In Re Proposed Disciplinary Action by Florida Bar Against Circuit Judge

103 So. 2d 632, 1958 Fla. LEXIS 1810
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 11, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 103 So. 2d 632 (In Re Proposed Disciplinary Action by Florida Bar Against Circuit Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Proposed Disciplinary Action by Florida Bar Against Circuit Judge, 103 So. 2d 632, 1958 Fla. LEXIS 1810 (Fla. 1958).

Opinion

103 So.2d 632 (1958)

In re PROPOSED DISCIPLINARY ACTION BY The FLORIDA BAR AGAINST a CIRCUIT JUDGE of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida.

Supreme Court of Florida.

June 11, 1958.

Wm. A. McRae, Jr., Bartow, for petitioner.

Maxwell W. Wells, Cecil H. Brown, Orlando, David S. Yoakley, Palm Beach, and William A. Foster, West Palm Beach, for The Florida Bar, respondent.

DREW, Justice.

Petitioner, a circuit judge, seeks an order directing the Florida Bar to cease and desist from taking disciplinary action against him and declaring that the Florida Bar is without jurisdiction to apply or enforce the disciplinary provisions of the Integration Rule against him. The applicable rules and provisions of our laws [except amended Article V of the Constitution, F.S.A.] are fully cited in a recent opinion of this Court, In re Investigation of Circuit Judge, Fla., 93 So.2d 601, upon which petitioner principally relies in this proceeding.

*633 The Florida Bar in its response, however, disclaims any intention of instituting or progressing disciplinary proceedings against petitioner for or on account of any act of his as a judge. It asserts that the disciplinary matter involving petitioner being considered by the Florida Bar relates solely to alleged acts of petitioner as and while an attorney and member of the Florida Bar prior to his becoming a circuit judge. It is contended that the above cited decision is inapplicable because the Court there considered matters for which impeachment would lie, and in deciding that impeachment was the exclusive remedy predicated its conclusion on the doctrine of expressio unius exclusio alterius.

The distinction is, in our opinion, without merit. While we recognize that the alleged conduct of petitioner prior to assumption of his judicial post could not serve as the basis for impeachment proceedings against him, it cannot be denied that the action undertaken by the Bar has no legitimate objective other than the ultimate removal of petitioner from office, a result intended under our Constitution to be accomplished only by impeachment. Disbarment would not, of course, operate directly to remove petitioner from office, but all parties concede that disqualification proceedings would logically follow therefrom. This is, in fact, the only practical purpose which would be served by disciplinary action against such a judicial officer, since under the law of this State he is, during his incumbency, clothed with no other right by virtue of his membership in the Bar. His lesser office as an attorney is, during the period of incumbency, merged in and absorbed by the greater office, that of circuit judge. Application of the Integration Rule to petitioner would thus accomplish indirectly what cannot be done directly by judicial action.

Since the assumption of judicial duties suspends all rights and privileges to engage in the practice of law [Sec. 18, Art. V, Florida Constitution], it should, logically, operate as a suspension of disciplinary procedures designed simply to ensure that such rights and privileges shall not be exercised by one who has shown himself unfit to practice law, and not to penalize or punish the offending member. Application of Harper, Fla., 84 So.2d 700, 702, 54 A.L.R.2d 1272.

In Application of Harper, supra, this Court held that disciplinary proceedings against attorneys are provided for and are instituted in the public interest to preserve the purity of the courts, and that a judgment in such proceedings can only be one affecting the formerly granted permit to practice as an attorney or cancelling and striking the name of such offending attorney from the roll of attorneys in this State.

It is argued by the Florida Bar that the provisions of Section 23, Article V of the Florida Constitution, [which became effective subsequent to our decision in Investigation of Circuit Judge, supra] vest in this Court exclusive jurisdiction over the discipline of persons admitted to the practice of law in this State, and that, inasmuch as Section 13 of said Article V provides that judges of the Supreme Court, the district courts and the circuit courts, to be eligible for office, must be a member of the Florida Bar in good standing, such Article vested in this Court the jurisdiction and authority to discipline a circuit judge for any alleged unethical conduct engaged in by him prior to his ascendancy to the Bench. Inherent in this argument is the proposition that the Constitution vests in this Court the power to discipline — even to the extent of disbarment — those members of the Florida Bar who occupy the position of justices of this Court or judges of the district or circuit courts. We find no such plan in amended Article V, and the events leading to the approval in the Legislature of said Article and its adoption by the people, still fresh in the minds of this Court, fortify our conclusion that such was not the intention *634 of the Legislature when the Article was approved by it nor of the people when it was overwhelmingly approved by them in the general election of 1956. This Article, it must be remembered, contains the same provision [Section 17, Article V] with reference to impeachment as the former Article except that district judges are brought within its provisions.

Moreover, history has not indicated any necessity nor does it suggest the advisability of such a procedure which would indubitably affect the independence of the courts vested with the solemn responsibility of the administration of justice in this State. While we are dealing directly here with the power of the Board of Governors of the Florida Bar to conduct such disciplinary proceedings, we are actually talking about our own authority, because such officials of the Florida Bar in conducting disciplinary proceedings are mere arms of this Court and can have no greater jurisdiction or authority than this Court possesses. In re Harper, supra. Were we to agree to such a premise the resulting mischief would be infinitely greater than any advantage which the Bar or the public could gain from it.

In the history of this State the occasions have been negligible when, had such power existed to investigate the conduct of circuit judges, it would have been necessary to use it. But the existence of such a rule would undoubtedly have affected the independence of the judiciary in the discharge of its solemn duty under the Constitution to administer equal justice under law. It is not amiss to observe that the complete independence of the judiciary of this country is essential to the preservation of the Constitution and the perpetuation of the fundamental concept of equal justice under law. It should never be forgotten that one of the first charges contained in the Declaration of Independence was that the tyrannical sovereign had "obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary Powers," and "made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices * * *"

The motivations underlying the reluctance with which an officer in one governmental department should be subjected to policing by those whom he directs or supervises, fully developed in the earlier opinion in In re Investigation, supra, need not be set out here at length, but it will suffice to say that the same considerations impel our decision in the instant case. This conclusion is not without precedent in other jurisdictions. While decisions of other courts construing their own constitutions are for obvious reasons, not binding on us, it is comforting to know that where similar propositions have been presented, other state courts have reached the same conclusions that we do.

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103 So. 2d 632, 1958 Fla. LEXIS 1810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proposed-disciplinary-action-by-florida-bar-against-circuit-judge-fla-1958.