Klensin v. Board of Governance of Pennsylvania Bar

168 A. 474, 312 Pa. 564, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 751
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 2, 1933
DocketAppeal, 275
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 168 A. 474 (Klensin v. Board of Governance of Pennsylvania Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klensin v. Board of Governance of Pennsylvania Bar, 168 A. 474, 312 Pa. 564, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 751 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Pee Cueiam,

September 25, 1933:

Respondent appeals from the recommendation of the Board of Governance that he be disbarred.

The record is a large one, covering 771 printed pages. We have carefully read it all. We have given most thorough consideration also to the ample brief filed in his behalf and to the earnest plea of his able advocate who argued his case at otir Bar. After weighing everything which has been urged in appellant’s behalf, our judgment is that the recommendation of the hearing masters and the Board of Governance must be given effect. “The Board of Governance had its origin with the Bar of the State and was appointed by us upon its representation that such a body would greatly aid in maintaining proper standards of conduct and practice among its members and enable the profession to discipline itself. Their findings come to us carrying weighty presumptions of justice and propriety”: Rosenbaum’s Case, 300 Pa. 465, 466.

The complaints against respondent were filed by Ben L. Stone, a member of the Lackawanna County Bar, by Anna Kliklus, a client, and by Stanley .Rushen, a witness in cases conducted by respondent. They charged him with (a) Unethical solicitation of negligence cases through the assistance of Abraham Klensin, his father, (b) Obtaining illegal and unethical contracts for compensation from his clients, (c) Subornation of perjury and obtaining false affidavits from witnesses in support of his clients’ cases.

The hearing masters who listened to the evidence for seven days made lengthy findings, which in our opinion *567 there is ample testimony to support. Summarized they are in part as follows: Respondent is twenty-five years old. He was admitted to our Bar September 26, 1928. He is practicing on his own account in Carbondale. On May 25, 1930, Michael Kliklus, Andrew Zagata and Stanley Chizuk, occupants of an automobile, were killed while driving over a grade railroad crossing a few miles from Carbondale. Each decedent left a widow and several children. The widows were uneducated and without means. Within a few days after the accident respondent’s father, who had a desk in the son’s office, visited the widow Anna Kliklus at her home in Carbon-dale and solicited her case for the respondent. Shortly thereafter she came to his office and gave him her case on a contingent basis, signing a written contract for compensation, which provided that respondent and any other attorney whom he might select should receive one-half of the amount recovered whether by settlement or verdict and that the attorneys should pay the cost of the suit. The writing provided that for better securing the agreement the widow set over and transferred to respondent her entire claim and any verdict or judgment entered thereon. Sometime after the accident Abraham Klensin visited Mary Zagata, another of the widows, at her home and solicited her case for the respondent. By reason of such solicitation she came to the latter’s office and executed a similar contract for compensation, except that respondent was to advance instead of pay the costs. Abraham Klensin also solicited the third widow, Leona Chizuk, at her home. As a result of such solicitation, she retained respondent, entering into a similar compensation agreement in which it was stipulated that if she received no more than $1,200 in damages respondent was to get nothing.

Respondent did not bring the three actions in this State, but in the City of New York, retaining as his associate a member of the Bar of that city, who under the arrangement between them was to receive one-third of *568 the fees. When the cases were about ready for trial, respondent took the three widows to New York City and the cases were settled for $10,000 each. Respondent received $15,000, paying thereout $5,000 to his colleague and all costs and expenses. Each widow was given $5,000.

Stanley Rushen, who is one of the complainants, was near the scene of the accident, but was not an eyewitness. Within three or four days thereafter he was visited by Abraham Klensin, who subsequently took him to the respondent on June 16, 1930. Respondent prepared an affidavit which was signed and sworn to by Rushen in which it was set forth that he was traveling in an automobile with another toward the scene of the accident at the time it occurred, that he (Rushen) alighted from the automobile and a car passed and came to a stop a short distance from the railroad crossing, that he saw some one alight from the car, walk over to the crossing, and then come back and reenter the automobile, which proceeded toward the railroad and was struck on the first track by the engine running at a high rate of speed, which had given no warning of its approach by whistle or bell; that the crossing signals were not operating at the time of the accident.

The hearing masters found that this affidavit was false and that the parts of it as to the automobile stopping, an occupant thereof alighting, walking to the crossing, returning and entering the car and no warning of the engine’s approach being given, its speed, and that the crossing signals were not operating were fabricated by the respondent for the purpose of making out a case against the railroad company with knowledge that it was false as far as Rushen was concerned. Rushen gave a number of statements both to representatives of the railroad company and to respondent. They were all false in part.

The heaxfing masters recite in their findings that after suits were brought the attorney for the railroad company fixed a time for the taking of depositions of Rushen and *569 other witnesses in Scranton. Respondent hearing of this had his father go the night before to Rushen’s home and arrange for respondent’s meeting him prior to the hearing. They met and Rushen told respondent that he was afraid to go upon the stand and swear falsely that he saw the automobile stop, etc. Respondent told him he would have to so testify as he had already signed and sworn to the statement. At the hearing Rushen did so testify. The hearing masters found that this was perjured testimony, suborned by respondent.

The hearing masters further reported that- after the cases were settled Rushen claimed he was entitled to $42 wages which he had lost because of the cases. This sum he demanded of respondent, who refused to pay him. He then complained to Walter Hill, Esq., President of the Lackawanna County Bar Association and later to the Board of Governance. The day after the complaint was sworn to Abraham Klensin took Rushen to respondent’s office and he was there paid the $42 in cash. He swore to another affidavit prepared by respondent to the effect that everything he had sworn to in the prior affidavit and at the hearing was true and that the only reason he complained to Mr. Hill was to get the $42. He signed a receipt for the money, also prepared by respondent, in which he stated that the last mentioned affidavit was not made as an inducement to receiving the $42, that it was immaterial to him at the time he made the affidavit whether he would receive the money or not. He also agreed with respondent to withdraw his complaint to the Board of Governance and later wrote a letter to the chairman of the hearing masters asking that the complaint be discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 474, 312 Pa. 564, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klensin-v-board-of-governance-of-pennsylvania-bar-pa-1933.