In Re the Conduct of Moore

345 P.2d 411, 218 Or. 403, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 427
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 345 P.2d 411 (In Re the Conduct of Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 the Conduct of Moore, 345 P.2d 411, 218 Or. 403, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 427 (Or. 1959).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This matter comes before us in regular course to review the findings and recommendations of the Board of Governors of the Oregon Bar respecting charges of professional misconduct made against Floyd D. Moore, an attorney licensed to practice in the courts of this state.

On February 5, 1959, the Oregon Bar filed a complaint containing four charges, as follows:

The First alleges that on or about October 19, 1953, while the accused was acting as attorney at law and counselor for his client Huida Hollander, she executed *404 a last will and testament, prepared by the accused, in which she left to him all of her property, with the exception of her piano, which was bequeathed to her church; that at that time Mrs. Hollander was suffering from a condition of senile dementia and was incompetent to conduct her own business affairs and that such condition of senility and incompetence was well known to the accused; that on and prior to the execution of the will the accused at no time advised his client to seek independent advice regarding its execution; and that the aforesaid conduct of the accused was and is unethical and in violation of the rules of professional conduct made and promulgated by the Oregon State Bar and constitutes such conduct that, if the accused were now applying for admission to the Oregon State Bar, his application should be denied.

The allegations of the Second are: That on or about October 28, 1953, said Huida Hollander, while a client of the accused, executed and delivered to him a bargain and sale deed, conveying to him her home, located in Portland, but wherein she reserved a life interest.

The Third Charge alleges: That on or about November 2, 1953, while the accused was acting as attorney at law and counselor for Mrs. Huida Hollander, a savings account of $5,342.10, owned solely by said client, was changed to a joint account with the accused; that thereafter, on or about November 19, 1953, the amount of $5,000 was withdrawn from said joint account and deposited in the Bose City Branch of The First National Bank of Portland, Oregon, in an account belonging solely to Mrs. Hollander; and that on the same date said account was changed to a joint account with the accused; and, also, on the same day the accused was furnished by said client' with a key and *405 joint access to her safety-deposit box; that thereafter, on or about January 25,1954, the account in the Oregon Mutual Savings Bank of Portland, Oregon, was closed and the balance therein transferred to the aforesaid joint account in the Bose City Branch of The First National Bank; and that thereafter, on August 16, 1954, the accused withdrew from the joint account in the Bose City Branch the amount of $5,006.03 and deposited the same in a savings account which the accused maintained jointly with his wife in another bank.

The Second and Third charges also included the same allegations as incorporated in the first charge respecting the accused’s knowledge of Mrs. Hollander’s mental condition and the same allegations with reference to the unethical character and violation of the rules of professional conduct.

The Fourth and last Charge was to the effect that on or about December 24, 1957, the accused wilfully sought to mislead Judge William Dickson, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Multnomah, Probate Division, by offering for probate the will dated October 19, 1953 (the will referred to in the First Charge, supra), by falsely representing to said judge that said will was her last will and testament, when he had knowledge of the existence of a later will, dated March 10, 1956.

After the issues were joined by the accused’s answer to the Bar’s complaint, a hearing was had on April 10, 1959, before a Trial Committee of the Bar, where the accused appeared in person and by his attorney. There was no controversy that the documents referred to in *406 the First and Second Charges were executed by Mrs. Hollander at the times as in the complaint alleged, nor that various transactions were had with respect to Mrs. Hollander’s savings accounts at the times and in the amounts set forth in the Third Charge.

On June 12, 1959, the Trial Committee found the accused guilty on the First, Second and Third Charges, as alleged in the complaint of the Oregon State Bar, except that they specially found him not guilty of knowledge that Huida Hollander was suffering from senile dementia at the time of the several transactions referred to in those three charges. They also found him not guilty on the Fourth Charge.

The findings of the Trial Committee and its recommendations for discipline were in due course referred to the Board of Governors of the State Bar for review and considered by that body at its meeting on Juné 27, 1959 (11 members participating and one member absent) . After its consideration of the record now before us and by a vote of 10 to 1, it rejected the first three' findings of guilt and adopted as its own a finding of “not guilty”- on the Fourth Charge.. By a vote of all 11 members present, it made a recommendation to this court that the accused be not disciplined in any manner by this court.

Beforé proceeding further, we take note that Mrs. Hollander, on August 7, 1954, left Portland by train for Duluth, Minnesota' (near her former home), to. visit relatives. On or about August ninth or tenth following, a nephew of Mrs. Hollander called Mr. Moore to advise that Mrs. Hollander had suffered a complete mental collapse and was then confined in a hospital pf'that city. . The nephew requested Mr. Moore, to-come and get her and return her. to Portland'. This *407 Mr. Moore claims was Ms first information that Mrs. Hollander was mentally ill.

Mr. Moore responded to the call hy plane and returned with Mrs. Hollander by train sometime prior to August 15, 1954, when he immediately arranged for her hospitalization at the Fairlawn Home, in Portland. On August fifteenth she was there examined at the instance of Moore by Dr. James G. Shanldin, of the medical firm of Dixon, Dickel & Shanklin, distinguished psychiatrists of that city. On Dr. Shanklin’s recommendation, Moore signed a notice of mental illness on August seventeenth, resulting in Mrs. Hollander’s commitment to the Eastern Oregon Hospital on August twenty-fourth. But before doing so, indeed, on August sixteenth, after receiving the report of Dr. Shanklin’s examination, and before her commitment or proceeding for appointment of a guardian, Moore withdrew all moneys of Mrs. Hollander from the joint savings account in the Eose City Branch of The First National Bank and deposited them in the Sellwood Branch of the same bank in a joint account to the credit of himself and wife.

On August twenty-sixth he petitioned the circuit court for the appointment of himself as Mrs. Hollander’s guardian. This petition was resisted by a number of friends and neighbors of Mrs. Hollander and resulted in the appointment of one Hans Sater as guardian. Sater, on December 29, 1954, in his representative capacity, brought suit against the accused and his wife for an accounting as to all personal property received by them from Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
345 P.2d 411, 218 Or. 403, 1959 Ore. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-conduct-of-moore-or-1959.