In re Nunn

76 N.W. 38, 73 Minn. 292, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 803
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 13, 1898
DocketNos. 10,681-(10)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 N.W. 38 (In re Nunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Nunn, 76 N.W. 38, 73 Minn. 292, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 803 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

MITCHELL, J.

The charge against respondent is that he has been guilty of misconduct in his profession as an attorney and counselor at law of courts of this state, in this: That on June 12,. 1897, and on other days prior and subsequent thereto, he knowingly and corruptly marked upon, changed, altered and obliterated certain records in the office of the clerk of the district court in and for Hennepin county, to wit, the records of the description of certain parcels of real estate contained in the delinquent tax list prepared by the auditor of said county, and filed in the office of the clerk of the district court in the matter of the proceeding for the enforcement of delinquent taxes for the year 1895, with the purpose and intent of making invalid said proceedings for the enforcement of said delinquent taxes against sundry descriptions of real estate entered in said delinquent list, which said wrongful acts were done by the respondent while examining said records as an attorney at law and a member of the bar of said Hennepin county.

[293]*293The evidence having been taken by a referee and reported to Ihis court, the only question for us to determine is one of fact, viz., whether the evidence proves that the respondent is guilty of the professional misconduct charged.

The oral testimony is very voluminous, and the exhibits are very numerous, the probative force of many of which can only be fully .appreciated by actual inspection. It is therefore impracticable to make anything like a full statement or analysis of all the evidence, .and we shall not attempt it, but content ourselves with giving a general outline of it.

In accordance with the general practice, the delinquent tax list was on printed blanks, the descriptive headings of which were: (1) '“Subdivision or Section”; (2) “Sec. or Lot”; (3) “Twp. or Blk.” In making up this list, the practice was to erase the one of the alternative descriptions which was not applicable to the property on that particular page. Thus, if the property was platted, the words -“Sec. or” and “Twp. or” would be erased, while if it was rural land the words “or Lot” and “or Blk.” would be erased, by drawing ink lines across them. The alterations or erasures which the respondent is charged with having made consisted of drawing ink lines .across the remaining words “Sec.” — “Twp.,” or “Lot”- — -“Blk.,” as the case might be , thus making the descriptions of all the property on the page appear to be defective. The delinquent list for 1895 consisted of three volumes, but the evidence directly tending to implicate the respondent is confined to alterations or erasures in volume 1.

It is an undisputed fact that such erasures had been made. The evidence, as well as the presumption, is that they were not made by the officials who prepared, or had custody of, the records; and, ibis being so, the necessary inference is that they must have been made by some third person or persons for an unlawful purpose.

The evidence directly tending to prove that respondent made the -erasures consists of the testimony of the vault clerk and of a deputy in the clerk’s office. Stated in a general way, their testimony is that, while respondent was examining volume 1 during the forenoon of June 12, they saw him making marks on the top of one or -more of the pages, with a fountain pen, and then apply to it a [294]*294blotter, which he had taken from a pile of clean blotters lying on a small table near where he sat, and that before he left he replaced, the volume in its proper rack, and put the blotter back on the top of the pile whence he had taken it. The evidence is to the effect that these witnesses immediately informed other officials in the office of what they had seen, who thereupon, as soon as respondent left, proceeded to examine volume 1, and found alterations or erasures of the kind described, on the tops of 38 pages; that these-erasures were of a light 'blue color (indicating that they were fresh or recent), easily distinguishable from the erasures made by the officials in preparing the delinquent list, which, by reason of their age, had turned black; that they also examined the blotter which respondent had used, and found upon it ink lines of a light blue color, corresponding to the light blue ink lines in the book. Several reliable and disinterested witnesses, who were called in for that purpose by the clerk of the court an hour or two afterwards, examined the book and the blotter, and corroborated the officials as to the existence of the alterations on the books, and of the ink lines on the blotter, and as to the fresh or recent appearance of both.

The book and the blotter are both in evidence, and their appearance corroborates the testimony of these witnesses as to the character of the erasures and of the ink lines on the blotter, and as to the similarity of the two. The blotter shows that it had never been used on ordinary writing, but, with the exception of three or four figures, only on fresh ink lines similar to those found in the delinquent list. This similarity is more strongly brought out by enlarged photographic views, wThich we have no doubt are competent evidence.

It further appears from the evidence that respondent was making' a specialty of “tax” and “tax-title” litigation, in which he was assailing the validity of taxes and tax titles; that the firm of which he was a member had some 40 such cases on the April term, 1897, of’ the district court for Hennepin county, two of which involved the validity of the tax of 1895 on lands the description of which was-affected by the alterations referred to. It also appeared that respondent had solicited landowners for business of this character.

A large number of similar alterations or erasures (of an older" [295]*295date, as indicated by their black color) were found in volumes 2 and 3, which affected the description of 339 tracts of land involved in cases in which respondent was attorney. As there is no evidence directly tending to connect him with these erasures, he could not be found guilty of making them, yet, in view of all the facts above referred to, and in view of the further fact that he had access to and had examined these volumes also in connection with his tax litigation, we think it is a circumstance which may be taken into account for what it is worth, although great caution should be exercised in drawing inferences from it.

The respondent admitted that he was in the vault examining volume 1, at the time referred to; that he had and used a fountain pen on that occasion. He testified that he had been employed by Assistant County Attorney Smith to assist in the trial of the real-estate tax cases at the then current term of court; that he was examining the book and making memoranda in connection with those cases; that what he wrote was not on the book, but on a memorandum which he had lying before him on the book; that he took no blotter from the pile referred to, but found a blotter in the book; and that he used it merely as a mark to note pages in the book to which he might desire to refer a second time. No such memorandum was produced in evidence. Respondent’s testimony is that he gave this memorandum to Smith on that same day, and almost immediately after he left the clerk’s office; that he repeatedly asked Smith for it; and that Smith promised to return it, or keep it for him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.W. 38, 73 Minn. 292, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nunn-minn-1898.