LOUISIANA STATE BAR ASSOC. v. Powell

195 So. 2d 280, 250 La. 313, 1967 La. LEXIS 2822
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 20, 1967
Docket47508
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 195 So. 2d 280 (LOUISIANA STATE BAR ASSOC. v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LOUISIANA STATE BAR ASSOC. v. Powell, 195 So. 2d 280, 250 La. 313, 1967 La. LEXIS 2822 (La. 1967).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

The Louisiana State Bar Association has filed a petition in this court seeking the disbarment of attorney Harold E. Powell. It is alleged that Powell was guilty of violation of the laws of the State of Louisiana of sufficient gravity to warrant his disbarment, and that he was guilty of willful violation of the rules of professional ethics and also guilty of unethical practices. The petition sets forth the specific acts of professional misconduct forming the basis of these allegations.

The Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances . of the bar association in March, 1963, notified the respondent Powell that it proposed to conduct a formal hearing to determine whether he was guilty of willful violation of the rules of professional ethics so as to evidence a lack of moral fitness on his part to practice law, and this notice recited in detail specifications of charges and complaints that had been brought against him.

This notice was received by respondent in Natchez, Mississippi. In April he wrote the committee acknowledging receipt of its letter, but stating that he did not intend to make any appearance before the committee and that he had not engaged in the practice of law in Louisiana since December, 1961, and did not intend to do so in the future. He also stated that he had not paid 1962 and 1963 dues to the Louisiana State Bar Association and accordingly was not entitled to practice law under the rules of the association, and that for this reason he believed any action taken by the committee would be moot.

When this court was informed that Powell, who was living at Natchez, Mississippi, was a non-resident of Louisiana, the court upon the petition of the Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances of the bar association appointed R. Emmett Kerrigan, attorney at law, to represent the absent accused in the proceedings to be held contradictorily against him. Mr. K rrigan promptly wrote Powell of his appointment to represent him in these proceedings. Mr. Kerrigan again wrote Powell, requesting among other thing’s details of any defenses which Powell might have. ■Mr. Kerrigan wrote the respondent a third time, giving the date set for the hearing, requesting any information that might be of assistance in defense of the charges *317 against him, and asking for the names of any witnesses who might testify in his behalf. All of these letters were sent by registered mail, and the record contains receipts signed by Powell showing that he received the letters He replied to none of them, however.

In due course a hearing was held on the charges or specifications, and following this hearing the committee concluded unanimously that Powell had been guilty of violations of the canons of professional ethics of sufficient gravity to warrant his disbarment. Accordingly the bar association filed in this court the petition for Powell’s disbarment.

After issue was joined by the filing of answer by the attorney representing Powell, this court appointed Mr. Maurice J. Wilson, a member of the Baton Rouge Bar Association, who had been engaged in active practice for more than 10 years, as commissioner of the court to take evidence and report to the court his findings of fact and conclusions of law. The commissioner in due course held a hearing. He has filed in this court an excellent report, full and complete, in which he gives his findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommends that the name of Harold E. Powell be stricken from the roll of attorneys and that his license to practice law in Louisiana be cancelled.

The attorney representing the absent respondent excepted to the commissioner’s report insofar as it made findings of fact and conclusions of law adverse to the respondent. Moreover, the attorney asserts that the commissioner erred in not dismissing or staying these proceedings, that the commissioner failed to give weight to certain specified evidence brought out at the hearing, and finally that the commissioner failed to follow a pronouncement of this court that “disbarment should never be.decreed, if any discipline less severe would accomplish the desired result”.

We think that the record fully supports the commissioner’s findings of fact, and that he gave full consideration and proper weight to all the evidence adduced. We summarize the facts from the record as follows:

(A) In November and December of 1961 the respondent was acting as attorney and notary in connection with closing two. loans for a lending institution in Baton Rouge which he had represented in similar matters before. Each transaction involved a sale of real estate, and the property in each case was covered by a mortgage which was to be paid from funds advanced by the lending agency. In each instance a check made payable to the joint order of the buyer and the respondent for an amount more than adequate to pay the mortgage was given to the respondent at. the time the loan was completed, and in each case the check was endorsed by the *319 “borrower and retained by the respondent. As is customary in such cases, it was the duty of the attorney handling the transaction to record the acts of sale and mortgage, pay and cancel the prior mortgage, and give to the lending agency the note signed by the borrower. In both cases Powell failed to pay the existing mortgage with the funds furnished by the lending agency, and the record does not disclose what happened to the money. After it became known, however, that these mortgages had not been paid and cancelled, respondent’s family, friends, and associates raised enough money to pay the existing mortgage on one piece of property, and on the other the amount necessary to clear the title was paid by a title insurance company. From these facts the commissioner concluded that "respondent used the funds made available to him to pay off the two prior existing mortgages for other purposes and by so doing violated a trust placed in him as an attorney by a client”.

(B) On November 9, 1962, Powell was charged in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge in a bill of information with the theft of $550.00, the property of Mrs. Alice Edwards. On March 16, 1963, he pleaded guilty to this charge and was sentenced to 10 years in the penitentiary. The sentence, however, was suspended and respondent placed on supervised probation upon full restitution’s being made. Mrs. Edwards, who had been a client of the respondent, testified at the hearing that Powell as her attorney had settled her claim in a damage suit for $750.00. Of this amount he gave her $100.00 and told her he would pay her medical bill of $550.00. The bill was not paid until after the charge of theft was filed, and it is not clearly shown when, by whom, or from what funds the medical bill was paid.

(C) Powell was indebted to a friend, George R. Sharp, for a large sum. He reimbursed Sharp in the following manner: Powell, a man named Harris, and Harry Meng were the owners of a corporation known as Old Hickory Investments, Inc., which owned a 40-acre tract of land. Powell represented to his associate Meng, who trusted him completely, that Sharp wanted to buy the property and would pay $50,000.00 by the assumption of a $32,000.00 indebtedness against the property and by giving his personal note for the balance of $18,000.00, payable in one year.

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 2d 280, 250 La. 313, 1967 La. LEXIS 2822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-state-bar-assoc-v-powell-la-1967.