Johnson v. State

112 S.W. 143, 87 Ark. 45, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 29, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 143 (Johnson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. State, 112 S.W. 143, 87 Ark. 45, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 6 (Ark. 1908).

Opinion

McCulloch) J.

Petitioner is an attorney at law, and procured from this court a writ of certiorari to bring up for review 'the record of a judgment of the chancery court of Yell County against him for contempt. The judgment, which explains the whole proceedings, is as follows (omitting caption) :

“Now on this day, the defendant Jo Johnson being plaintiff’s solicitor in a cause pending in this court wherein W. T. Dunbar is plaintiff arid Joseph Evins and others are defendants and cross complainants, the said Johnson appearing for and representing the plaintiff W. T. Dunbar, and the said Johnson having filed and argued before the court a number of other vexatious motions in said cause, which had been overruled by the court, thereupon the said Johnson offered to file the following motion in said, cause, to-wit:
“ 'Comes the plaintiff by his attorney and suggests to the court that the attorney’s fee of Judge R. C. Bullock, one of the attorneys for the said cross-complainant, as well as the fees of all the attorneys for said cross-complainant, largely and substantially, if not wholly, depend upon the rendition of a judgment and decree in this case in favor of said cross-complainant; that said R. C. Bullock is related to the judge of this court within the fourth degree of consanguinity. Wherefore plaintiff prays that the said Bullock be interrogated as to his interest in the subject-matter of this suit and in the determination of same, so that the said judge may decline to sit at the hearing of this case,if found proper so to decline.
“ ‘Jo Johnson, attorney for plaintiff.’
“Thereupon the court assessed s fine of fifty dollars against the said Jo Johnson for the contempt of court.
“It is _therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the State of Arkansas do have and recover of and from the said Jo Johnson the sum of fifty dollars, as for fine and penalty for contempt, and all her costs in this behalf laid out and expended, and that the State of Arkansas have execution therefor; and said Johnson excepts.”

This court in Ex parte Davies, 73 Ark. 358, settled the practice to be followed in reviewing judgments rendered by circuit and chancery courts for contempts committed in the presence of the court.

Judge Riddick, speaking for the court in that case, said: “As contempts committed in the presence of the court may be .summarily tried and prosecuted without process or pleading -of any kind, it is highly proper that the judgment should contain a finding of the facts constituting the- contempt. Chief' Justice Ruffin of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, in a case of this kind before that court, said that ‘it befits every court which has a proper tenderness of the rights of the citizens and a due respect to its own character to state in its judgment explicitly the facts constituting the contempt, not suppressing those on which the person might be entitled to be discharged, more than it would insert others which do not exist, for the sake of justifying the commitment.’ Ex parte Summers, 5 Iredell’s Law, 149. He shows clearly and convincingly the reasons why such a finding of facts should be made in the judgment, but he held that the absence of such a finding did not render the judgment void.” Judge Riddick also added this, with respect to a judgment for contempt: “When a judgment of that kind is entered ¿gainst an offender, the statements in the record must be taken in a proceeding of this kind as absolutely true, and we cannot interfere unless it clearly appears that the judgment is wrong.”

We therefore indulge the conclusive presumption that the learned chancellor recited in 'his judgment all of the facts constituting the alleged contempt of court, and, as t’he face of the judgment does not disclose any finding that the petitioner’s manner in presenting his motion was discourteous or disrespectful to the court, or that he was guilty of any contemptuous conduct, unless the presentation of the motion be found, in itself, to constitute contempt, we presume that there was no objectionable conduct other than the mere filing of the motion.

There is a recital, however, that petitioner had previously filed in the case and argued before the court other vexatious motions. When these motions were filed, the judgment does not recite, nor does it declare that petitioner had been guilty of contempt in filing any of them. The mere filing and presentation of a motion or repeated motions which are thought to be for the purpose of vexation or delay do not constitute contempt of court. The court may, in the exercise of its inherent powers, strike them from the files because they are not presented to sub-serve the ends of justice and are merely-for vexation or delay, but, unless they are presented in a contemptuous or disrespectful manner, or unless they contain matter which of itself constitutes contempt, the court cannot treat them as contemptuous merely because they are thought to be for vexation or delay.

Take, for instance, motions' for continuance or change of venue. The court may well treat repeated motions of this kind as dilatory in their purpose, and refuse to hear them; but if they are presented in a respectful manner, it shows no contempt of court, and cannot be so treated unless they involve some violation of the court’s orders, so as to amount to an obstruction of the administration of justice.

We have then the question presented whether or not it is contemptuous per se for an attorney at law to file in court a motion for his client suggesting the disqualification of the judge to sit in trial of a cause wherein he is related within the fourth degree to some person who has some direct pecuniary interest in the result of the suit; but is not a party to the record.

It goes without controversy that when an attorney files a paper reflecting upon the integrity, fairness and impartiality of the judge he thereby makes himself guilty of contempt of court. An affidavit or motion filed for the purpose of disqualifying the judge or obtaining a new trial on account of alleged prejudice or bias, or for the purpose of changing the venue on that ground, would undoubtedly be a contempt of court where the statute does not make it grounds for the motion. Harrison v. State, 35 Ark. 458; In re Jones, 103 Cal. 397.

But we cannot see how the filing of a motion suggesting the disqualification of a judge on alleged grounds which do not reflect on his integrity or impartiality can be held to be contempt, even if the suggested grounds of disqualification do not amount to such in law. The attorney would, at least, have the right to raise and present in a respectful manner to be passed upon the question of the judge’s disqualification, without laying himself open to a charge of contempt, provided the grounds alleged did not reflect upon the integrity or impartiality of the judge so as to bring the court into contempt. It is in no wise calculated to bring a judge into contempt before the public or to lower the dignity of his position by suggesting his disqualification in a case because of relationship to a person directly interested in the subject-matter of the litigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 143, 87 Ark. 45, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-state-ark-1908.