In re Wall

13 F. 814
CourtUnited States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida
DecidedMarch 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 F. 814 (In re Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Wall, 13 F. 814 (circtndfl 1882).

Opinion

Locke, D. J.

It has been charged that the defendant, J. B. Wall, an attorney of this court, did, with an unlawful, tumultous, and riotous gathering, he advising and encouraging thereto, take from the jail of this county and hang a man, to the court known only as John. To this charge he has filed an answer, demurring to the action of the court because—First, no complaint under oath has been filed; and, secondly, because he has been charged with an indictable offense, of which this court has no jurisdiction before indictment and conviction; and denying that he counseled, advised, encouraged, or incited an unlawful, tumultuous, and riotous gathering or mob to take one John from the jail and cause his death by hanging. The offense in which Mr. Wall is charged to have participated came to the personal knowledge of the court. As the judge was leaving the court-house for dinner, a prisoner was brought into the yard in custody of officers. Upon his return in the afternoon the dead body of the same person hung in a tree directly in front of the court-house door. No legal execution had taken place. The evidence shows that a person, whose name has not appeared, was taken from the jail, and, in the immedato vicinity of the court-house, hung to the limb of a tree; that said J. B. Wall was present, went with several others to the sheriff’s house, returned thence to the jail, where they took therefrom the prisoner; that he walked in immediate proximity to him in going to the tree, so along beside him that the witness thinks he had hold of him, and was then lost to sight in the crowd until after the man was hanged.

This is an action to determine the right of an attorney to retain his position as an officer of this court, and as such is instituted by it for its own protection, and the preservation of its integrity through the characters of its officers, and does not require the intervention of a third party by affidavit or otherwise.

No court is bound to await the complaint of a third party before investigating any matter touching misconduct of its officers, when information considered sufficient is received, and the circumstances demand its interposition. Randall v. Brigham, 7 Wall. 540.

An attorney is an officer of the court admitted to practice under its rules, amefiable to it, and liable to have such relations sundered upon satisfactory evidence of dishonest professional conduct, habits of general immorality, or any such single act of crime or vice as may show' him unfitted for the trusts and confidence reposed in him as such. Percy’s Case, 36 N. Y. 651; Hawk. P. C. 212; Bryant's Case, 24 N. H. 155; Ex parte Brownsal, 2 Cowper, 829; 12 Geo. I. c. 29; 4 Henry IV. c. 18; Case of Austin, 5 Rawle, 204; McLaughlin v. Dist. [816]*816Court, 5 Wafts & S. 272; Dickens’ Case, 67 Pa. St. 169; Mill’s Case, 1 Mich. 392; Potter’s Case, H. 26 G. 3 K. B. He has a right to an opportunity to appear and answer in his own behalf before a final judgment against him; but any notice, rule, or summons does not require the technical nicety in its allegations, nor the exactness of proof, of a criminal proceeding. Sanborn v. Kimball, 64 Me. 140; Leigh’s Case, 1 Munf. 481.

It is sufficient if the grounds are so set out as to give him knowledge of the matter with which he is charged, so that he may not be misled, and the true facts ascertained upon such investigation may /be considered and decided upon. Ranclall v. Brigham, supra. It is true that the English courts have in some instances declined to take summary action against attorneys for indictable offenses unless conviction has first been had, but such practice seems to have been considered as within the discretion of the court at the time and not as a rule. Lord Denman remarks, in 3 Nev. & P. 389 : “Would not an indictment for perjury lie upon these facts? We are not in the habit of interfering in such a case, unless there is something amounting to an admission on the part of the attorney which would render the interposition of a jury unnecessary.” Also, in 5 Barn.-& Aid. 1088, he remarks: “It is not usual to grant the rule if an indictable offense is charged.” Yet, notwithstanding a conviction, the question of guilt or innocence seems to have been deemed within the discretion of the court, as in Dowl. P. G. 110, although verdict 'had been found against the defendant, the judges still considered there might have been some dou,bt and refused the rule; and in King v. Southerton, 6 East, 127, notwithstanding the defense was urged that the defendant had been convicted of an offense not cognizable by .law, Lord Ellenborough remarked that “enough appeared to satisfy the court that the defendant was an improper person to remain an attorney.”

While such may have been the practice in the courts of England, it has not b.een accepted by American courts; Anon. N. J. Law, 163, being the only case found when judgment has been refused on that ground. On the contrary, in Re Hirst & Ingersoll, 9 Phila. 216, although the court, in the motion to disbar, say that “the offense charged—subornation of perjury and conspiracy against justice—is within reach of an indictment,” they make the rule absolute dismissing one party and suspending the other during the existence of the court.

[817]*817In Smith v. State, 1 Yerger, 228, the information was exhibited by one of the judges of the circuit, and although it was alleged that an indictment had been found in a foreign state, no trial nor conviction had been had, and the court remarks:

“ Law, administered in the usual form, is tardy, and any course short of special ministration would lose much of its beneficial effects. The mazy round of special pleadings, miscarriages before juries, and delays incident, afford a labyrinth for the wily to take shelter, if not escape; therefore, it is not deemed prudent to allow one so charged the right to demand forms of trial directly calculated to defeat the end.”

In Fields’ Case, 1 Martin & Y. 168, where the power of courts to remove their officers was under consideration, the court says:

“ By change of venue and writs of error the criminal could easily have kept off the punishment for two years, and by this means put himself above the law, if the court had not the power of removal. The conviction, when produced, would only be evidence of the facts alleged, and these facts the court have for this purpose as much right to inquire into as the jury. ” “ In this country it would most probably be unconstitutional to inflict punishment upon the person of the offender otherwise than by conviction upon indictment. But the removal from office being a civil proceeding not affecting the person, and being no bar to an indictment for the same offense, the finding of a jury is not necessary to authorize the court to remove.”

The supreme court of New Hampshire, in Delano’s Case, 58 N. H. 5, take a similar view of the law by disbarring an attorney for an indictible offense without conviction.

In this action against Mr. Wall this court unquestionably has jurisdiction, but in a criminal prosecution it has none.

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Related

Shaw v. United States
180 F. 348 (Sixth Circuit, 1910)
Ingersoll v. Coal Creek Coal Co.
117 Tenn. 263 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wall-circtndfl-1882.