In Re Lincoln

283 P. 965, 102 Cal. App. 733, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 137
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 24, 1929
DocketDocket No. 5416.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 283 P. 965 (In Re Lincoln) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Lincoln, 283 P. 965, 102 Cal. App. 733, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 137 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

THOMPSON (IRA F.), J.

The appeal herein is from a judgment suspending the accused attorney from membership in the legal fraternity for the period of one year, commencing December 24, 1924. The first question with which we are confronted is: Have the questions presented by the appeal become moot by the expiration of the period of suspension? (There is no doubt but that the suspension period has expired on account of the self-executing character of the judgment. See In re Graves, 62 Cal. App. 168 [216 Pac. 386], and Lincoln v. Superior Court, 95 Cal. App. 35 [271 Pac. 1107].)

The respondent Bar Association relies upon the authority of Goldsmith v. Board of Education, 63 Cal. App. 141 [218 Pac. 296], and two cases therein cited to support their assertion that the questions raised by the appeal are now of only academic interest. The cited case was one wherein the plaintiff and appellant, Goldsmith, had been suspended as a school-teacher for unprofessional conduct, after a hearing by the board of education. He instituted a proceeding in mandamus by which he sought to be restored to his position. Judgment in the Superior Court went in favor of the board of education, and the petitioner appealed. Before the appeal was determined the period of suspension expired and petitioner was reinstated. The court held, upon the motion for dismissal, that petitioner’s right to a salary during the period of suspension was involved, in addition to the question of reinstatement, and, therefore, the appeal should not be dismissed. The reasoning upon the other question of whether the court should entertain an appeal upon the question of reinstatement is obviously dicta. Aside from this fact is another element which distinguishes it from the present situation in this, that there the appeal was not from the order finding the petitioner guilty and suspending him, but an appeal in the mandate proceeding which could only result in an order directing the board to reinstate. Weaver v. Reddy, 135 Cal. 430 [67 Pac. 683], is to be distinguished on the same ground. The third *736 ease, Bradley v. Voorsanger, 143 Cal. 214 [76 Pac. 1031], is very patently not in point. There the plaintiff brought action to enjoin the holding of an election. The trial court denied the injunction. Before the appeal could be heard the election had been held. Manifestly this case is of no assistance to us because it illustrates a very obvious instance of the question having become moot. No judgment which could have been entered could possibly have afforded the plaintiff-appellant any relief. It cannot be gainsaid that courts should not attempt to determine mere academic questions or render judgments which are ineffective. But is that the instant situation? Assuming that an attorney who has been found guilty of unethical conduct and for that reason suspended is not strictly comparable to a judgment debtor or one convicted of- a criminal offense, our attention has not been directed to a case directly in point, nor have we been able to discover any. In civil matters, the law, at least in California, is settled. The party against whom a judgment is rendered does not lose his right of appeal by payment of the judgment unless the payment is made by way of compromise. (Warner Bros. v. Freud, 131 Cal. 639 [82 Am. St. Rep. 400, 63 Pac. 1017].) Nor can the judgment debtor be deprived of his right of appeal by execution of the judgment and its satisfaction. (Kenney v. Parks, 120 Cal. 22 [52 Pac. 40].) We think it is apparent that in the instances covered by the authorities cited it could not be seriously argued that the questions had become moot. Yet these adjudications do point to a distinction made in some of the subsequent criminal cases involving fines, wherein it is said that if the payment of the fine be voluntary the right of appeal is lost, whereas if its payment be considered involuntary the right of appeal is not lost. And at this juncture it is well to note that in the present proceeding the satisfaction of the judgment was entirely without the acquiescence of the appellant.

There has been a considerable divergence of opinion in criminal cases. We were at first inclined to set most of them down for the purpose of comparing the logic upon which they are premised. But it seems sufficient, inasmuch as we have concluded that the proper rule is announced in the jurisdictions of Massachusetts, Wisconsin, New York, Washington and Alabama, to call attention to some of the *737 authorities there. In the well-reasoned case of State v. Winthrop, 148 Wash. 526 [59 A. L. R. 1265, 269 Pac. 793, 796], the court says: “Notwithstanding these views of the courts touching the question of waiver of right of appeal by payment of a civil money judgment, there seems to be a very decided conflict in the decisions touching the appeal-able effect of satisfying a criminal or criminal contempt judgment by payment of a fine or suffering imprisonment thereby adjudged against the accused, even when such submission to the judgment is clearly the result of coercion. The reasoning of the courts which hold to the view that such satisfying of a criminal or criminal contempt judgment constitutes a waiver of the right of appeal seems for the most part to be rested upon the theory that nothing can be restored to the accused if the judgment against him be reversed, and that therefore the question of the correction of the judgment of conviction becomes merely moot. Those decisions, it seems to us, lose sight of or purposely ignore that damaging effect of such a judgment' which everybody knows reaches far beyond its satisfaction by payment of a fine or serving a term of imprisonment. The Alabama court, in Johnson v. State, 172 Ala. 424 [Ann. Cas. 1913E, 296, 55 South. 226], learnedly reviewed the question of waiver of appeal by Johnson by his payment of a fine adjudged against him for selling intoxicating liquor. Justice Somerville, speaking for the court, holding that such satisfaction of the judgment did not constitute a waiver by Johnson of his right of appeal, very pertinently observed:

“ ‘Although there are a few cases to the contrary, the rule is nearly universal in civil cases that mere payment of a judgment, or obedience to the mandate of the court, works no waiver of the right of appeal. ...
“ ‘We can discover no valid reason for a different result in criminal cases. The assumption in State v. Westfall, 37 Iowa, 575, and other cases, that a' convicted defendant, who is ordered to be committed to jail, unless the fine and costs be paid or secured, and, under that threat from a valid judgment, pays the penalty assessed, does so voluntarily, is but a grim form of jesting, and utterly at war with the generally accepted notion of the meaning of the term. . . .
“ ‘Nor do we conceive that the supposed inability of the defendant to recover, after reversal of the judgment, the *738 sum paid by him for its satisfaction, as is predicated in some of the cases under criticism, is a matter of vital importance.

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 965, 102 Cal. App. 733, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lincoln-calctapp-1929.