In Re Young

132 P.2d 1052, 61 Nev. 463, 1943 Nev. LEXIS 3
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1943
Docket3384
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 1052 (In Re Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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 Young, 132 P.2d 1052, 61 Nev. 463, 1943 Nev. LEXIS 3 (Neb. 1943).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Taber, J.:

Prior to the summer of 1942, attorneys from other states, under certain conditions and upon compliance with certain requirements, could be and frequently were granted licenses to practice law in all the courts of this state, on motion, without taking the regular bar examination. By amendment of supreme court rule I, adopted June 3, published June 19, and effective July *464 19, 1942, every applicant for a license to practice as an attorney and counsellor in Nevada must take the regular bar examination held once each year, commencing on the second Monday of September.

In this proceeding petitioner prays the court for an order admitting him to the practice of law in all the courts of this state. The state bar of Nevada has demurred to the petition upon the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to warrant the granting of any relief. A summary of the pertinent allegations of the petition will be found in the following nine paragraphs :

(1) Petitioner, after acquainting himself with the provisions of the rule as it read prior to said amendment, wrote a letter on March 5, 1942, at Las Vegas, the city of his residence, addressed to the secretary of the state bar, at Reno, requesting him to send petitioner “application for admission to practice law in the State of Nevada on motion from a reciprocal state not requiring an examination.” On March 18 the secretary acknowledged receipt of said letter and requested petitioner to give him, by return mail, certain desired information about his residence, upon receipt of which the secretary would comply with the request made in said letter of March 5. In the secretary’s letter he enclosed a copy of supreme court rule I, and directed petitioner’s attention to subdivision 7 thereof governing qualifications to be admitted on motion. On March 19, and before petitioner had received the secretary’s letter of March 18, petitioner wrote a second letter addressed to the state bar of Nevada, at Reno, in which he said he had just learned that the secretary had been ill, and that petitioner would appreciate it if the office of the state bar would cause to be sent him the application form mentioned in his first letter to the secretary. After receiving the secretary’s letter of March 18 petitioner, on March 20, wrote him, giving the desired information regarding his residence in Nevada. In this letter he *465 further stated that he would endeavor .to qualify from the State of Washington, “which is entirely reciprocal.” On April 15 petitioner “rather belatedly” acknowledged receipt of a letter from the secretary enclosing a preliminary form of application for admission to practice. In this letter petitioner stated that he had directed letters to the State of Washington for the necessary certificates and letters which were to accompany his application, and that same should be forthcoming within two weeks thereafter.

(2) On June '8 petitioner again wrote the secretary, stating that his six months’ residence in Nevada had been completed on March 31, and that he now had on hand the requisite evidence of his prior status from the State of Washington and was ready to file his application. In this letter he inquired with respect to his status under the recent amendment - of supreme court rule I, and added that it had occurred to him- “that some provision in the amendment or practice might have left admission on motion available to any who had commenced residence • and work looking toward such admission, and who, perhaps, like I, had completed residence and the accumulation of the required evidence, prior to or just at a time coincident- with the change.” ■ On June 10 the secretary replied to said letter as follows: “Kindly be advised that the amendment to Rule I of the Rules of the Supreme Court governing admissions of attorneys from other-jurisdictions has been amended and will go into effect' thirty days after publication. Publication of the rule will be made in the State Bar 'Journal and should come out'within the next ten days. Therefore you will be required, when the time comes, to take the regular Bar examination.”

(3) On July 29, two days within the time limited by the rule, petitioner mailed his application to take the bar examination. Receipt of same, in the absence of the secretary, was acknowledged on July 31 by his secretary who, in her letter of acknowledgment, advised *466 petitioner that she had taken the matter up with the president of the state bar, who told her that petitioner’s application was not in the correct form, and instructed her to send him four copies of application, together with questionnaire, all of which she was enclosing with the request that petitioner complete and return them at once. This he did, about ten days thereafter.

(4) On August 22 the secretary of the board of bar examiners wrote petitioner, requesting certain additional information in connection with his application. Petitioner replied by letter of August 25, giving such information. On August 24 the secretary of the board of bar examiners wrote the following letter to petitioner: “At the meeting of the State Board of Bar Examiners on August 22nd your Application was considered, but we are unable to pass upon your examination by reason of the fact that we did not receive your character questionnaire until August 17th. It is exceedingly unlikely that you will be allowed to take the Bar Examination this year as we have not the time within which to obtain a complete report on you. The examinations will be given September 14, 1942, and if, within a reasonable time prior thereto, your character reports are completed you will be allowed to take the examination,' otherwise not. I will advise you immediately if the Board desires to allow you to take the examination this year.”

(5) On September 5 the secretary of the board of bar examiners wrote petitioner the following letter': “On August 22nd I wrote you requesting information as to your whereabouts since December, 1940, in order to complete the investigation of your affidavit and questionnaire. Will you please send me the information immediately. Although your application cannot be considered by reason of the fact that we have not completed a character report, I will allow you to take the examination beginning September 14th, 1942, in Reno if you will sign the enclosed personal request under the conditions stated therein.” On September 7 petitioner replied *467 to said letter as follows: “On receipt of your letter of August 22, 1942, I immediately wrote you a full page letter giving complete information requested. I directed it to you at the address indicated, P. 0. Box 2046, Reno, Nevada; its date was August 25, 1942. Frankly, I am past the stage of being perplexed. I have done everything the rules seemed to require and with just as much expedition as time and circumstances would permit. I was definitely of the opinion that under the rules as they existed I was entitled to have had my application for admission on motion considered but was willing to pass that one at the time; then after spending almost a full year being advised that I could not even take the examination and now I can take it with strings attached— its just too much.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 1052, 61 Nev. 463, 1943 Nev. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-young-nev-1943.