Circuit, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 803, 68 Utah 213, 1926 Utah LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jones-utah-1926.