In Re Lyman

30 Haw. 405, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 33
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1928
Docket1816
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 405 (In Re Lyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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 Lyman, 30 Haw. 405, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 33 (haw 1928).

Opinion

*406 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This : is an information by the attorney general charging the respondent, who is an attorney duly licensed to practice in all the courts of the Territory, with professional misconduct. Four offenses are charged. The 'main issues involved are questions of fact. Upon these many witnesses were examined, the trial consuming five days. The charges will be referred to seriatim.

(1) Undisputed evidence shows that on or about August 12, 1927, an automobile» driven by one Ealph S. Hall was in a collision with one Eudolph Stein on one of the highways of this city; that Stein was at the time under th^ influence of liquor and received certain injuries, not serious, in the accident; that the following morning Stein, haying in the meantime read in the morning paper a report of the accident and of the name and the place of empldyment of the driver of the automobile, telephoned to Hall and invited financial assistance; that Hall said he would call on him, but was advised by *407 a friend not to do so and did not go; that on August 16, about 4:30 P.M., Hall found on his desk a memorandum to the effect that the respondent requested that Hall call him by telephone; that Hall immediately did as requested and learned from the respondent that Stein and the respondent desired him to call at the respondent’s office; that immediately thereafter Hall, in company with George Nowell, an attorney at law and a member of the bar of this court, proceeded to the police station, which was next door to the respondent’s office, and there examined the police report of the accident and thence went directly to the respondent’s office; that there they met respondent and Stein and an interview followed; that some reference having been made to the accident, the respondent asked Stein how much money he would take; that Stein left it to the respondent to say and that respondent asked him if $25 would do; that Stein said something by way of demurring to the smallness of the amount and that. nothing further was said at this juncture except that Nowell, speaking for Hall, said that Stein had a right to have Hall arrested if he wanted to and that they (Hall and Nowell) could not stop him and thereupon left the respondent’s office. Upon some of the essentials the evidence of the respondent contradicts that of the prosecution. Hall’s testimony is that when he called the respondent by telephone the respondent said that Stein had issued a warrant for Hall’s arrest but that he, the respondent, did not want to have it executed until he had had a talk with Hall about it and that perhaps it would not be necessary to execute it at all; and, further, that at the respondent’s office the respondent handed the warrant of arrest to Hall, the latter examining it, and that this was before the respondent addressed to Stein the question, “What will you take to fix this up, Stein?” or “What do you *408 want to fix this up?” or words to that effect. Nowell’s testimony corroborates Hall’s evidence as to wbat was said in the respondent’s office, although he says that he does not recall respondent’s handing the Avarrant to Hall, i Stein, called by the respondent as a witness, testified that he heard the respondent say to Hall over the telephone that he, Stein, was going to serve the warrant and that the respondent told him at the conclusion of the telephonic communication that Hall had thereupon said to the respondent, “For goodness’ sake, don’t, hold that warrant, don’t serve it, I’ll be right over.” The respondent’s testimony, on the other hand, AAras in brief that Avhat he said to Hall over the telephone was that a “complaint” had been made, by Stein against Hall concerning the accident and that he, the respondent, wished to see Hall about it; that at his office he did not produce or exhibit the warrant of arrest- and that he did not even know, until after the interview ended and Hall and Nowell had left his office, that a warrant had been sworn to by Stein. In answer to a question by the court the respondent stated in direct terms that the talk with Hall and Nowell in his office centered around the possibility of a damage suit and that there was no reference to a possible arrest. Here is a direct conflict upon an important matter. The picture presented by the testimony of Hall and Nowell is that of an interview at Avhich an arrest was distinctly threatened, followed by a suggestion by the respondent on behalf of Stein to settle for $25. The essence of the statement of the respondent is that the interview related to the possibility of a civil suit for damages and that there was no reference to the possibility of an arrest. This particular question is one of the credibility of witnesses. Hall and Nowell are both apparently young men of good character. There is not a Avord of testi *409 xnony reflecting upon them with respect to their character or' to their reputation. Hall is an accountant, an Englishman by birth, who has resided in the Territory of Hawaii only since February, 1927. Mr. Nowell is a graduate of Stanford University and was admitted to the bar of this court in April, 1926. Other than in the instance under consideration, it does' not appear that either of them has ever had any dealings with the respondent or that any cause exists for either of them to bear ill will against the respondent. The impression that they gave us while testifying on the stand was that of entire reliability. They volunteered nothing detrimental to the respondent and on the contrary made every concession that possibly could be made in his favor. We believe that they were conscientious and truthful in the giving of their testimony. They had no motive for testifying falsely against the respondent. Our finding is, in accordance with the testimony of Hall and Nowell, that over the telephone the respondent made known to Hall and at the conference repeated to him and to Nowell that a warrant had been secured by Stein for the arrest of Hall in connection with the automobile accident and that the proposal or suggestion by the respondent on behalf of Stein that the payment of $25 would “fix” or settle the matter was intended by the respondent to be made effective, by the threat of the warrant and that Nowell correctly understood at the time, as he testified at the trial, that if the $25 was paid by Hall the warrant would not be served and that if the $25 was not paid the warrant would be served.

(2) One Ohoy Wan Bui, a Korean, was, on December 14, 1926, sentenced, after conviction, by the Honorable W. T. Eawlins, one of the judges of the United States district court for the district of Hawaii, to imprisonment for a term of eighteen months. In May, *410 1927, he became, under the Federal laws, eligible to parole and the jailer of Oahu Prison where he was confined so certified to the United States district attorney. At'that time he had served one-third of his term (less lawful deductions). During the month of May, 1927, a fellow prisoner, Chun Tai Kil, also a Korean, advised Choy Wan Kil to consult the present respondent and to secure his assistance in obtaining release from prison before the expiration of Ms term. Choy Wan Kil, acting upon the advice, sent for the respondent. After a few days 1;he respondent called on Mm at the prison and had a conference, with Mm and with Chun Tai Kil.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 405, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lyman-haw-1928.