In Re the Proceeding for the Disbarment of Boland

248 P. 399, 140 Wash. 148, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 667
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1926
DocketC.D. No. 891. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 248 P. 399 (In Re the Proceeding for the Disbarment of Boland) 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 Proceeding for the Disbarment of Boland, 248 P. 399, 140 Wash. 148, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 667 (Wash. 1926).

Opinions

Tolman, C. J.

— This is a proceeding before the state board of law examiners for the disbarment of an attorney. The board, after full bearing, made a report, findings of fact, and recommendations to this court, in part as follows:

“With reference to the first cause of action, we find the facts to be as follows:

“On August 4, 1921, the "White Swan Auto Company, a corporation, gave to C. A. Payne its note for $4,000 and secured it by a chattel mortgage on its personal property and a mortgage upon a tract of land, and subsequently becoming in failing circumstances made an assignment for the benefit of creditors to respondent W. G-. Boland. The respondent did not take possession of the property covered by the mortgage, and the installments of principal and interest on the note not being paid, Mr. Payne declared the whole debt due, and commenced foreclosure proceedings by notice and sale, which resulted in the personal prop *150 erty described in tbe notice being sold and Mr. Payne became the purchaser thereof at a price considerably less than the whole amount of indebtedness. After these proceedings were had it was discovered that some of the personal property covered by the mortgage had been omitted from the notice and was not covered by the sheriff’s sale and Mr. Payne commenced an action in the Superior Court of Washington, for Yakima County, to foreclose the mortgage as to this personal property and also the real estate mortgage, and made the respondent a party thereto in his capacity as assignee for the benefit of creditors of the White Swan Auto Company, and asked that a Receiver of the corporation be appointed. On June 12, 1922, M. A. Hale was appointed receiver of the corporation and authorized to take possession of its property and hold the same subject to further order of the court.
The Receiver qualified but left the personal property in the garage building of the corporation, but placed the same under his own lock and key. While these proceedings were being had, the White Swan Auto Company was adjudged a bankrupt, and the respondent was appointed trustee on or about July 6, 1922, and qualified as such on or about August 18, 1922. The respondent as Trustee in Bankruptcy moved to be allowed to intervene in the above action, which application was granted, and on September 8, 1922, he filed an answer and cross complaint in which he set up the invalidity of the note of $4,000 given by the White Swan Auto Company to Mr. Payne, and the real estate and chattel mortgages given to secure it, the invalidity of the notice and sale proceedings, alleged the value of the personal property sold to Mr. Payne thereunder was $2,000, and prayed for a cancellation of the note and mortgage, and that the personal property sold under the notice and sale proceedings to be returned to him as Trustee in Bankruptcy, or in case return could not be had, for a judgment against Mr. Payne in the sum of $2,000. The case came on for trial, and on September 30, 1922, a judgment was entered as prayed for in the complaint, said judgment being in the alternative for the return *151 of the personal property sold to Mr. Payne under the notice and sale proceedings, or if delivery could not be had that the respondent have a money judgment against Mr. Payne in the sum of $2,000. Prom this judgment an appeal was taken to this court, but no supersedeas bond was put up by Mr. Payne.
“After the entry of the judgment awarding respondent possession of the personal property, he made demand upon the attorneys for the Receiver for its possession, and followed this up by making application to the court for an order discharging the Receiver and directing him to deliver the assets and property of the "White Swan Auto Company to him, which application was denied. It does not affirmatively appear from the record that the attention of the court was called to the judgment awarding the respondent possession of the property, or why the application for possession thereof was denied.
“The respondent on October 6,1922, caused a special execution to be issued out of the superior court, and upon said judgment as though the same was one in his favor and against Mr. Payne for $2,000.00 and costs. When this execution was placed in the hands of the sheriff, he and the respondent went to the building where the personal property was located and which was still in the possession of the Receiver, removed the lock from the door, and thereupon the sheriff levied upon said property and gave notice of sale thereof. On November 4, 1922, pursuant to this notice the property was sold by said sheriff. (For reference to the foregoing, see respondent’s Exhibit ‘B’).
“The sheriff’s sale was attended by respondent, not in his capacity as Trustee in Bankruptcy, but as attorney and agent for one George H. Thompson, and there was sold to him by the sheriff all of the personal property for the sum of $50, although in his cross-complaint the respondent had alleged, and in the judgment, ttíe value of the property was found to be $2,000. After making this, purchase the respondent took full possession of the personal property, and later acting for Mr. Thompson, sold a portion of it to Yakima county for $600.
*152 “The respondent seeks to justify this method of procedure by the contention that if he put the property out of the way so that Mr. Payne could not deliver it to him in accordance with the judgment of the court, he would then be entitled to collect from Mr. Payne the sum of $2,000 awarded by the alternative judgment (Tr.. 94-97).
“The judgment herein referred to was reversed by this court (Payne vs. White Swan Auto Company, 126 Wash. 550), it being decided that the foreclosure of the chattel mortgage by notice and sale proceedings could not be attacked collaterally, and that by his purchase at such sale Mr. Payne had become the owner of the property.
“Yakima county made an adjustment with Mr. Payne as to the property it had purchased from the respondent, and then brought suit against Thompson to recover what it had paid to him, and recovered judgment therefor.
“While the action of the court in refusing to direct its officer, the Receiver, to deliver possession of -the personal property to respondent after the court had awarded him possession of it by the judgment above referred to was inconsistent, we think the acts- of the respondent in causing execution to be issued, having the property sold and bidding the same in for, and purchasing the same for a nominal sum in behalf of, a client under the circumstances, and for the purposes above set forth, were dishonest and unprofessional and in violation of his duty as an attorney at law charged with a trust.
“The facts relative to the second cause of action we find to be as follows:
“About January 1,1923, Roy J. Nye closed negotiations with Robert M. Smith purporting to act as agent for N. Y. Miller, of Seattle, for the purchase of two lots in Yakima, upon which there was a dwelling house. Mr. Nye paid Smith $300 and got a purchase money receipt. There was a mortgage on the property held by the Liberty Savings &

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248 P. 399, 140 Wash. 148, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-proceeding-for-the-disbarment-of-boland-wash-1926.