In Re Weber

13 So. 2d 341, 202 La. 1037, 1943 La. LEXIS 948
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 12, 1943
DocketNo. 35518.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 13 So. 2d 341 (In Re Weber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Weber, 13 So. 2d 341, 202 La. 1037, 1943 La. LEXIS 948 (La. 1943).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

This original proceeding was instituted by the State Bar of Louisiana upon the recommendation of its Board of Governors on August 8, 1939, seeking to have Dudley L. Weber suspended from practicing law in this state on the ground that he had “knowingly attempted to secure a divorce for non-residents of Louisiana in the State of Louisiana, contrary to law * * * and knowingly used the testimony of suborned and perjured witnesses to this end.” His actions in this respect were alleged to have grown out of the case of Rita Dingco v. Lorenzo Dingeo.

Appearing in his own behalf, the defendant first filed an answer generally *1040 denying all of the allegations of the petition. Subsequently, through counsel, and reserving all of his rights under his original answer, the defendant entered a special plea expressing his willingness to accept the reprimand which, in authorizing the institution of these proceedings, had been recommended by the Board of Governors, in order that the further embarrassment, expense, and delay attendant upon any additional hearing might be avoided. This 'special plea was referred to the Hon. Ben B. Taylor, the Commissioner appointed by this court upon the recommendation of the Board of Governors to take the evidence in the case, for such action as he might deem appropriate.

In the meanwhile, however, the Legislature of Louisiana, by its adoption of Act No. 55 of 1940, repealed Act No. 10 of the Second Extra Legislative Session of 1934, which act had created the State Bar of Louisiana, and, in its Act No. 54 of 1940, memorialized this court to create the Louisiana State Bar Association. On January 13, 1941, the Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances appointed by this court to handle disbarment and suspension proceedings under the new state bar organization, filed a supplemental and amended petition under which the disbarment of the defendant is sought. The defendant, filing a supplemental and amended answer to this petition, reiterated all of the allegations contained in his original answer, that is, he denied he had been guilty of any misconduct. After numerous continuances the case was finally heard on November 28, 1941, before Hon. Hermann Moyse, the member of the East Baton Rouge Parish bar appointed the Commissioner for such purpose on May 27, 1941, after Mr. Taylor, the commissioner formerly named by us, was relieved of his duties upon his own request. The only testimony taken at this hearing, and that by depositiofi, was the testimony of Solomon M. Reich, an attorney of the New York State Bar, upon whose complaint the original investigation of Mr. Weber was instituted. In addition to this testimony, however, there was also introduced in evidence and made a part of the record a photostatic copy of the record in the Dingeo v. Dingeo case; the affidavit of Harris M. English, the curator-ad-hoc in the Dingeo case; letters from Judges Holcombe and Womack of the Nineteenth Judicial District; photostatic copies of letters, telegrams, and affidavits from the files of Solomon M. Reich; and the testimony taken at three hearings, viz.: (1) The hearing before the two judges of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court on September 30, 1938, at which the defendant was not present; (2) before the Ethics Committee of the Baton Rouge Bar Association on October 10, 12, and 19 of 1938, which the defendant attended without any previous notice having been given him; and (3) before the Disbarment Committee of the Sixth Congressional District and the East Baton Rouge Bar Association on January 12 and 26 of 1939.

The Commissioner concluded the allegation of the petition that the defendant “knowingly attempted to secure a divorce for non-residents of Louisiana in the State of Louisiana * * * and knowingly used the testimony of suborned and perjured witnesses to this end” was amply supported *1042 by the evidence, and he recommended the defendant’s suspension from the practice of law in this state for a period of two years.

The defendant first excepted to the Commissioner’s report on the ground that the Committee on' Professional Ethics and Grievances of the new state bar organization “was wholly without power and without jurisdiction ratione materiae to change the charge from suspension to disbarment or to make any change in the proceeding whatever, other than as is disclosed by the report and recommendation” of the Board of Governors of its predecessor; consequently, the conclusions and recommendations ' of the Commissioner which were predicated upon the supplemental and amended petition filed by the Committee, and the evidence introduced thereunder, should be vacated and set aside.

This exception is without merit. The fact that this court appointed a new Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances to replace the committee ..that had been in existence when these proceedings were instituted did not deprive the new committee of the right to prosecute the case to a final determination. In re Mundy, 182 La. 148, 161 So. 184. Moreover, the committee had a right, if in its opinion the charges brought against the defendant and the evidence supporting the same warranted such action, to ask that Weber be disbarred instead of suspended. The issues were not changed by such action, as contended by the defendant. As a matter of fact, the new committee reiterated “all of the allegations contained in the original petition.”

These proceedings were precipitated by a letter addressed to Albritton & Hardin, attorneys at law in the City of Baton Rouge, on September 15, 1938, by Solomon M. Reich, an attorney at the New York Bar, at whose request Weber had instituted a divorce case in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court entitled Dingeo v. Dingeo. In this letter, Reich complained about Weber’s failure to secure the final divorce decree as promised and he asked if Albritton & Hardin were in a position to prosecute the case to final judgment and to also institute suit to recover the moneys paid Weber,., as well as other expenses incurred, such as long distance calls and telegrams. In the letter is found the following statement: “Some time ago, an attorney by the name of Dudley L. Weber, having his offices at 205 Reymond Building, Baton Rouge, La., represented to our office that he is able to handle divorce cases under certain conditions, amongst which he enumerated the fact that where the parties were separated for four years and there was a desertion for a period of over four years, that he was in a position to institute an action for divorce and obtain the decree, although the parties were not present in Louisiana at the time. Accordingly, Mr. Weber handled several cases for this office and it seemed satisfactory, because in each and every case we obtained a decree from the Court granting the divorce in such action.”

To the letter Reich attached a copy of a letter he purportedly wrote Weber on December 2, 1937, which reads as follows:

“I am enclosing herewith a check for $50.00 as your fee to handle a new case *1044 entitled Rita Dingeo v. Lorenzo Dingeo, her husband, in which she is asking for an absolute divorce on the grounds of desertion and abandonment.
“The parties were married on April 20th, 1931 in the Municipal Building in New York County, New York.

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Bluebook (online)
13 So. 2d 341, 202 La. 1037, 1943 La. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-weber-la-1943.