Lady v. State Bar

170 P.2d 460, 28 Cal. 2d 497, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 231
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1946
DocketL. A. 19601
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 170 P.2d 460 (Lady v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lady v. State Bar, 170 P.2d 460, 28 Cal. 2d 497, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 231 (Cal. 1946).

Opinions

THE COURT.

The State Bar, by a notice to show cause, charged petitioner with professional misconduct violative of sections 6103 and 6106 of the State Bar Act. The Board of Governors adopted with modifications the findings of the local administrative committee and recommended that petitioner be suspended from the practice of law for a period of three months. On this application for review he contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings and that no professional misconduct has been shown.

[498]*498In 1941 petitioner, as substituted plaintiff, was prosecuting an action for accrued alimony which had been assigned to him by his client, Mrs. Dorothy Sunderland, shortly before her death in October, 1940. On June 27, 1941, petitioner was served with a subpoena duces tecum issued at the instance of the defendant in that action, directing the petitioner to appear before a notary public for the taking of .his deposition and to bring with him all instruments comprising the assignment to him of the claim upon which his cause of action was based. During the taking of the deposition on July 12, 1941, petitioner refused to answer certain questions. When asked if he had with him the assignment referred to in the subpoena, he exhibited and permitted opposing counsel to examine an original undated assignment executed by Mrs. Sunderland. He gave the notary a copy of this paper but refused to deliver the original, saying: “I don’t intend to let the original assignment go into evidence today, and I intend to take it along to court at the time of trial.”

The deposition was thereupon continued, and on July 16th an order was issued by the superior court directing the petitioner to show cause why he should not be required to answer the disputed questions. At a hearing on July 25th, the court fixed August 9th as the date for the resumption of the deposition and directed petitioner to answer at that time the questions asked before the notary. One of the questions concerned the execution of the undated assignment by Mrs. Sunderland. At the hearing on July 25th the court did not require a surrender of the assignment but permitted the petitioner to retain it upon his stipulation that he would permit defendant’s counsel to have it examined by a handwriting expert.

When petitioner appeared for the resumption of his deposition on August 9th he failed to produce the undated assignment, but instead produced an assignment of almost identical wording dated September 23, 1940, and stated that it was the assignment upon which he relied as the basis of his cause of action. He said that upon his return to his office on July 12th, he had opened his files in the case and discovered that he had produced the wrong assignment; that he had commented on the fact to his associates; and that he had immediately destroyed the undated assignment to avoid any repetition of his error. In explanation of his failure to state these facts to the court at the hearing of July 25th, he claimed that he considered that the subject of that inquiry and of his [499]*499stipulation was the assignment on which “he relied,” which was the assignment dated September 23d, and he therefore acted upon the assumption that it was unnecessary to mention his error to the court or to tell of his destruction of the undated assignment.

On August 12, 1941, the superior court issued an order requiring petitioner to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt for failing to surrender the undated assignment for inspection by a handwriting expert as he had agreed at the hearing of July 25th and for failing to disclose to the court at that hearing that he had theretofore destroyed that instrument. In November, 1941, after the hearing, the order to show cause was discharged.

The main action thereafter proceeded to trial. Under a special defense urged by the defendant, the issue was litigated concerning petitioner’s purpose and motive in procuring an assignment from his client. Findings favorable to petitioner were made on that and other issues, and in March, 1943, a judgment was entered directing that petitioner, as trustee, recover from defendant some $28,000 and costs and that the money should be paid to the administrator of Mrs. Sunder-land’s estate. Defendant appealed from the judgment. Proceedings were had for satisfaction of judgment and for a receivership. Finally, in November, 1944, the case was compromised by the payment to petitioner of $5,000, and the appeal was dismissed. During that same month the present proceeding was instituted. The record in that case was received in evidence in the present proceeding.

At the time it was suggested to Mrs. Sunderland that she should assign her cause of action to petitioner, she was suffering from a fatal malady, and with petitioner’s help she had found refuge in a county institution. Petitioner claims that he was reluctant to accept an assignment from her until after the complaint against her former husband had been filed because he pla3ined to initiate arrest and bail proceedings and wanted to avoid any personal liability which might arise if such proceedings were improper or the husband’s identity mistaken.

With respect to the dated assignment, the evidence shows without contradiction that it was executed by Mrs. Sunder-land on September 23, 1940, a few hours after the filing of the complaint. With respect to the time of execution of the undated assignment, the evidence is uncertain.

[500]*500. Petitioner asserts that subsequent to September 23d he forgot that he had taken an assignment, and that on October 6th, about ten days before Mrs. Sunderland’s death, he secured án undated assignment from her. It is argued by the respondent that, after taking such care to procure the dated assignment within a few hours of the filing of the complaint, it'is incredible that petitioner could have forgotten the incident and proceeded to take the undated assignment; that the circumstances indicate that petitioner took the undated assignment in August as a safeguard in case of his client’s early demise; and that after the commencement of the action in hie client’s name, he directed the preparation of the dated instrument and had Mrs. Sunderland execute it, with intent to use it in procuring the substitution of himself for her as party plaintiff.

For some undisclosed reason a dictograph had been placed in the hospital room of Mrs. Sunderland, and the record contains a transcription by representatives of the district attorney’s office of a purported conversation overheard on August 25, 1940, while petitioner and his secretary were visiting Mrs. Sunderland. The transcription bears a notation ' that the radio was “turned on very loud so only snatches of the conversation could be heard,” and the reported items of conversation indicate that Mrs. Sunderland signed a compensation insurance claim and other papers at that time. The forms of signature mentioned in the conversation are said to indicate that one of the unidentified papers must have been the undated assignment. But petitioner denies that any assignment was executed on that day, and his secretary testified that she saw none signed although she did not remain in the room during the entire time of petitioner’s visit.

The local administrative committee found that the undated assignment was executed by Mrs. Sunderland on August 25th. The board struck that date from the findings but adopted the j committee’s further finding that the undated assignment was the first assignment executed by Mrs. Sunderland.

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Bluebook (online)
170 P.2d 460, 28 Cal. 2d 497, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lady-v-state-bar-cal-1946.