In the Matter of Proceedings Against Elam

211 S.W.2d 710, 357 Mo. 922, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 702
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1948
DocketNo. 40164.
StatusPublished

This text of 211 S.W.2d 710 (In the Matter of Proceedings Against Elam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of Proceedings Against Elam, 211 S.W.2d 710, 357 Mo. 922, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 702 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*925 ELLISON, J.

[710] This proceeding was instituted directly in this court by-leave, under Rule .5.03, on an information filed by the. members of the Circuit Bar Committee of the - Sixteenth Judicial. Circuit (Jackson County) -charging the respondent Oscar B. Elam, a lawyer who resides and offices in that circuit, .with professional misconduct in violation-of Rules 4.01, 4.06 and 4.17 of the Canons of Ethics adopted by this court -' The information prays that if upon' a hearing the respondent be found guilty, a judgment be rendered assessing such penalty or punishment under Rule 5.10 as shall seem: proper. Under that rule the disciplinary action may be either a-reprimand, suspension from the' practice for a designated time, or. permanent disbarment. This court appointed Hon. Frank Hollings-worth, Judge of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit, as Special Commissioner to take the evidence and make report to this court of his find *926 ings of fact and conclusions of law. His report has been of great assistance in elucidating a long and involved record!

The charges against Mr. Elam grow' out of a suit he brought in the circuit court of [711] Platte County in 1944 for Mrs. Stacy Henderson and her sister Mrs. Minerva Crilly, as plaintiffs, ■ against théifi insane brother Beauregard Brown, to partition a residence property in Weston, Platte County, owned by those three parties as tenants in common. A dispute arose between some of the parties ■ and respondent Elam on the charge that he was attempting by contract to effect a partition sale of the property to James E. Bovard, who officed with him, at a price less than it was worth. At the sale Bovard was forced by competitive bidding to pay more thán respondent’s contemplated sale price. ;

Thereafter respondent Elam, claiming to represent both the twd plaintiffs and .Bovard, endeavored to have the latter substituted as plaintiff for the former in the partition suit, and Bovard’s bid price rebated to the contemplated contract sale price. Motions of a similar nature followed. At hearings in May and August, 1945, the trial judge intervened and enforced the bid price and wrote the final decree. At those hearings respondent Elam used intemperate language referring to opposing counsel and addressed to the court. The same was true of certain motions or pleadings filed. by him. He further brought a $60,000 libel suit against'the trial judge, as here-after explained. The charges against him are that: (1) his attitude and conduct toward the trial court were disrespectful, in violation of Canon 4.01; that he represented conflicting interests and deserted his original clients,- the two plaintiffs, in violation of Canon 4.06; that he engaged in • personalities and. made false charges, in the nature of personal attacks on opposing counsel, both orally and in pleadings, in violation of Canon 4.17. All these were sustained by the Special Commissioner’s report, in whole or in part.

Bespondent Elam is/now 78 years old. He has briefed the case and argued it here. He has furthermore filed a motion to strike 18 exhibits from the transcript on the grounds that they were irrelevant or not presented below, or on other grounds. This motion also asks that 70 different parts of the Special Commissioner’s 43 page typewritten report be stricken for various reasons. ■ His original brief is long and he has filed two additional briefs along with a motion that certain original testimony in the trial court files be sent here. We cannot extend this opinion to discuss the facts, objections to evidence and the law, at such length as respondent has done. Neither can we rule on the merits of the partition suit; the question is on respondent’s professional conduct.

The record facts, condensed as much as possible, are as follows. The plaintiffs in the partition suit, Stacy- Henderson and Minerva Crilly, respectively were 79 and 83 years old when they died on June *927 20 and May 8, 1945, about a year after the suit was filed. These two sisters lived together in Leavenworth, Kansas. Their brother Beauregard Brown had for many years been insane and an inmate of an asylum in Kansas. Mrs. Crilly was the dominating member of the family, but she was adjudged insane by a Kansas Court on May 17, 1944, after the partition suit was brought. She remained under that disability for about three months until she was “restored” by the same court on August 22, 1944. Mr. Elam had a part in the latter proceeding. She had a stepson Elof Crilly, a merchant in Kansas' City, who testified before the Special Commissioner that she was “just as good, as brainy as a man,” except when under the influence of codeine prescribed by her physician. While cross-examining Crilly Mr. Elam stated twice that he doubted whether any contract Mrs. Crilly had made in 'a year (or years) could be enforced: But he declared he considered her sane. Apparently he thought the medicine produced her mental condition.

Respondent Elam’s connection with the whole, transaction began when Mrs. Crilly’s stepson Elof employed him in April, 1944. She had listed the residence property with a real estate agent in Weston named Foley to be sold for $1250, and Foley had obtained a contract purchaser named Conard at that price. Likewise, Mrs. Crilly and her sister had executed and delivered to Foley a warranty deed of the property with the name of the grantor omitted. The consideration named in the deed was “other valuable considerations & No/100 Dollars.” [712] Two days later Elof Crilly and respondent Elam went to Weston on April 13, 1944, and induced Foley to rescind his brokerage contract and to surrender the deed, on the theory that the'interest of the insane and non-signing tenant in common, Beauregard Brown, could not be .conveyed by the deed. At a conference at the home of Mrs. Crilly in Leavenworth that same day, ■ it was returned to her, but she entrusted it to Elam;' who kept it thereafter. He suggested the best way to pass the whole title would be by bringing a partition suit, in which his fee could be taxed as costs. Elof Crilly testified that Elam said he thought the' property ought' to be worth $2500, inasmuch as the mother of the parties had paid that for it in 1917; and that he (Elof) and Elam agreed on a price of $1800.

Respondent Elam filed the partition suit on May 5, 1944.' Prior thereto he talked to John J. Coull, a member of the Kansas City bar 78 years old, about serving as attorney for Elof Crilly, who was to be guardian ad litem for the insane defendant Beauregard Brown in-that suit. On. September 4 Crilly was so appointed by the court and Coull filed an answer for him which had been prepared by Elam, stating the petition ought to be granted. Two days later the cause was heard, and an interlocutory decree entered ordering a partition sale. *928 Coull testified that Elam talked to him about the value of the property, and proposed that they buy it, which latter Elam denied.

■ For the previous six months or so James E. Bovard had worked in Elam’s office in Kansas City typing and serving legal papers'. He was 76 years old and stone deaf. - But he was soon to come into an inheritance of $6000, and Elam was handling certain legal matters for him..

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211 S.W.2d 710, 357 Mo. 922, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-proceedings-against-elam-mo-1948.