In Re Pedro

32 Haw. 751, 1933 Haw. LEXIS 15
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1933
DocketNo. 2099.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 751 (In Re Pedro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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 Pedro, 32 Haw. 751, 1933 Haw. LEXIS 15 (haw 1933).

Opinion

*752 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

■ On December 14, 1932, the attorney general of the Territory filed in the circuit court of the fourth judicial circuit an information charging that Thomas Pedro, Jr., a duly licensed district court practitioner having his office in Hilo, had, on the dates mentioned in the information, committed three separate and distinct acts of professional misconduct in violation of his duty as an attorney at law, and praying that a rule issue to the said Thomas Pedro requiring him to appear and show cause why his name should not be stricken from the roll, of practitioners in the district courts of the Territory. The rule was duly issued and served and on January 7, 1933, Pedro filed his return. In his return he denied that he had been guilty of any of the acts charged against him. On the hearing the circuit judge decided against Pedro and adjudged that he be disbarred. The case is here on appeal.

The first charge made in the information is that “the said Thomas Pedro, Jr., did, in his law office in Hilo, County and Territory of Hawaii, on or about the 14th day of April, 1930, attempt to bribe one Lee A. Pearson, a federal prohibition agent, by offering to pay the said Pearson one thousand dollars ($1000.00) per month if he, the said Pearson, would agree not to arrest, or otherwise interfere with the unlawful manufacture and/or sale of intoxicating liquor by certain alleged bootleggers whom the said Pedro claimed to represent.”

Three witnesses testified concerning this charge. Two of them, Lee A. Pearson and E. C. Knudsen, were officially connected with the enforcement of the National Prohibition Law on the Island of Hawaii, The third witness *753 was Thomas Pedro, Jr., the respondent. There was a sharp and irreconcilable conflict between Pedro’s testimony and that of the other two witnesses regarding the truth of the charge. In his written decision the circuit, judge who tried the case expressed the opinion that Pearson and Knudsen had told the truth and that Pedro had not. He had these witnesses under observation and heard them testify. Under these circumstances we are reminded of the rule that has long obtained in this jurisdiction when a judgment or decree rendered at chambers is brought here on appeal. This rule is that while in such cases we have the power to review the testimony and reach a different conclusion from that reached by the circuit judge, his factual findings are nevertheless entitled to great weight and will generally not be disturbed.

It is contended by the respondent that the circuit judge was so obviously wrong in believing Pearson and Knudsen instead of Pedro that we should reverse the judgment. Because of this contention we will review the testimony in some detail.

Pearson testified that he had been federal prohibition agent for the district of the Territory of Hawaii since November, 1929; that on April 11, 1930, while he was at lunch, he received a telephone call from Pedro asking him to call at his office; that at about 1:30 o’clock he went to Pedro’s office which was in the Burns building in Hilo; that no one other than himself and Pedro was there and that as he sat down Pedro said to him, '' 'As the bootleggers are afraid of you and me, and I being an attorney, they want me to make a proposition to you.’ He said, 'This is the proposition. There are eight big bootleggers in Hilo, and ‘ some others, making twenty altogether that want to pay you $50.00 a month each for protection, making a total of $1,000.00 per month.’ I asked Mr. Pedro why he came to me with that proposition. *754 Pedro said, ‘The bootleggers wanted a third man, so that if anybody was watching their movements they would know.’ Then I asked Mr. Pedro why they did not approach Mr. Bowman as he was the agent in charge in Hilo at that time. He said, ‘The bootleggers know you are the outside man, and know the bootleggers and the places.’ I asked Mr. Pedro for a list of the bootleggers who wanted to pay me for protection. He read off the names of Kitagawa, Miyamoto, Abe, Kita, Yamashira, Kuwada. I told Pedro I would not have anything to do with the proposition.” Pearson also testified that the same afternoon he reported this conversation to Mr. Bowman, his official superior, and later, by Bowman’s instruction, he reported it to the Honolulu office.

Pedro in his testimony, after admitting that Pearson came to his office on the afternoon of April 14, in response to his call, testified as follows regarding what he said to Pearson on that occasion: “When he arrived at my office I told him I had called him down to the office so that I can tell him of. the violations going on, without any apparent interest on his part as prohibition agent; that he was not doing his duty; what he was doing then was practically what his predecessor, Fred Wood, prohibition agent, did, and for such inactivity I reported him to the authorities in Honolulu. * * * I told him I had made up my mind to report him also to Honolulu, if he did not take more interest in his work and do his duty as prohibition agent, and that, if upon reporting him to Honolulu I did not get any results then I would write to Washington direct.” And when asked what Pearson said to that, his answer was, “I don’t recollect the words, but suddenly he rose, left my office, and went out.” He also testified that Pearson’s attitude seemed hostile.

The record shows that on October 8, 1930, Pedro, Pearson, Knudsen and Bowman (who was deputy admin *755 istrator), met in tlie office of the prohibition agent in Hilo. All of these persons (except Bowman) testified regarding what was said at that meeting. Pearson testified that Knudsen said to Pedro, “ ‘I heard, Mr. Pedro, that you had reports to make of bootlegging in Hilo.’ Pedro said he was going to report everything, all the places running wide open, and that he wanted something done. Mr. Knudsen asked him, ‘We want the facts,’ and he wanted to know if Pedro would sign affidavits to enable us to obtain search warrants. He said that wasn’t his job and it was up to us to hatch them. He said that if he had been elected sheriff he would clean up the place, and as a good citizen he wanted us to do something. I said, ‘Yes, as a good citizen you acted as messenger for the bootleggers, trying to bribe me.’ He said, ‘I only did that for the reason that I wanted to catch the bootleggers when they gave you the money.’ Knudsen asked him if he was going to share that money if I accepted. He said, ‘No, all I did that for was to try to catch the bootleggers.’ ” Pearson was asked by Mr. McGhee, the deputy attorney general, whether there was any conversation at that time about whom these alleged bootleggers were. The answer was, “Knudsen asked him who had him approach me and he said Mr. Kuwada had him approach me, and Kuwada represented the others.”

Knudsen, testifying in regard to what conversation was had at this meeting, said (addressing himself to Pedro) : “‘I understand you are making complaints to the assistant district attorney who is in town this morning.’ He said, ‘Yes, I am going to tell him all about the bootlegging operations in town.’ I asked him what he knew about the bootleggers. He said he knew all about them, that they were running wide open, that anybody could buy liquor in town.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 751, 1933 Haw. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pedro-haw-1933.