In the Matter of Sharon J. Pate

119 S.W.2d 11, 232 Mo. App. 478, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 100
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 11 (In the Matter of Sharon J. Pate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals 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 Sharon J. Pate, 119 S.W.2d 11, 232 Mo. App. 478, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 100 (Mo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

ALLEN, P. J.

This is an original proceeding in disbarment against Sharon J. Pate, a licensed attorney of this State. Honorable M. E. Montgomery of Sikeston was appointed commissioner to hear testimony in said proceeding and directed to file his findings of fact and conclusions of law in this court. In compliance with his appointment and commission the said M. E. Montgomery has reported to this court his findings of fact and conclusions of law, as follows:

“The information sets up that the accused was tax attorney from 1932, until 1935, by appointment of the County Court of Pemiscot County, Missouri, for Drainage Districts Number Six and Eight of *480 said County, and then charges the accused with a number of specifications of infidelity to the interests of his said districts, in the handling of numerous drainage tax suits brought by accused in behalf of said districts.

“Omitting formal averments, which were not disputed, the petition may be boiled down to a charge that the accused, as such tax attorney entered into wrongful agreements with delinquent drainage taxpayers to so manipulate the handling of tax suits against them, as to enable them to bid in their lands at the tax sales for the approximate amount of the court costs, including accused’s attorney fee, thereby enabling them to defraud said drainage districts (and their bondholders) out of their drainage taxes; and that pursuant to such understandings, the accused procured tax sales to be held in the absence of rival bidders, and withdrew such sales when rival bidding was in evidence, or was in prospect.

“The answer admitted accused’s employment as tax attorney, but denied any wrongful agreements or conduct, and sets up numerous surrounding facts and circumstances, as explanatory of accused’s actions in the handling of these tax suits.

“Informants relied on circumstantial evidence to prove the wrongful agreements alleged, there being little direct evidence outside of admissions by accused, to support such specification. To refute this charge, accused produced a number of the delinquent taxpayers with whom the information charged that he conspired, and they all denied having any such arrangements with accused.

“Accused filed more than five hundred tax suits, but he did not take judgments, nor direct executions, except in those suits where the defendants therein, requested that such action be taken. His explanation of why he extended to defendants this unusual consideration, was that the Hon. J. E. Duncan, Judge of the Circuit Court, had ruled and publicly stated from the bench, that economic conditions being bad, he would not enter tax judgments, nor permit sales, unless the landowners so requested. And (Ex) Judge Duncan called as a witness by accused, corroborated accused’s statement as to his attitude on this matter. Accused’s brief refers to this as an ‘Arbitrary ruling,’ and his counsel agreed that it was wholly beyond the power of the court, but that the court just ‘Took the bit in his teeth.’ (T. 188.) However, accused made no claim that he protested in any manner against such ruling, and the inference, from this and other evidence to be hereinafter noted, would seem to be, that it met with his hearty sanction.

“There was no dispute that over a period of about fifteen months, eleven sales (days) were held, involving more than three hundred (300) tracts of land, a substantial portion of which was some of the best lands in the county, without netting the districts anything what *481 ever, accused’s brief (page 7) stating that ‘The land was sold for approximately the amount of the costs in the various cases.’’

“Neither was it disputed that some sales were withdrawn while bidding was in progress, or was about to begin, and then the property sold later the same day, but the evidence was conflicting as to whether accused or the sheriff (who had died shortly before the hearing), was responsible for such actions.

“And accused admitted that after R. L. (Bob) Ward had run one piece of land up on the owner to about $1100.00, it was resold about twenty minutes later (T. 85 and 86), the owner having advised the sheriff that he would not pay his bid, and on this second sale, it was knocked off on a bid of only $98.00 (Mr. Ward had left and gone to his office in the meantime).

“Accused testified that he was present at both of said sales, but that he said nothing either pro or con as to conducting them. By way of explanation of his non-participation, he testified that he was without any authority to interfere because the executions were directed to the Sheriff and not to accused, and furthermore that he was employed merely to reduce these tax claims to judgment, and had no responsibility to look after the interests of the districts at the tax sales anyway (T. 408). In other words, accused’s testimony at the hearing, was a disclaimer of any authority or responsibility, and that he attended the tax sales on his own personal account to see that the sales brought the amount of his attorney fee and court costs, many sales of prior years having failed to do that, to the loss of those who had fees in such cases.

“Before proceeding to a more detailed consideration of the evidence, we pause to dispose of two preliminary matters:

“FIRST: Accused’s Plea in Abatement.

“SECOND: Accused’s objection to the admissibility of certain evidence.

“Accused contends that at the time this suit was filed, another suit, involving the same cause of action, was then pending in the Supreme Court, hence that this cause should abate.

“The facts upon which accused relies are about as follows (T. 519) :

“The State Bar Committee originally filed a disbarment suit against accused in the Pemiscot County Circuit Court. Thereafter at the behest of said Bar Committee, the court entered an order dismissing said suit, over accused’s objection. Accused appealed said order of dismissal to the Supreme Court pursuant to See. 9 of Rule 36 of the Supreme Court rules. However, that court transferred said appeal to this Court on the ground that the Supreme Court had no jurisdiction.

“Accused says that the Supreme Court was in error in concluding that it had no jurisdiction, and since it failed to decide the appeal *482 on the merits, that this original cause is still pending in the Supreme Court (Accused’s brief, pp. 24 to 28). Accused further contends that the opinion written by this Court {In Re Pate, 107 S. W. (2d) 157), following the above transfer, is a nullity because this court had no jurisdiction of the cause to decide anything, but even if not a nullity for want of jurisdiction, it conflicts with the order of the Supreme Court transferring the cause to this Court, which order, accused says was tantamount to a holding that an appeal would lie from the order of dismissal (to some appellate court), hence that this court’s holding that no appeal would lie (from the order of dismissal), was therefore subject to be quashed for such conflict. Certiorari was applied for and denied, and said opinion of this court became final.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.2d 11, 232 Mo. App. 478, 1938 Mo. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-sharon-j-pate-moctapp-1938.