Matter of Bretz

542 P.2d 1227, 168 Mont. 23, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 458
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1975
Docket12896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 542 P.2d 1227 (Matter of Bretz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Bretz, 542 P.2d 1227, 168 Mont. 23, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 458 (Mo. 1975).

Opinion

*24 ORDER OF DISBARMENT

The attached Report, Findings of Fact, and Recommendations of the Commission on Practice of the Supreme Court is hereby adopted as the Findings and Conclusions of this Court. The report was filed with this Court on May 28, 1975. On that day, a citation was issued and served on L. R. Bretz.

Thereafter, on June 3, 1975, L. R. Bretz filed a Motion for Continuance of the matter with reference to two criminal eases pending, one in Lewis and Clark County, Cause No. 3963 and one in Cascade County, Cause No. 6537B. Supporting affidavit, exhibits and memorandum were filed.

*25 Thereafter, on June 11, 1975, Objections to the Report, Bindings and Recommendations of the Commission were filed. •Generally the objections dispute (a) the rules, (b) counsel, (c) the Commission, (d) procedures, (e) the charges. Also included was a request that the transcript of the proceedings had before the Commission be made a part of the record.

Subsequently, the jury in Lewis and Clark County Cause No. 3963 has rendered a verdict of guilty. Judgment was entered and sentence pronounced on July 14, 1975.

This Court in effect, granted in part the Motion for Continuance referred to above by deferring action until after judgment in Lewis and Clark County Cause No. 3963.

The Court has studied the transcript as requested by L. R. Bretz.

The Court, being fully advised now orders that the objections of respondent L. R. Bretz are denied, the Motion for Continuance to a time beyond the trial in Cascade County Cause No. 6537B is denied.

Now therefore, by authority vested in this Court by law and the Rules of the Commission on Practice of this Court,

It is hereby ordered and adjudged that L. R. Bretz be, and he hereby is, found guilty of the charges in the attached report of the Commission on Practice, and that he be disbarred and that his name be stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors of this Court and that he be precluded from practicing as such attorney and counselor in all the courts of this State.

The Clerk of this Court shall give notice in this manner: (Title of Court and Cause)

This is to inform all concerned that L. R. Bretz has been by this Court found guilty of the charges set forth in the report of the Commission on Practice filed in the office of the Clerk; that he has been disbarred and his name stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors of this Court and *26 he is precluded from practicing as an attorney and counselor in all the courts of this State.

Dated this 14 day of July, 1975.

Thomas J. Kearney

Clerk of the Supreme Court

(SEAL)

Such notice shall be published in the forthcoming issue of the Bar Bulletin of the State Bar of Montana; copy of this: Order shall be forwarded to L. R. Bretz, his counsel, the Chairman and Secretary of the Commission on Practice, the Clerk of the Federal District Court for the District of Montana, and the Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit. Copies of the aforementioned notice from the Clerk shall be mailed by the Clerk of the Supreme Court to the-Clerks of the district courts of the State of Montana.

REPORT, FINDINGS OF FACT, AND RECOMMENDATIONS PRELIMINARY DISCUSSION

Under its rules of January 1, 1965, Creating and Governing the Commission on Practice of the Supreme Court of Montana, this Court imposed upon this Commission the duty to receive and investigate complaints of alleged misconduct on the part of any lawyer in the State of Montana (Rule III), and gave to this Commission the option of either referring the complaint to a Grievance Committee or “* * * as otherwise directed by the Commission on practice * * * ” (Rule-IY (b)). Formal complaints seeking disciplinary action against an attorney shall be prepared (or authorized) by the Commission on Practice and signed by any interested person (Rule Y (a)); and those filed in the Supreme Court shall be conducted in the name of the State of Montana, and shall be-prosecuted by the Attorney General “with the aid and assistance of one or more members of the Bar of Montana” (Rule-IX).

*27 The Legislature of the State of Montana directed the Attorney General to conduct an investigation of the Workmen’s Compensation Division of the State of Montana for any improprieties in the operation of that department.

In the latter part of 1978, a complaint against Luke McKeon was received by the Commission. Fearing prejudice with respect to any criminal prosecution, the Attorney General requested Mr. Patrick F. Hooks, Esq., Secretary of this Commission, to have the Commission refrain from taking immediate action. Shortly thereafter a complaint against L. R. Bretz was received from Eugene Hall, Sr., the substance of which is incorporated in Count Four of the current complaint. In deference to the request from the Attorney General, the Commission delayed action on both complaints. Subsequently Mc-Keon was prosecuted, pled guilty to felony counts, and was disbarred by this Court.

On January 30, 1974, the Attorney General acting in the name of, and by authority of, the State of Montana, filed a joint information in the State District Court in Cascade County, Montana, against Respondent L. R. Bretz and one Gloria Eusek Carden alleging some 28 different felony counts charging larceny, forgery, and theft involving Workmen’s Compensation claimants who were clients of Respondent Bretz. There was extensive newspaper notoriety throughout Montana which has periodically continued to date. The record will disclose that those 28 counts were subsequently dismissed in the Cascade County District Court and later filed and incorporated in an information containing 58 counts. During the months of ■July and August, 1974, this Commission discussed the charges, the potential seriousness thereof, their impact on the public, particularly in view of Watergate, and the extensive newspaper publicity in Montana concerning the charges. The Commission agreed to the advisability of securing special counsel, independent of the office of the Attorney General, to investi.gate the incidents and report back to the Commission on Prac *28 tice so that the Commission could determine whether or not the matters justified immediate official, formal action and consideration by this Commission. To that end the Commission solicited and secured the services of William Bellingham, Esq., with assistance from Earl L. Hanson, Esq., and Neil E. Ugrin, Esq., all practicing lawyers who have no official connection with the office of the Attorney General.

Under date September 12, 1974, the Commission received a formal letter from the Attorney General advising that as required by legislation he was conducting an investigation of the affairs of the Workmen’s Compensation Division of the State of Montana, that he had developed factual information from his investigation of a course of conduct on the part of Respondent L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
542 P.2d 1227, 168 Mont. 23, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-bretz-mont-1975.