Ingle v. Kivett

201 S.W.2d 545, 30 Tenn. App. 1, 1947 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 20, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 545 (Ingle v. Kivett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingle v. Kivett, 201 S.W.2d 545, 30 Tenn. App. 1, 1947 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

HOWELL, J.

The defendant filed an answer to the petitions and amendments in which he denied each item in which he was charged with wrongdoing or unprofessional conduct.

The case was heard on oral testimony before Honorable A. F. Officer, Chancellor of the Fourth Chancery Division of the State, who was designated to sit in the case, by the Chief Justice on account of the ill health of the regular Chancellor.

Upon the hearing the Chancellor found that the defendant had been guilty of unprofessional conduct and dishonesty in connection with a number of divorce cases filed by him as attorney in the Circuit Court of Claiborne County and in connection with a forged resignation of Judge A. G. Shumate on the minutes of the County Court of Claiborne County of September 2, 1942.

The Chancellor entered a decree permanently striking the name of the defendant from the list of members of the bar and prohibiting him from practicing law in the State.

After proper procedure the defendant has appealed to *4 this Court and lias filed the following assignments of error:

‘ ‘ 1. The weight of the evidence is against the findings and decree of the Chancellor and in favor of the contention of the defendant.
“2. The Court erred in finding that the defendant should be permanently disbarred and in decreeing permanent disbarment.
“3. The decree of permanent disbarment is excessive or excessively drastic and should be modified.
“4. The Court erred in finding and in so decreeing that the defendant, J. Kyle Kivett, was responsible for the forging of the resignation of Judge A. G. Shumate, which appeared on the monthly minutes of the County Court on September 2, 1942, for the reason there is no direct evidence introduced connecting the defendant with said forgery, and no evidence that he even had access to the records of the County Court at that time.”

Many acts of the defendant which amount to misconduct were charged in the original and the intervening petitions and amendments. The specific act which seems to have prompted the filing of the original petition was that the defendant had represented the husband of petitioner Mrs. Anne Cameron Ingle and had by fraud obtained a divorce for him, Judd Ingle, from her, in the Circuit Court of Claiborne County. She, upon discovering that her husband had secured the divorce, filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Claiborne County seeking to set aside and have his divorce decree declared null and void upon the grounds that she was a resident of an adjoining County and had not been served with any process in the divorce suit and had no notice or knowledge of it until after the decree was entered against her. She *5 charged in her bill that the return of the process issued in the divorce case was fictitious and fraudulent and that there was no such person as the- deputy sheriff who purported to sign the return upon the summons. Upon the hearing of this case in the Chancery Court the complainant testified that she had not been served with any process in the divorce case and there was testimony that there was no such person as the deputy whose name appears on the return. The Circuit Court Clerk testified that no deputy by that name was known to her or on her list of deputies and no one had appeared to claim the fee for service of the process and she could find no one to pay this fee to and the Sheriff testified that he had no such deputy. The defendant in that case was represented by the defendant here who had filed the divorce bill for him and no proof was introduced for the defense. Defendant’s position in that case was that the proof offered by the complainant was not sufficient to overcome the return of the officer as it appeared on the summons. The Chancellor found as a fact that:

“Process was issued and the record shows that the process was handed to Judge Kivett, and was later found in the file, showing a return by this man, H. A. Hobbs. The testimony shows that there is no such deputy in Claiborne County, no one being able, as far as this record shows, to locate him. I find that this is a fictitious return and a decree will be granted directing that the decree to the defendant be set aside for fraud.”

That case was taken to the Court of Appeals by a writ of error by the defendant here, Judge Kivett, and upon the hearing the Court of Appeals, Eastern Section, affirmed the decree of the Chancellor and declared the divorce decree null and void as based upon a return by *6 a fictitious or nonexisting person. In the opinion in that case the Court of Appeals said in part:

“The Chancellor seeing and knowing the grave imputations herein very properly (see Gibson’s Suits in Chancery, Higgins and Crownover, 4th Ed., secs. 1140, 1141, page 957) called the high sheriff who verified the fact that there was no officer in Claiborne County by that name of the one who had made the purported return. No explanation or offer to counter this fact and the imputations herein was offered. This left at the door and on the head of the attorney who had filed the divorce proceeding a very grave and serious charge. This charge should not go unanswered. If members of this bar and the bar of the chancery court are dealing in such a practice they should be summarily and severely dealt with. If as a matter of fact the return of an officer has been forged or is fictitious this is a fraud on the court. If a member of the bar is guilty of such a practice it is the duty of the court and' bar to make a thorough investigation thereof and act accordingly.
“In view of the seriousness of the imputations herein we think a copy of this opinion should be sent to the President of the State Bar Association for a full investigation of the entire matter. It is our hope that no member of this bar is guilty of such a practice. We choose to think that counsel has a reasonable explanation and that this has not been offered because he did not realize the seriousness of the imputations herein. ’ ’

The petition for disbarment charges that the defendant J. Kyle Kivett wrote the return on the summons in the case of Ingle v. Ingle and signed the name of the fictitious deputy sheriff thereto and is guilty of forgery.

The petition also made similar charges against the defendant in seven other divorce cases filed in the Circuit *7 Court of Claiborne County, viz., George L. Weaver v. Elizabeth Schaubb Weaver, J. T. Jordan v. Flora Rhodes Jordan, Jeremiah J. Daly v. Betty Daly, Dora Lee White v. Charlie D. White, Agnes Dugger Lowe v. Thedford Lowe, R. T. Lowe v. Cora Brown Lowe and Ester Lang Stampfer v. Charles Stampfer.

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Related

Barnes v. Kyle
306 S.W.2d 1 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1957)
Kivett v. Mason
206 S.W.2d 789 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 545, 30 Tenn. App. 1, 1947 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingle-v-kivett-tennctapp-1947.