Kenton County Bar Ass'n v. Murphy

114 S.W.2d 722, 272 Ky. 617, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 11, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 722 (Kenton County Bar Ass'n v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenton County Bar Ass'n v. Murphy, 114 S.W.2d 722, 272 Ky. 617, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 144 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chief Justice Stites

Confirming report of Bar Commissioners.

This proceeding is before us on a report of the Board of Bar Commissioners finding the respondent, John T. Murphy, guilty of unprofessional conduct and recommending that he be disbarred from the further practice of law in this state. A number of charges were made, some of which were dismissed because the incidents out of which they arose occurred more than five years prior to the institution of this proceeding. Several of the charges were dismissed on their merits. The final report of the trial committee, in which the full board concurred, found respondent guilty on three separate counts. Since we have concluded that the findings upon the so-called Weber count alone require the confirmation of the award, it will not be necessary here to consider the others. A detailed statement of the facts giving rise to this charge is essential to an understanding of the case. ■ Some of the facts constituting the background of the present investigation are set out in respondent’s brief and we have drawn onhis' statement'of them, as well as. on the.report of the .trial committee, in an effort to paint the complete picture.

Madeline Yan Dezande, a woman in her twenties and a native of Belgium, married a man by the name of Beals - some.’years ago..; Beals was killed in Detroit, leaving her a widow. Thereafter she became .housekeeper in the home of Thomas W. Corby, a wealthy widower past 75 years of age, who lived in Detroit. Some” time .after Mrs. Beals took over’her'duties as housekeeper for Mr. Corby she married him, and shortly thereafter a child,-Marie Therése ’ Corby, was born. A year or two after the marriage Mr. Corby brought suit-and obtained a-'divorce from MrS; Corby. She was paid-the- sum of $50,000 pursuant to an antenuptial con *619 tract. She left Detroit and moved to Dayton, Ohio, where she married one Russell Morgan and where she was living at the time of the death of Mr. Corby in 1924.

Mr. Corby had no children by his first marriage, and his only heirs at law other than the infant Marie Therese, whose parentage was disputed, were the children of his brothers and sistérs. These nieces and nephews secured the appointment of an administrator, and it was at this time that Mrs. Morgan employed the respondent, John T. Murphy, to press the claim of Marie Therese as heir to the entire estate. After considerable litigation a new administrator was appointed on motion of the Michigan guardian of Marie Therese, and in 1926 a compromise was effected through the payment of $150,000 to the nieces and nephews, and quitclaim deeds to the land owned by Mr. Corby were secured from them. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan at this time-had taken up their residence in Kentucky. Mrs. Morgan was serving as guardian of her daughter in Detroit, and she and Mr. Morgan were joint guardians in Kentucky. The respondent. and his associate were allowed the sum. of $75,000 for their services and $25,000 for their expenses in connection with the estate up to this time. After the payment .of state ánd federal taxes of about $150,000, the payment to the nephews and nieces of $150,000, to Detroit lawyers about $100,000, to Mr. and Mrs. Morgan for their services as guardians, $100,-000, and the payment of the expenses and fees of respondent and his associate, there still remained in the hands of the guardian an estate .of something over $1,000,000. This terminated respondent’s first employment.

In 1927 Mrs. Morgan again employed respondent, this time to procure' a divorce for her from Mr. Morgan. Following this divorce, Morgan’s guardianship was terminated, and thereafter Mrs. Morgan served as the sole guardian, ■ both in Michigan and in Kentucky. Respondent served as her attorney. Some time thereafter' Mrs. Morgan married one Weber,' and it is from this fact that the charge here before us has been designated the Weber count, although during the time when most of the incidents here involved occurred she was still Mrs. Morgan.

During the year or two while Mr. and Mrs. Morgan *620 were acting as joint guardians, they had succeeded in getting their accounts into great confusion. Mrs. Morgan had procured from the Kenton county court an annual allowance of $36,000, for the maintenance of her ward, and Morgan himself had obtained from that court an allowance of $6,000 a year as a sort of manager of the estate. They were therefore enjoying an annual income of $42,000, out of their ward’s property. They had moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where they evidently lived in some style. Respondent says that when he was re-employed in 1927, he found that they had kept no books of account and could produce only bankbooks and records which showed only the amounts deposited in bank and the amounts withdrawn therefrom. The estate consisted almost exclusively of valuable land in and about Detroit. The principal tract had been sold to a Detroit company-for $1,073,000 under a contract which provided for payment out of the proceeds of sale of numerous lots into which the tract was divided. As said in the report of the trial commissioners:

“Detroit was the place where the money came in, and Kentucky was the place where the money went out.”

By an order of the Kenton county court, entered upon affidavit and motion of respondent, the People’s Bank & Trust Company of Covington was designated as the depository of guardianship funds in Kentucky, and those funds were made subject to the joint control of the guardian and the surety company on her bond.

Meanwhile, and even before the divorce, Morgan had been deposed as manager of the estate, the allowance of $500 a month had been cut off, and the office of the estate had been moved to respondent’s office in Covington. Respondent was paid $200 a month for this service, and while the checks which covered his compensation in this capacity are marked for “legal fees” or “attorney’s fees” or simply “fees,” the trial commissioners found, and we think correctly, that respondent is right when he says that these payments were not intended to include compensation for all of his professional services during that time. He undoubtedly did a large amount of work between his second employment in 1927 and its termination in 1931.

The foregoing statement of facts furnishes simply *621 the background for the occurrences hereafter to be narrated.

Early in September, 1928, Mrs. Morgan went to Europe, where she remained for three months. Shortly after her departure, on September 14, 1928, respondent opened an account in the Lincoln National Bank at Cincinnati, in the name of “Madeline Corby Morgan, Special Guardian for Mar-ie Therese Corby,” and deposited therein a check of the Scripps-Jefferson Land Company of Detroit, in the sum of $20,915.66. (The exact amount of the check is material). The check was made payable to Mrs. Morgan as special guardian for Marie Therese. Neither the respondent nor the guardian had ever had a deposit in this bank before. Respondent himself says that the account was opened:

“So that I could use the money to take care of not only myself but other expenses while she was away and if it was there it would not be necessary to have the signature of the bonding company in Kentucky. * * * By depositing them over there it would not be necessary to have any bonding company O.

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Related

In Re Gilbert
118 S.W.2d 535 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 722, 272 Ky. 617, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenton-county-bar-assn-v-murphy-kyctapphigh-1938.