In re Waggoner

206 N.W. 427, 49 S.D. 78, 1925 S.D. LEXIS 133
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1925
DocketFile No. 5564
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 427 (In re Waggoner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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 Waggoner, 206 N.W. 427, 49 S.D. 78, 1925 S.D. LEXIS 133 (S.D. 1925).

Opinion

MO'RIARTY, C.

This proceeding was instituted in this court for the disbarment of L. E. Waggoner, heretofore admitted by this court to the practice of law in the courts of this state.

The accused made his first appearance herein by interposing three demurrers to the three separate charges contained in the complaint. After hearing upon said demurrers ,this court made an order overruling each of said demurrers and allowing the accused time to answer. An answer was duly served and filed, raising issues of fact upon the allegations of the complaint. And Hon. R. F. Williamson, of Aberdeen, an attorney of this court, was by the court appointed a referee to hear the evidence and to report the same to this court, with his findings of fact and conclusions of law made upon such evidence. The said referee has presented to the court a transcript of the evidence taken 'before him. and has submitted therewith his findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the matter now comes before the court upon such report of the referee.

In the decision upon the demurrers (47 S. D. 401, 199 N. W. 244), this court fully defines the law of this state, in so far as the offenses alleged in the complaint are concerned, and it also modifies to some extent expressions made in Re Bartlett et al, 47 S. D. [80]*80208, 197 N. W. 285, as to the standards of professional conduct to be required of members of the bar of this state.

The law of the case being thus defined, the only questions before the court at this time are the questions of fact covered by the evidence, and whether the evidence supports the findings and conclusions of the referee. In considering these questions the court must be influenced by recognizing" the very serious effects of disbarment, and at the same time by the necessity of preserving high standards of legal ethics so that practicing attorneys shall understand that they are to measure their conduct not by an effort to merely avoid being guilty of lawbreaking “beyond any reasonable doubt,” but by avoiding “even the appearance of evil” and refraining from the doing of any act which raises in their own minds serious doubts of its propriety.

Three separate charges are made in the complaint and are covered by the report of the referee: (1) The acceptance of a reward in the Gutmann Robbery Case. (2) Misconduct in the Carl Schmahl Case. (3) Misconduct in the P'risch Case.

A statement of the nature of each of these charges will be found in the decision on the demurrers, above cited, and it is unnecessary to extend this opinion by a repetition thereof.

The evidence shows, beyond dispute, that the accused did: accept one-third of a reward of $1,800 paid for the return of certain jewelry stolen from the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul depot at Sioux Falls, and recovered by the efforts of the accused and others. This $600 was received by the accused before he had rendered any services to any one except such as he appeared to perform as state’s attorney of Minnehaha county, engaged in an effort to secure the evidence required to convict the persons guilty of the theft of the jewelry. After accepting this $600 the accused went to Cincinnati, Ohio, to secure a final settlement from the parties offering'the reward for the recovery of the stolen jewelry. At Cincinnati he received a further payment of $350, of which he paid $181 to one Hugo Karl, who claimed to be entitled to a share of the reward. The remaining $169 of this payment he kept to' reimburse him for the expenses of the trip. After receiving the $600, and before starting for Cincinnati, he made an agreement with Julius Wold and S. B. McCauley, the men who have' received the remainder of the $1,800, whereby these men! [81]*81agreed that the accused' should represent them in the matter of adjusting the amount of the reward and securing settlement thereof, and for such services should have an equal share with themselves in any and all rewards recovered in the matter. It appears that after the making of this agreement neither Wold or McCauley received any other of further reward, and that the $600 each which they then had was all that either of them ever received from the transaction. The evidence further shows that before accepting the $600 the accused had felt some doubts .as to his right to accept any part of the reward. He had- consulted an older and more experienced attorney, he and his law partner had examined authorities as to the question, and the accused says that they found nothing to convince them that there would be any impropriety in his accepting* part of t'he reward. Yet he says that when the time of actual receipt of the $1,800 arrived he told Wold and M'cCauley that he would not take any part of it, and then Wold and McCauley retired to another room' and talked it over, and came back and said an attorney should go to Cincinnati to make the final settlement, and if the accused would represent them there he could have an equal share with themselves in all rewards recovered. And he then went to Cincinnati as, their representative. The accused says that he thought he ought to be “overly careful” to see that everything was all right about taking this reward, because he knew that he had a lot of enemies in Sioux Falls, “and it would not take much of an excuse for some one to start something.” Considerable space in the record is occupied with the question whether the jewelry surrendered for the reward was used as evidence in the prosecutions of persons who were tried for the theft of the goods. But this question is rendered unimportant by the fact that after the recovery of the jewelry two of the men who were arrested' entered pleas of guilty and acted as witnesses for the state in the prosecutions of the others. It is quite evident that without the finding of part of the property at places indicating guilt of these men, the pleas of guilty could not have been secured, nor their evidence used to convict the others.

From the evidence thus epitomized the referee deduces the following conclusions of law:

“(1) That the accused received a part of the reward offered [82]*82in payment of' legal services rendered to Julius Wold and S'. B. McCauley, and not for prosecuting any criminal action.
“(2) That it Was no part of the accused’s duty as state’s attorney to recover said jewelry or make the trip to’ Cincinnati.
“(3) That in accepting a part of said reward the accused acted in good faith and in an honest belief that he was entitled to the same.
“(4) That the receipt and acceptance of said reward was legal and ethical and violated no provision of law, and no ethics of the profession and in no manner was intentionally guilty of any professional misconduct.”

With these conclusions the court cannot agree. It is very apparent from the evidence of the accused himself that his employment by Wold and McCauley as their attorney, and giving him an equal share with them in a reward already paid to them, was a mere subterfuge to cover up his taking of a part of ther reward, and throw dust in the eyes of those enemies that were liable “to start something.” This very subterfuge casts doubt upon the good faith of h.is acts. If the accused' really believed that he had a legal and ethical right to accept part of the reward, why should he tell the others that he would not take the share offered him? If he was barred from taking any of the reward directly, upon what theory could he act for himself and others in collecting the reward for one-third and his expenses?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Clark v. Williams
128 S.W.2d 1098 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 427, 49 S.D. 78, 1925 S.D. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-waggoner-sd-1925.