In Re Proceedings Against Titus

225 S.W.2d 715, 359 Mo. 1070, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1949
DocketNo. 40492.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 S.W.2d 715 (In Re Proceedings Against Titus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Proceedings Against Titus, 225 S.W.2d 715, 359 Mo. 1070, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 708 (Mo. 1949).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This is a proceeding for.the disbarment of the respondent Gilbert R. Titus, a licensed attorney at law, residing at Independence, Jackson County, for alleged unprofessional conduct. The information was filed here by the Advisory Committee established by our Rule 5.14, by leave of this court under Rule 5.03, after that Committee. had first made a preliminary investigation at which the respondent was present with his counsel, and permitted to cross-examine and to present witnesses. Thereafter this court appointed as Special Commissioner Sam T. Evans, Esquire, of the Daviess County bar, to take evidence at hearings, upon the issues raised by the information, and he has filed his report.

The information contains nine counts. Count 1 charges the respondent altered, without the signers’ knowledge, written statements taken from four prospective witnesses in contemplated personal injury *1072 litigation in which the law firm of Sprinkle & Knowles, with which he is associated, represented the plaintiff. These witnesses later testified in the case for the defendant, and the alleged altered statements were introduced and used by respondent’s associate counsel in cross-examination. The changes .assertedly were made by leaving .a blank space at the bottom of.the text of each statement, between it and the verification and signature below, and thereafter inserting foreign matter in that space. The Special Commissioner found for respondent on all of these four charges.

Counts 2 to 9 charge respondent with soliciting several persons to make claim and file suit for personal injuries against railroad companies, a public transportation company, and a motor vehicle owner, and in one case for the solicitee’s loss of the services of his wife. The Special Commissioner sustained the charges against respondent in Counts 4, 5 and 9, and found in his favor on Counts 2, 3, 6, 7 and 8. He recommended that respondent be suspendéd from'the practice of law for eight months.

The basic issues are factual. The good reputation of respondent for honesty, veracity and integrity was attested to by nine reputable persons and is not ■ challenged in this proceeding. The record is voluminous and involves twelve separate fact controversies. The testimony taken before the Advisory Committee covers 593 pages; that before the Special Commissioner 1320 pages; and the statements and briefs of adversary counsel 378 pages. To avoid undue extension of the opinion we review only the charges on which the Special Commissioner found against respondent — save as to the first count, and the sixth, seventh and eighth counts.

The four witnesses whose written statements are charged by the first count to have been altered, were: Victor Paul; Stanley Smith [10 years old at the time]; and Mr. and Mrs. Charles House. These statements were taken in preparation for the trial of a wrongful death case, Cline v. Tobin Construction Co., wherein a young woman motorist was killed on a night in May or June, 1940, at or near a highway viaduct in course of construction over railroad tracks and a creek near Greenwood in Jackson County. The construction work obstructed the highway, called the “old road”, necessitating a meandering detour therearound. ’ Apparently the automobile failed to take the detour, and followed the highway, the casualty resulting. The firm of Sprinkle & Knowles of Kansas City, with which respondent was associated, brought a suit against the contractor for her death, and o'ne of the important questions in the case was whether the detour was marked with detour signs and lights that night.

The written statements of the four witnesses were taken over a period of a few days, weeks''or months before the trial of the dine case, by respondent Titus'or associate counsel. They were written by the taker with a fountain pen on sheets of yellow'paper about 13 *1073 inches long and 8-% inches wide, ruled with printed blue lines about inch apart. All began on the first or second blue line from the top of the sheet. They were prepared, and were signed by the witness, on the spot where and when he or she was interviewed.

The Special Commissioner found that the written statement of Victor Paul was not taken and written by respondent ■ Titus, as charged, but by his associate counsel Mr. Knowles; and that respondent was not even present on the Occasion. We concur in that finding. Knowles and Titus both so testified, as did also Harvey Willsey, a former Justice of the Peace at Independence, who said he was present with Knowles at the time. Furthermore, the Paul statement is in an obviously different handwriting from that of the other three statements. So that issue drops out of the case.

Turning next to the statement of the 10 year old witness Stanley Smith, the textual part of which occupied 26 lines on the sheet". So far as material here it recited 'he had helped a neighbor boy set out the lanterns along the detour the night of the casualty. “We” had to go back and relight one of them. “There was one light on a sand pile and one on the north side of the road, about 30 or 35 feet apart.” After the casualty he returned to the scene thereof. The foregoing and other recitals immaterial-here 'filled 21 lines of the 26 line written statement. The closing five lines [immediately preceding the line reading “Have you read this statement” and the signature] occupied 1.20 inches of vertical space, and continued: “I did not see any lanterns that had been run over and I know that there were only two lanterns at the old road the night of the accident. 1 paid no attention to the detour signs that night.”

■ ■ The 13 line written statement of Charles House stated he had made several trips through the detour road and had seen lights that had gone out, which he stopped and lighted. He had done this at the old road. He went through the detour the night of the casualty but “paid no attention to the lights.” The statement then closed with two sentences occupying a vertical space of .75 inch next above the verification and-signature: “I saw no detour sign on the north. After-wards flares were on each side of the road.”

The 26 line written statement of Mrs. Charles House recited she and her husband drove through the detour on a round trip to Kansas City the night of the casualty, returning about 11 p.m. They did not know of it until the next morning. It was dark when they drove through the detour. ‘ ‘ There were no lights in the old road. ’ ’ After further recitals describing the course of the meandering detour, the statement closed with five lines as follows above the verification and signature, occupying a vertical space of 1.20 inches in the written statement -. ‘‘There were no lighted lanterns in the old roadway when we went through after dark as toe were going to Kansas City. I do not recall any detour sign at the old road.’K

*1074 It will be observed that detour signs are not mentioned in the text of any of the three statements except the closing challenged parts; and that there they are mentioned negatively, the prospective witness stating that he: “paid no attention to”; or “saw (on the north) no”; 'or did “not recall” any detour signs. The text of Mrs. House’s statement further said there were “no

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In Re Woodward
300 S.W.2d 385 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1957)
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264 S.W.2d 366 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.2d 715, 359 Mo. 1070, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proceedings-against-titus-mo-1949.