In re Newby

117 N.W. 691, 82 Neb. 235, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 253
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1908
DocketNo. 14,175
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 117 N.W. 691 (In re Newby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Newby, 117 N.W. 691, 82 Neb. 235, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 253 (Neb. 1908).

Opinion

Letton, J.

This is an original proceeding in disbarment upon an information filed by the attorney general under the direction of the court. In order to understand the peculiar condition of the record, it will be necessary to give a history of the proceedings in this and other cases based upon the same facts. This proceeding had its inception in this court on March 10, 1905, when the attorney general filed [236]*236a somewhat informal motion for an order to confirm a judgment of the district court for Saline county' disbarring William L. Newby from the practice of law, and for an order revoking and canceling the certificate of Newby to practice law in the several courts of this state. The motion set forth that it was based upon a transcript of the proceedings of the district court for Saline county in the matter of the disbarment of Newby filed therewith. Pending proceedings upon this motion, on June 10, 1905, the respondent filed a petition in error seeking a review of the judgment of the district court for Saline county referred to in the motion. The error case was duly argued and submitted, and on May 3, 1906, in an opinion by Sedgwick, C. J. (76 Neb. 482), the judgment of the district court was affirmed so far as it disbarred Newby from practice in the courts of the Seventh judicial district, but reversed as to the order of disbarment generally; it being-held that, since this court was the only court in the state which could admit to practice in all the courts of the state, it alone had the power to enter an order annulling such admission. Pending the hearing of the error case, the proceedings in this case were suspended. Following the disbarment proceeding in the district court, respondent was prosecuted criminally in that court upon a criminal charge growing out of the same transaction. The criminal action was still pending at the time of the filing of the opinion referred to, which was made to appear to this court, and it was ordered: “Further proceedings in this court upon the main charge against the defendant are continued until the final determination of the criminal proceeding now pending in the district court for Saline county. When those proceedings are finally disposed of, it will be the duty of the attorney general to so inform this court, and further proceedings will then be taken thereon.”

In December, 1907, a motion was made to dismiss the proceedings on the ground that the criminal charge had been dismissed and the defendant discharged. This mo[237]*237tion was overruled, and the attorney general was directed to file a formal complaint for disbarment in this court. In compliance with this direction, a formal information was filed, charging that in practicing his profession the respondent “has been wanting in good moral character, has been guilty of deceit and collusion with intent to deceive a court, and has also been guilty of irregular, unlawful and unprofessional conduct in the following particulars.” Then followed a copy of the information filed in the district court for Saline county, which charges, in substance, that Newby had impersonated a deceased person before a notary public in Oklahoma, had forged the name of such deceased person to a warranty deed conveying certain premises then in litigation in the district conrt for Saline county, had assumed to appear for said deceased person as an attorney at law in that court, knowing at the time that his purported client was dead, and had thereby knowingly and wilfully deceived the court and the parties to the action. The information filed by the attorney general further charges that upon a trial in the district court Newby was found guilty and disbarred, and that the conviction was affirmed in this court so far as it disbarred the respondent from practicing in the courts of the Seventh judicial district. To this information the defendant filed an answer, admitting the disbarment proceedings in Saline county, and denying specifically every other allegation of misconduct, deceit or collusion contained in the information. Upon these issues the attorney general introduced in evidence the bill of exceptions containing the evidence taken upon the disbarment proceedings in Saline county, and the bill of exceptions containing the evidence taken in the criminal trial in the same court. Original evidence was taken by the respondent in the form of depositions. The case was argued and submitted upon the issues raised by the information and answer, and upon the evidence thus produced.

The peculiar and unusual condition of the evidence re[238]*238quires that it be distinctly borne in mind that there are three distinct masses of testimony before us, each taken at different times and in different proceedings. The first is the evidence in the disbarment proceedings before the district court, which was taken in the latter part of March and early in April, 1904. The second is the evidence taken upon the criminal trial, which was held in December of the same year; and the third consists of the depositions taken directly in this proceeding in June, 1908. An interval of between two and three years intervened between the taking of the first and last of this testimony. It may be noted also that different attorneys represented Mr. Newby in the different proceedings, as this has some bearing upon the final determination of the case. The most important testimony in the disbarment procedings in the district court was given by one E. J. Garner, a notary public, residing in Coyle, Logan county, Oklahoma. He testified that on the 15th day of June, 1903, which was several months after the death of Charles E. Jennings, the true OAvner of the property in question, a man who was a stranger to him came into his office in Coyle, and there signed and acknowledged in the name of Charles E. Jennings a warranty deed to the property in question; that he fixed the date by a record which he kept of his notarial work (this record was introduced in evidence); that he afterwards recognized Newby in Friend, Nebraska, as the man who signed and acknowledged the deed. He testified that at the time of the execution of the deed Newby had no beard other than a mustache, and that the deed was acknoAvledged'in the afternoon of that day. The deed itself was not in evidence, but the record of it which was introduced showed the date of acknoAvledgment to be June 5.

Other evidence showed that early in 1903 Newby went to one A. D. Jennings, a resident of Lincoln, Nebraska, who had formerly liAred in Friend, and asked him if he did not have a son by the name of Charles E. Jennings, and said that if the son OAvned this property there would [239]*239be a consideration in it for Mm. Lafe Burnett, an attorney who resided at Wilber, the county seat of Saline county, testified that at the opening of the March term of court, 1904, and before the hearing in the disbarment proceedings, Newby showed him the forged deed, and told him he could prove he was not in Oklahoma at the time the deed was dated; that Charles E. Jennings was a traveling salesman, and that he had been at Newby’s house in Friend two weeks before. He also testified that in February, 1903, he, Burnett, received a letter from Guthrie, Oklahoma, written in script, signed, by Charles E. Jennings, asking Mm to appear in the tax foreclosure proceedings, and inclosing a copy of the publication notice of the beginning of the suit; that after he had done so, and had obtained leave to answer in 30 days, he wrote Jennings to that effect, and that he received another letter with a draft of an answer and a cheek for $40 in June or July, 1903, and that he then filed an answer as attorney for Charíes E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.W. 691, 82 Neb. 235, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-newby-neb-1908.