In Re N.J. State Bar Assn.

166 A. 316, 112 N.J. Eq. 606, 11 Backes 606, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 157
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 11, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 166 A. 316 (In Re N.J. State Bar Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re N.J. State Bar Assn., 166 A. 316, 112 N.J. Eq. 606, 11 Backes 606, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 157 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

The facts and situation leading up to the present proceeding are:

The New Jersey State Bar Association, through its president and chairman of its committee on ethics and grievances, by its verified petition dated April 29th, 1932, represented to the late chancellor, Edwin Robert Walker, certain known or believed improper practices prevailing in the court of chancery. *Page 608

These representations appear, from the said petition, to have gone in five directions:

1. That the administration of receivership and trust estates had been a matter of patronage rather than trust, resulting in the allowance of large and exorbitant fees by vice-chancellors to receivers and counsel.

2. That the situation last referred to had by the governor and the public press been referred to as a "receivership racket."

3. That there existed a well settled impression in the public mind that it is necessary to retain certain members of the bar in order to secure the appointment of receivers or to successfully avoid such appointment, such employment calling for the payment of exorbitant fees resulting in obtaining the desired results regardless of the exact justice of the particular causes.

4. That so-called "ambulance chasing" in receivership matters had become a practice through and by the means of certain lawyers procuring claims of creditors and stockholders of corporations and making the latter a prey to insolvency and receivership proceedings.

5. That the repeated appointment by certain vice-chancellors of the same person as receiver and a certain coterie of solicitors, counsel, masters and other officers had created the belief in the public mind that receivership and other fees had directly or indirectly been "split" by such officers among themselves and that certain vice-chancellors had participated therein directly or indirectly.

The prayer of the petition was that the chancellor appoint a master to conduct an investigation into the practice of members of the bar soliciting receivership cases and the handling thereof, also into the administration of such estates, including fees allowed and paid to receivers and other officers and make report to the chancellor to the end that all officers of the court who have been unfaithful to the trust reposed in them be removed and that such estates in the future be administered for the benefit of the trust and not as a matter of patronage. *Page 609

In compliance with said petition, the late chancellor, on May 2d 1932, made and entered the following order:

"Upon reading and filing the verified petition of the New Jersey State Bar Association and it appearing that an investigation as therein prayed should be made, and the committee of one hundred (100), representing certain business and trade groups of this state, appearing by counsel and several of the members of the executive committee and concurring orally in the said prayer of the said petition;

"It is accordingly on this second day of May, 1932, ordered that Charles L. Carrick, Esq., one of the advisory masters of this court, be and he hereby is appointed master and authorized and directed to conduct an investigation into the practice which has existed and which exists on the part of members of the bar in soliciting receivership cases and the handling thereof;

"Into the administration of receivership and other trust estates in the past and present, including the fees allowed and paid to receivers, solicitors for and counsel with receivers and other trustees, auctioneers, appraisers, accountants, masters and any other officers of this court; including fees paid to officers or attorneys in the administration of the affairs of closed banks and other financial institutions; and whether or not any fees allowed to any of such officers have been split, and with whom, and whether any officer of the court has benefited directly or indirectly in any fees allowed any other officers or appointees of the court.

"It is further ordered that such master shall commence hearings within ten (10) days from the date hereof at such place or places within this state as he may designate, and he is permitted to hold his hearings in any chancery chambers in this state.

"It is further ordered that such master be and he is hereby authorized and empowered to issue any subpoenas that may be necessary in the course of investigation to compel the production of witnesses, books, documents or other evidence before him.

"It is further ordered that such master be, and he is hereby *Page 610 authorized, after consultation with the officers of the State Bar Association and the executive committee of the committee of one hundred (100), to appoint counsel in such proceedings; said counsel, with the approval of the master may designate associate counsel, and such legal, clerical, investigating and stenographic assistance as may be necessary properly to conduct such investigation, but at the cost of the State Bar Association unless the legislature shall make appropriation therefor, except a stenographer allowed by statute.

"It is further ordered that the said master make a report to the chancellor with all convenient speed. Said report may be submitted in sections or chapters from time to time as the master shall direct.

"It is further ordered that the clerk of this court shall co-operate with the master and send him as though he were a vice-chancellor to whom the cause had been referred, the files in any designated cause and/or furnish him with copies of any papers required, free of costs or other fees."

Under such order the master proceeded to investigate proceedings in receiverships had before Alonzo Church, Esq., one of the vice-chancellors, and under date of July 25th, 1932, made a report to the late chancellor in which he concluded his findings of facts as follows: "The conclusion is inescapable that the vice-chancellor, at the time of his suspension from office, had lost the confidence of the bar, and was wholly unfit to discharge the duties of his office." The late chancellor endorsed this report "accepted, approved and ordered filed, July 27th, 1932."

Here it should be observed that on May 2d 1932, concurrently with the order of reference before set forth, Chancellor Walker made an order relieving Vice-Chancellor Church from all duties by recalling all references theretofore made, prohibiting further references and striking his name from the roll of vice-chancellors "to the end that he shall not receive compensation for work not done by him."

Subsequent to the report of the master before referred to and on September 15th, 1932, Vice-Chancellor Church resigned and the question thereupon arose as to his right to *Page 611 receive his salary from May 2d 1932, when the late chancellor undertook to strip him of his powers and functions to the date of his resignation. This matter being before the comptroller, that officer called upon the attorney-general for his opinion and was advised that salary for such period was legally due and payable.

The master then turned his investigation toward the administration of Vice-Chancellor Fallon, who on January 9th, 1933, presented to me his petition setting up, inter alia

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 316, 112 N.J. Eq. 606, 11 Backes 606, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nj-state-bar-assn-njch-1933.