In re Mindes

95 A. 743, 88 N.J.L. 117, 3 Gummere 117, 1915 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 95 A. 743 (In re Mindes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Mindes, 95 A. 743, 88 N.J.L. 117, 3 Gummere 117, 1915 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 15 (N.J. 1915).

Opinion

[118]*118The opinion of the court was delivered by

Minturn, J.

The appellant was adjudged guilty of contempt of court by Simon Hahn, Esq., judge of the Pirst Criminal Court of Newark. The alleged contempt occurred in the presence of the court, and the conviction of appellant is authorized by section 79, page 3991 of the compiled statutes.

There can be no doubt of the right of the court below, for the preservation of its dignity, to commit for a contempt committed in its presence. 9 Cyc. 5, and cases; 6 R. C. L. 515, and cases.

The brief of the appellant concisety states as he conceives is, the question involved, viz.: “The mooted question in this case, is as to the rights and privileges of an attorney, in the discharge of his duty to his client, in the conduct of a cause.” The duty referred to was predicated on the alleged obligation of the police court, at the time, and under the circumstances, to accept complaints against two police officers. The trial of a case was in progress when appellant made his motion, and the order of business, at least as the court conceived it, was to dispose of the case in hand before assuming other business. At the conclusion of the case the appellant renewed his application. The judge testified that he informed-appellant that such a complaint should be presented to the prosecutor of the pleas. The appellant, however, according to his own statement continued to- argue the matter until the court “banged his gavel,” and said, “that will be about all for counsel.” Instead, however, of accepting this emphatic ruling of the court as final, the appellant persisted in arguing the matter further, by continuing as he narrates it, as follows: “In every case that I have had before your honor, when down came his gavel again in the midst of my sentence. I hesitated a moment and then said to him, Tf your honor please, I am an officer of this court, and a duly licensed attorney' of this state, and as such I have certain rights and I insist on those rights; and one of those rights is to be heard in this court, in the cause in defence of my client, and if your honor' refuses to give me that right, I [119]*119shall he compelled to withdraw from this case, and have other counsel substituted, and not try this case in this, court again/ 1 (hen was immediately seized.”

The appellant in thus describing his attitude incidentally enunciates his conception of the ethical standard which governed his conduct, which in effect was that the trial court, nolens nolens, was under a legal obligation not only to continuo hearing the appellant, after argument had been terminated, but that the court was also legally obligated to grant to the appellant; the order he was seeking, and which the court on at least two occasions, during argument, had denied him. But his conception of legal duty went further, for he warned the court of the dire consequence of failing to hear liim, i. e., that he would he obliged to forsake Ms client and substitute other counsel, “and not try this case in this court again.”

This threat naturally comes to us barren of the tone and demeanor of the appellant, and his environment, which doubtless served in the arena of a filled court room to> emphasize, punctuate and accentuate it.

The judge of the lower court had that element of the ease before him and he thus describes it: “He insisted on the court taking the complaint, and notwithstanding the fact that .1 had already ruled upon the question, he insisted on becoming abusive, and used loud and threatening language to the court. I rapped several times for order. He refused to keep quiet. I told him if he did not keep quiet I would l)e compelled to adjudge him guilty of contempt of court.. Notwithstanding my warning, he continued to speak in a loud lone'of voice, and stood in a very threatening and defiant attitude before me, he standing directly in front of the bench. After I had again told him to cease speaking, and that 1 had already ruled upon the question, lie leaned over the bench, and extending his right arm with his index finger pointing directly within an inch or two of my nose, he said: ‘You will listen to me, and I will make you listen, you will have to take this complaint, and I will make you take it; [120]*120you are only a committing magistrate; because a man wears brass buttons does not make him any better than any one else, and if you don’t take this complaint I will see that you are impeached, and what is more, I will never come into this court again, either for a complainant or for a defendant.’ And then he continued still to keep on talking, and it was then that I finally seeing that the court was in an uproar—it was almost a riot in the court room, I finally restored order, and I stated to Mr. Mindes that he had grossly offended the court, and that I did thereby adjudge him guilty of a contempt of court, and I then imposed a fine against him of $50, and ordered him committed until the fine was paid.”

The witnesses pro and con differ as to the circumstantial details connected with the incident, but the important fact remains that the appellant’s own story convicts him of a misconception of the duty he owed as an attorney, to his client, as well as the duty he owed to the court, of which he was an officer. There is an ethical standard of duty governing the conduct of attorneys to both client and court, which constitutes an important branch of the law 'of procedure, but which law schools, in their haste to matriculate, seldom, if ever, inculcate or include in their curriculum. The result of this defect' is that the young attorney, particularly one who has missed the benefit of an office training, often misconceives the extent and limitations of his duty as an officer of the court, particularly in the lower courts where he is often prone to substitute argumentum baculinum for argumentum ad judicium as his conception of official duty.

The testimony in this case satisfies us upon the appellant’s own story, that he quite honestly misconceived both his duty to his client, and his duty to the court, and that if he had properly conceived these duties, he would have been saved the unfortunate contretemps into which his over-zealous action led him.

His duty to the court consisted in respectfully submitting to the court’s ruling, when it became manifest that the court desired to hear no further argument in the matter.

[121]*121Generally speaking, it is the duty of the attorney to maintain the respect due to courts and judicial officers, and their rulings, and any breach of that duty is a contempt.

So it has been held that where an attorney indulges in invective or scandalous innuendo that tends to degrade or humiliate the court, or impair its respectability and usefulness, it is the duty of the court to take such steps as may appear to be necessary to preserve its dignity and good name, even to the expulsion of the offender from practicing before it, and he may be disciplined as for a contempt of court, where the court possesses the necessary jurisdiction. Pittsburg, &c., Co. v. Muncie Co., 166 Ind. 466; 9 Ann. Cas. 165; In re Pryor, 18 Kan. 72, 26 Am. Rep. 747; 6 R. C. L. 493, and cases cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 A. 743, 88 N.J.L. 117, 3 Gummere 117, 1915 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mindes-nj-1915.