In Re the Discipline or Disbarment of Metzenbaum

154 P.2d 602, 22 Wash. 2d 75, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 385
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1944
DocketNo. C.D. 2886.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 602 (In Re the Discipline or Disbarment of Metzenbaum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 Discipline or Disbarment of Metzenbaum, 154 P.2d 602, 22 Wash. 2d 75, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 385 (Wash. 1944).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

The board of governors of the Washington state bar association instituted this proceeding for the dis *76 ciplining or disbarment of the respondent, Walter Metzenbaum, an attorney at law.

Respondent was admitted to the practice of law in the state of Washington in the year 1907, and for the greater part of the time since then until the latter part of 1942 he has practiced his profession in this state; at other times and for relatively brief periods he has practiced the same profession in other states.

The board of governors issued its complaint against the respondent in December, 1942, charging him with violation of his oath of office and violation of the ethics of the profession in that, on three separate, specific occasions during the year 1942, and while residing in this state, he had personally and through the agency of others solicited the employment of himself as attorney for certain individuals in prospective personal injury actions to be brought by such persons. At the time the complaint was served on the respondent, however, he was residing, and has ever since resided, in the state of California and has not during that period practiced law in this state.

In due time, respondent filed his answer, denying the charges made against him and alleging affirmatively certain facts in explanation of one of the charges contained in the complaint. Subsequently, the board of governors filed a supplemental complaint charging respondent with another act of solicitation, alleged to have likewise been committed in this state in the year 1942. It appears, however, that the supplemental complaint was never served on the respondent nor was it ever answered- by him.

The cause was later set down to be tried by a local trial committee on April 30, 1943, in accordance with the practice obtaining in this state in such cases. At respondent’s request, the trial committee granted three successive continuances of the matter, once because of respondent’s financial inability to come to Seattle from Bakersfield, California, where he was then residing; a second time because one of his sons, who was in the armed service of the United States, was expected home on a furlough at about that time; and a third time because of respondent’s weakened physical con *77 dition due to a duodenal ulcer from which he was then suffering. In connection with the last continuance, a physician, who was a member of the staff of the University of California hospital, in the city of San Francisco where respondent was then living, certified on October 1, 1943, that respondent had previously sustained two hemorrhages of the duodenal ulcer and had been under the physician’s care ever since, and that respondent’s condition was such that the projected trip to Seattle would be inimical to his health. On the strength of that certificate, the trial committee granted the third request, continuing the case to December 14, 1943, but at the same time notified respondent that no further continuances would be permitted.

On November 29, 1943, respondent applied for another continuance and in support of his application submitted a second certificate from the same physician, stating that, while respondent had made progress under the physician’s treatment, his condition was still such that any lengthy travel, followed by the strain of a legal contest of the nature involved in the pending cause, would likely prove dangerous to respondent’s health, and that for that reason he, the physician, had advised respondent not to make the trip to Seattle.

The members of the committee and their attorney had some conference and correspondence with each other in regard to the requested continuance, but the committee ultimately concluded to deny respondent’s request. The record does not disclose any expressed reason for that decision, nor is there anything in the record controverting the statement of either the respondent or his physician with reference to respondent’s physical condition at that time. Respondent complained bitterly of the action taken by the trial committee and stated that he would not jeopardize his life by coming to Seattle at that time, in the face of his doctor’s orders, even though by not coming he might run the risk of being disbarred from the practice of law in this state.

The cause then came on for trial on December 14, 1943, the day set therefor. Although the respondent had not re *78 quested that an attorney be appointed to represent him at- the trial, the committee, after some discussion of the-matter at the commencement of the hearing, concluded to, and did, appoint a local attorney for that purpose. The attorney knew nothing about the case, however, and entered upon the trial without any opportunity for preparation. Although he seems to have done everything he could for the respondent under the circumstances, the fact remains that because of his lack of knowledge concerning the case he actually rendered little or no assistance to the respondent.

The trial proceeded, not only on the original complaint, but also on the supplemental complaint which had not been served on the respondent. About six months after the hearing, the trial committee made its written findings, which were largely a repetition of the allegations in the complaint, and from those findings concluded that respondent had solicited employment of himself as attorney for various persons and had violated his oath of office and his duties as an attorney. Basing its action on these findings and conclusions, the trial committee recommended that the respondent be permanently disbarred.

Upon a subsequent review of those proceedings, and after respondent had filed a statement in opposition to the report of the trial committee, the board of governors approved and adopted the findings of the committee and then likewise recommended that respondent be disbarred from further practice of law in the state of Washington. The evidence, findings, and recommendations of the board of governors were then transmitted to, and filed in, the office of the clerk of this court. Respondent thereupon filed in the same office his objections to the action and recommendation of the board, and accompanied his objections with a typewritten brief. The cause was then duly assigned for hearing by this court on the whole record as brought before it.

In the objections and brief submitted by the respondent, he makes three contentions: (1) that the proceedings before the trial committee should not be considered at all *79 in this court, or at least that the entire matter should be sent back to the committee for trial anew, for the reason that the respondent, on account of his serious illness, was prevented from attending the hearing and properly defending himself; (2) that the entire proceeding before the trial committee should be held null and void for the further reason that the committee, without the knowledge or consent of the respondent, ánd without any authority in law, assumed the prerogative of appointing an attorney to represent him throughout the trial; and (3) that the evidence in the case is wholly insufficient to support the findings and recommendations of either the trial committee or the board of governors.

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154 P.2d 602, 22 Wash. 2d 75, 1944 Wash. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-discipline-or-disbarment-of-metzenbaum-wash-1944.