In re Selleck

151 S.W. 743, 168 Mo. App. 391, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 432
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 743 (In re Selleck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Selleck, 151 S.W. 743, 168 Mo. App. 391, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 432 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

NOETONI, J.

This is an original proceeding for-disbarment of tbe respondent, Ellroy Y. Selleck, Esq., [392]*392instituted in this court at the instance of the St. Louis Bar Association, acting through its committee on grievances. Upon the respondent’s appearing at the bar in person and by counsel, after notice and citation were duly served upon him, the court appointed Charles W. Bates, Esq., and George E. Smith, Esq.', members of the St. Louis bar in good standing, as special commissioners to sit together, .hear the testimony and make report of their finding’s of fact and conclusions of law thereon with respect to the several charges preferred. The commissioners were' duly sworn and qualified to act in that behalf and in due time proceeded upon the discharge of the duties as such.

It appears that all parties interested appeared before the special commissioners in person and by counsel and introduced volumes of evidence, both oral and documentary. The special commissioners sat eighteen days hearing testimony, and there were examined before them in all eighty-five witnesses. The record accompanying their report to this court consists of four volumes containing in all 1843 pages, besides an additonal volume of documentary evidence alone in the form of exhibits introduced at the hearing. Together with this voluminous .record, the special commissioners filed here the following report, setting forth their findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“State of Missouri, City of St. Louis.
IN THE
ST. LOUIS COURT OF APPEALS
MARCH TERM, 19-12.
In the Matter of Ellroy V. Selleck No. 13209.
Special Commissioners’ Report.
“George E. Smith and Charles W. Bates,'special commissioners appointed by this Honorable Court on [393]*393November 20, 1911, to jointly take tbe testimony offered by tbe parties, relator and respondent, and to report the same1, together with findings of fact and conclusions of law, as more fully appears by .the copy of the order of appointment hereto attached and made a part hereof, after duly taking the oath of office on said day, which oath is hereto attached and made a part hereof, did by consent of parties, Messrs. Thomas B. Harvey and Walter H. Saunders appearing for relators, and Mr. John A. Talty appearing for respondent Selleck, after due notice and by consent of parties, begin the hearing of said cause on the 27th day of December, 1911, and continued to hear the same from time to time and from adjournment to adjournment as by consent of all parties until the' 5th day of July, 1912, when both parties concluded the testimony desired to be heard by them respectively.
“That your commissioners held sixteen (16) sessions of entire days and two (2) sessions of half days and heard the testimony of eighty-five (85) witnesses.
“Tour commissioners further report that they file herewith and make a part hereof transcript of the proceedings had before them, the testimony appearing in eighteen hundred and forty-three (1843) pages, and the written documents in evidence as exhibits appearing in a large separate volume.
“After hearing counsel, Messrs. Harvey and Saunders on behalf of relators, and Mr. Talty on behalf of respondent, your commissioners report as follows:
“The charges against respondent Ellroy Y. Selleck are presented by the Bar Association of the city of St. Louis, seeking the disbarment of said Selleck. These charges are five in number, as appears from the charges filed in this court on the 30th day of September, 1911.
[394]*394“CHARGE FIRST.
“Your commissioners find the issues in favor of respondent, Ellroy Y. Selleck, upon this charge.
“CHARGE SECOND.
“Your commissioners find the issues in favor of respondent, Ellroy Y. Selleck, upon this charge.
“CHARGE THIRD.
“Your commissioners find the issues in favor of respondent, Ellroy Y. Selleck, on this charge.
“CHARGE FOURTH.
“Your commissioners find the issues against Ellroy Y. Selleck on this'charge and find him guilty as charged.
“Further, upon this charge your commissioners find that said Ellroy V. Selleck was in the year 1906 duly admitted to practice law and licensed to practice law in the courts of the State of Missouri, by the Supreme Court of Missouri, and from that time continuously up to the present time he has been engaged in the practice of law as an attorney and counsellor. That in the months of November and December, 1908, one Charles Mathew Kotzaurek was conducting two hat stores in the city of St. Louis, one at 60S Pine street and one at 907 Pine street, and that the said Kotzaurek was indebted to various persons for rent of the said stores and for hats purchased and contracted for;' that in his employ at that time was one Bertha Henkel; that at that time and prior thereto the said Ellroy Y. Selleck was and had been the attorney and counsel for said Bertha Henkel; that sometime in the month of November or December, 1908', said Bertha Henkel introduced the said Kotzaurek to her attorney, the said Ellroy V. Selleck; that under the advice and direction [395]*395of said Selleck, lie conspiring with the said Kotzanrek and the said Henkel, a scheme was devised by said Selleck for this purpose, and said Kotzaurek and said Henkel directed by the said Selleck in his capacity as their counsellor and attorney, to execute falsely bills of sale and promissory notes and to authorize the said Selleck to execute certain checks to apparently consummate a sale of the stock of hats by said Kotzaurek to said Henkel; that said papers were executed and delivered, although in truth and in fact no such transaction took place as purported to be set forth by said papers; that litigation ensued, involving those transactions, and as a part of the conspiracy and plan devised by said Selleck to carry out said fraudulent scheme, he, the said Selleck, directed and instructed the said Henkel to give false and perjured testimony, in pursuance of which plan and scheme said Henkel did knowingly, wilfully and intentionally, in the trial of said litigation, give false and perjured testimony under the direction and at the suggestion of said Selleck, and the said Selleck, in said litigation, did knowingly, wilfully and intentionally give false and perjured testimony.
*11 CHARGE FIFTH.
“Tour commissioners find ¿gainst the respondent, Ellroy Y. Selleck, on this charge and find that the allegations in said charge are true.
“Further, your commissioners find that said Selleck, being a licensed attorney as heretofore stated and practicing his profession in the city of St. Louis, was for some months prior to July 20, 1910, employed by one John Link as attorney and legal adviser; that said John Link died on the 20th day of July, 1910, and that letters testamentary were issued by the Probate Court of the city of St. Louis to his widow, Minna Link, on July 23, 19Í0. That during his lifetime the [396]

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In re Marshall
160 S.W. 531 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 743, 168 Mo. App. 391, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-selleck-moctapp-1912.