In Re Miller

59 P.2d 9, 57 Nev. 93, 1936 Nev. LEXIS 32
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1936
Docket3095
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 9 (In Re Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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 Miller, 59 P.2d 9, 57 Nev. 93, 1936 Nev. LEXIS 32 (Neb. 1936).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Taber, J.:

Petitioner, A. Grant Miller, has instituted this proceeding for a review by this court of the action of the *94 board of governors of Nevada state bar finding him guilty of unprofessional conduct and recommending that his license to practice law be revoked, and that he be forever disbarred from practicing law in this state.

On June 17, 1933, Thomas McCann consulted petitioner with the idea of having the latter commence suit to' foreclose a $2,500 mortgage. According to Mr. McCann, the only conversation on this occasion, aside from his directing petitioner to commence the foreclosure suit, related to the $25 payment made by him to petitioner, in currency, for which petitioner wrote out and handed Mr. McCann a receipt in the following words and figures: “Reno, Nev., June 17/33. Reed from Thos. McCann the sum of twenty-five dollars acct initial costs McCann v. Bathurst. A Grant Miller.” McCann’s testimony is to the effect that petitioner told him this money was for filing the suit and paying sheriff’s fees and mileage for serving the papers. Petitioner admits that Mr. McCann talked to him on the aforesaid date about the foreclosure suit, but testifies that in the conversation he informed Mr. McCann that he did not think the mortgaged property was worth much, that he did not think anybody would buy it, and that McCann had better get his money out of the mortgagor if he could. To this, according to petitioner, Mr. McCann replied that he would like to get his money, but did not see any chance of doing so, and thought best to foreclose, as he thought he could “make some money out of the place if he got it.” Petitioner says he explained to McCann that the latter would have to bid in the property and pay all the expenses and fees himself. Petitioner’s version of the remainder of that conversation is as follows: “He wanted to know how little it would cost to start it, and I said, ‘It will cost you probably around three hundred dollars altogether.’ ‘Well,’ he said, T do not want to pay out the money now, but how much would it actually cost to start it?’ I told him, ‘About twenty-five dollars.’ I said, ‘Do you want to start it right away ?’ He said, ‘If you can get any money out of her I would like to have *95 you get it if she can pay that interest and start it a little later.’ ” Petitioner testifies that the $25 payment was not for clerk’s and sheriff’s fee, but was simply an advance payment on petitioner’s attorney’s fee.

The respective versions of what happened in 1933, after June 17, will now be stated in substance, and in narrative form:

Thomas McCann: At the time I gave him (petitioner) the suit, the home loan came up. Of course, then I had to stay back for awhile, couple of months, to find out whether I would give her (mortgagor) a chance, and it went on and went on, and I went to California. I thought no use to bother. He' had the papers, so I didn’t have anything to say then until after I came back from California. I can’t exactly approximate the time of my return — didn’t pay much attention to it, but anyhow mortgagor’s application had been on file with the home loan about two months. From June 17, 1933, until November 6 of that year, I made frequent demands upon him to bring the suit. On November 5, 1933, I went down to see him, and asked if he was going to file the papers. He said, “Yes, I am going right to work at them.” He said the home loan had told him that mortgagor’s application had not been disapproved. I told him I thought it had, because the home loan man had told me so the day before. I left him and went to see the home loan man, and he told me they could “do nothing with it.” I told Miller the loan wasn’t going through, and he said, “I will see about it.” As I was coming from the home loan office, Miller called me from across the street, and I went across to where he was. He said that he had just been talking to one of the home loan men, and that mortgagor’s application had not been disapproved. I told him that it had been disapproved, and for him to start the suit. I said, “We have fooled long enough”; then he said, “I will get right at it and will call you up when I get it through”; then I went home and talked to my wife, telling her that, from the way Miller acted, I didn’t think he was going to do anything. *96 Next morning I went down and demanded the note and mortgage back from him. This was on November 6, 1933. He gave me the papers, and then I spoke to him about the $25 I had handed him on June 17. He said he would have to see a lawyer, and also asked me if I didn’t think that what he had done for me was worth something. I told him that he hadn’t done anything for me yet, outside of a lot of talking. I took the note and mortgage to Mr. Barry, who proceeded to foreclose the mortgage. Mr. Miller never has paid back that $25. Afterwards I went to see Mr. Cooke, chairman of the local administrative committee of the state bar, and made a statement of the facts regarding this $25 item. This was done with the view of having proceedings taken against Mr. Miller for professional misconduct. Nothing was said about the home loan when I first gave the papers to Mr. Miller, but it wasn’t very long afterwards, a matter of days or weeks, until the home loan came into the situation. Mr. Miller did not, in any of his talks, inform me that he had been suspended by the state bar. When I gave him the $25, he was going right ahead and commence the suit. The mortgagor was one of the first persons to file an application for a home loan, and she informed me that she had filed the application, and I agreed then to wait for awhile before foreclosing. I had to wait. There was no way of getting it through— couldn’t do anything. Mr. Miller told me he didn’t think we could do anything; and circulars were issued, telling about it. When mortgagor informed me that she had made application for a home loan, I agreed to let the foreclosure matter ride until such time as she could get the loan. It was after the man in the home loan office told me they could not do anything with her application that I went to see Mr. Miller, and told him to proceed with the foreclosure suit. He didn’t do anything about it. I think this was some time in November, and finally I went and got the note and mortgage back and took them to another attorney. On June 17 mortgagor’s note was overdue about six months. I had been after her more *97 or less persistently, and only went to an attorney as the last hope. There was no other place to go.

A. Grant Miller, petitioner: After Mr. McCann agreed that I should first try to get some money out of the mortgagor before commencing suit, I wrote her a letter, and she came in and talked about the home loan proposition, saying she would pay Mr. McCann if she could get a home loan. I then saw Mr. McCann, and at first he objected, as the home loan organization had not been completed as yet in Eeno. I then proceeded to get some definite information about the home loan and about the bonds the mortgage holder would be expected to take, but at first Mr. McCann refused to take the bonds and said he wanted the property sold so we could “make the money out of it.” Then I said, “In that case, the only thing to do is to go ahead and foreclose.” Mr. and Mrs. McCann and I drove out to see mortgagor, and, after talking with her, Mr.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 9, 57 Nev. 93, 1936 Nev. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-miller-nev-1936.