In Re Revision Of, or Amendment To, Integration Rule of the Florida Bar

103 So. 2d 873, 1956 Fla. LEXIS 3229
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 13, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 So. 2d 873 (In Re Revision Of, or Amendment To, Integration Rule of the Florida Bar) 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 Revision Of, or Amendment To, Integration Rule of the Florida Bar, 103 So. 2d 873, 1956 Fla. LEXIS 3229 (Fla. 1956).

Opinion

103 So.2d 873 (1956)

Petition for REVISION OF, OR AMENDMENT TO, THE INTEGRATION RULE OF THE FLORIDA BAR.

Supreme Court of Florida. En Banc.

July 13, 1956.

*874 Vincent C. Giblin, Richard H. Hunt, George A. Brautigam, Joseph A. Hackney, George J. Shamas, Thomas H. Anderson, E. Clyde Vining, Henry K. Gibson, R.P. Terry, Dewey Knight, Herschel E. Smith, Robert F. Underwood, Roscoe Brunstetter, Miami, Charles H. Spooner, Coral Gables, Charles J. Bodner, Joseph M. Fitzgerald, Milton M. Ferrell, Herbert A. Warren, Jr., Joe Creel, L. Earl Curry, Jackson L. Peters, G. Hugo Whitehouse, Douglas D. Reed, Robert H. Anderson, Tom J. Lummus, Eldon L. Boyce and Ellis S. Rubin, Miami, for petitioners

Donald K. Carroll, Jacksonville, for the Florida Bar.

John M. Coe, Pensacola, Stanley Milledge, Miami, Tobias Simon, Miami Beach, amicus curiae.

TERRELL, Justice.

Honorable Vincent C. Giblin and twenty-six other members of the Miami Bar petitioned this court to amend the Integration Rule of the Florida Bar to read as follows:

"The lawyer, because he is an officer of the courts in which he is admitted to practice and is pledged by his oath to support the Constitution of the United States, occupies a most important position of public trust. The bench and bar, as well as the public, have the right to insist, should his loyalty to the Nation and its Constitution be subject to justifiable doubt, that he dissipate such doubt, if he can, and his duty to do so cannot be discharged by silence when the circumstances are such as to demand that he speak. His duty requires that he expose candidly and truthfully his views and activities when, in the public interest, he is legitimately interrogated by a court of which he is an officer or by any other competent governmental agency. In such circumstances he may, of course, exercise for his own personal protection his constitutional right to decline to give testimony under oath which will incriminate or tend to incriminate him, but when, by exercising his right to safeguard himself, he magnifies and intensifies existing justifiable doubt as to his loyalty, his privilege to practice law may be withdrawn in the public interest and for the general welfare."

The Board of Governors of the Florida Bar responded to said petition with the suggestion that the following be substituted as its position with reference to the proposal embraced therein:

"A lawyer, being an officer of the court and pledged by his oath of admission to the bar to support the Constitution of the United States, holds a position of public trust. The practice of law is a privilege, not an inherent right. Should his membership in, or his adherence to the doctrines of, the Communist Party, one of the basic tenets of which is the overthrow of the United States Government by force and violence, be justifiably questioned by any court or governmental agency in any official proceedings, he has the duty to dispel any resulting doubt as to his loyalty to this country, if he can. If such membership or adherence be admitted by him or competently proved in said proceedings, or if he claims *875 constitutional protection in said proceedings by refusing to answer any competent question concerning such membership or adherence, the said admission, proof, or refusal shall, in any proceedings on account thereof filed against him pursuant to Article XI of this Rule, constitute prima facie evidence that he is unfit to continue to exercise the privilege of practicing law."

In fine, the objective of petitioners and the Florida Bar is to condemn membership in the Communist party on the part of attorneys at law and to withdraw the privilege to practice law in Florida if they persist in adherence to such membership. We heartily approve most of the pronouncements in the petition and in the response thereto of the bar. We do not think their objectives are materially different. The Giblin petition appears to contemplate automatic disbarment while the suggestion of the Florida Bar makes any effort to invoke the Fifth Amendment or avoid answering questions in any proceeding to ascertain his connection with or affiliation with the Communist party prima facie evidence that the lawyer is unfit to continue in the law practice. We do not think, however, that the adoption of the amendment as proposed would afford the protection to a lawyer charged with being a member of the Communist party contemplated in Sheiner v. State, Fla., 82 So.2d 657.

The Sheiner case has been discussed at length in bar journals and other periodicals throughout the country and has been generally though not unanimously approved. Adoption of the rule as proposed would, in our opinion, jeopardize rights secured by Section 12, Declaration of Rights, Constitution of Florida, F.S.A., as well as the guaranties embraced in the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. The proposed rule in whatever form approved should contemplate the proper exercise of every safeguard wrapped in these provisions of organic law; they may not always be obvious on the surface, however, the importance of adhering to the doctrine long established by this court that the investigation and trial of a lawyer for unprofessional conduct must be a judicial proceeding, in the manner provided by law or rule of this court, cannot be overemphasized. Petition of the Florida State Bar Association, 134 Fla. 851, 186 So. 280; Sheiner v. State, supra; Florida State Board of Architecture v. Seymour, Fla., 62 So.2d 1.

This court is committed to the doctrine that claiming the privilege against self-incrimination is not a disgrace; it is not to be construed as an inference of guilt or that the one who claims it is addicted to criminal tendencies; it may be claimed by the innocent as well as the guilty and its exercise may not be considered a breach of duty to the court. Boynton v. State ex rel. Mincer, Fla., 75 So.2d 211; State ex rel. Mitchell v. Kelly, Fla., 71 So.2d 887; State ex rel. Feldman v. Kelly, Fla., 76 So.2d 798; Florida State Board of Architecture v. Seymour, supra; United States ex rel. Belfrage v. Shaughnessy, 2 Cir., 1954, 212 F.2d 128; In the Matter of Grae, 282 N.Y. 428, 26 N.E.2d 963, 127 A.L.R. 1276; Konigsberg v. State Bar of California, 76 S.Ct. 832; Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners of New Mexico, 60 N.M. 304, 291 P.2d 607; Yale Law Journal, May 1956, p. 873. The doctrine of this paragraph should by all means be available to the lawyer because he may be called on to defend one who has invoked the Fifth Amendment or it may become his duty in many other ways or instances to espouse an unpopular cause, to give legal protection to the downtrodden or align himself with those who are misguided and in need of legal protection. He should not be prejudiced by the pressure of minorities or other groups when he takes up the cause of those who need his assistance.

In the recent case of Ullmann v. United States, 350 U.S. 422, 76 S.Ct. 497, 501, the *876 Supreme Court reviewed at length the privilege against self-incrimination and among other things said:

"No doubt the constitutional privilege may, on occasion, save a guilty man from his just desserts. It was aimed at a more far-reaching evil — a recurrence of the Inquisition and the Star Chamber, even if not in their stark brutality.

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103 So. 2d 873, 1956 Fla. LEXIS 3229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-revision-of-or-amendment-to-integration-rule-of-the-florida-bar-fla-1956.