Kentucky State Bar Association v. Lewis

282 S.W.2d 321
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJuly 14, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 282 S.W.2d 321 (Kentucky State Bar Association v. Lewis) 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
Kentucky State Bar Association v. Lewis, 282 S.W.2d 321 (Ky. 1955).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

These are disciplinary actions brought by the Kentucky State Board of Bar Commissioners against the Respondents, Jesse K. Lewis and Burnis Martin. The cases were tried separately by the Trial Committee of the Bar Board, but they were briefed together and argued together, and we will dispose of them in one opinion. The Bar Board recommended a six months suspension in each case.

These cases grew out of some litigation in Floyd County. The respondent, Martin, was an active member of the Good Government Taxpayers’ League, Inc. In the autumn of 1952 the Taxpayers’ League employed the respondent, Lewis, to file suits against various county officials for the misapplication and misappropriation of public funds.

The Complaint against Lewis is based on an affidavit which he prepared and caused to be filed in support of a motion to require Special Judge Lawrence Grauman to vacate the bench. The Complaint against Martin is based upon a newspaper advertisement which he caused to be published in the Floyd County Times, at Prestonsburg.

Five suits were filed by Lewis in October of 1952, and the Regular Circuit Judge disqualified himself. The Hon. Lawrence Speckman, former Circuit Judge of the Chancery Branch in Jefferson County, was appointed to try those cases. Some time in the early part of 1953, Mr. Lewis filed five additional cases of the same character, and in May of 1953 he filed nine more suits of the same character. All these actions were either in the name of the Taxpayers’ League, or brought by active members of it.

It is not clear by whom or when, but sometime in the early part of 1953 a suit apparently of the same or similar character, was brought against the Respondent Martin.

Some of the plaintiffs in these suits were candidates for public office, subject to the August primary of 1953. They were running against some of the defendants who were incumbent officials.

Judge Speckman was in the process of trying, by depositions, the first five cases, when the second group of cases was filed. Two of the defendants in the second group of cases expressed a desire to Judge Combs, then a member of the Regular Court of Appeals, and a resident of Prestonsburg, county seat of Floyd County, for a speedy trial, so that the charges against them could be disposed of prior to the August Primary. Some of them also contacted Mr. Henry Harned, then Administrative Director of the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Judge Combs and Mr. Harned relayed this information to Judge Porter Sims, then Chief Justice. Judge Sims contacted Judge Speckman who did not feel that he had time to hear the cases orally because at that time he was sitting as special judge in the Hardin Circuit Court and could not give so much time from his private practice. He agreed to go to Prestonsburg and hold a conference to determine if he could spare the time for an oral hearing, and if he could not, he agreed to resign in the new cases so that another Judge could be designated.

Judge Speckman held the conference suggested by Judge Sims on April 4, 1953, at Prestonsburg. Following that conference the attorneys for defendants wrote Judge Sims, requesting that a Judge who could grant an oral hearing be appointed. Lewis, upon receipt of a copy of that letter wrote Judge Sims strongly opposing a change in Judges and oral hearings. Judge Speck-man returned to Louisville, resigned his commission on the ground that he could not grant an oral hearing. Judge Sims then *323 appointed Judge Lawrence Grauman, a regular Judge of the Jefferson Circuit Court.

Judge Grauman proceeded to Prestons-burg on April 20th to try the preliminary questions raised by defendants in the second five cases. No objection was made to Judge Grauman’s appointment or to his hearing of the cases orally. During that week Judge Grauman disposed of the five cases, ruling adversely to Lewis in four of them, and favorably in one. The four adverse rulings were directly opposite to the way Judge Speckman had ruled on the same or similar questions in the first five cases. He dictated his opinion to the reporter in open court, during which he commended Lewis’ ability as an attorney. On April 23rd of that week Martin’s advertisement appeared in the paper.

When Lewis filed the last nine cases, Judge Grauman was again designated Special Judge to try them. No objection was made to his appointment at the time. He had difficulty however in finding a date for the trial of these cases which suited all the lawyers, and himself. He finally fixed June 29th as the day to commence the trials. This date did not suit Lewis who had made arrangements to be in Portland, Oregon, to attend a church conference. Lewis expected to be gone about a month. Lewis and all other attorneys were duly notified.

When Judge Grauman opened Court on the 29th of June, Lewis was not present, and no one appeared in his stead on behalf of his clients. The Circuit Clerk handed Judge Grauman an affidavit on which 'the complaint in this .action is based, saying that it had been filed with him by some one.

The affidavit is much too long to be reproduced in full. It charges essentially that Chief Justice Sims, Judge Grauman and unnamed political bosses of Frankfort and Louisville and the defendants- in those cases were parties to a corrupt political arrangement by which Judge Grauman was directed how to decide the litigation in Floyd County.

We quote two sentences which are fair samples of the charges contained in the affidavit.

“That thereupon the defendants and their attorneys left the courthouse and went to their offices and prepared and forwarded to the Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky a letter requesting him in effect to give them the political relief which they so badly needed; that thereafter and by reason of Judge Speckman’s oral ruling as above set out the defendant and appel-lee, Troy B. Sturgill, A. B. Meade, and other named defendants by reason of their political links and secret contacts in Frankfort, with said political machine and bosses, brought sufficient pressure upon the Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals to have him to force Judge Speckman to resign in the above cases and to appoint Hon. Lawrence Grauman, Circuit Judge of Louisville, Kentucky in his place, the said Grau-man being a part and connected with the aforesaid political organization and machine of Jefferson County which had selected, nominated and helped elect him Circuit Judge in Jefferson County and to which political organization he was obligated for his election; that by reason of said political connections and the various links and connections, ■economic, political and otherwise, the said Special Judge, Lawrence Grau-man, was advised and informed by the political bosses at Frankfort how to decide these cases even before he came to Prestonsburg.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kentucky Bar Association v. Richard Boling
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2023
Kentucky Bar Ass'n v. Blum
404 S.W.3d 841 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2013)
Ryals v. Pigott
580 So. 2d 1140 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1990)
Kentucky Bar Ass'n v. Heleringer
602 S.W.2d 165 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 1980)
Pierce v. Tharp
455 S.W.2d 145 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1970)
In Re Meeker
414 P.2d 862 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1966)
In re Gordon
402 S.W.2d 854 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 S.W.2d 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-state-bar-association-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1955.