Matter of McCabe

544 P.2d 825, 168 Mont. 334, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 500
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1975
Docket13092
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 544 P.2d 825 (Matter of McCabe) 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 McCabe, 544 P.2d 825, 168 Mont. 334, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 500 (Mo. 1975).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an original proceeding, ancillary to petitioners’ petitions for admission to the Bar by examination. Petitioners here, among others, petitioned for a rehearing of this Court’s decision in In re Senate Bill No. 630, 164 Mont. 366, 523 P.2d 484, 31 St.Rep. 479, which was decided upon the Court’s own motion. Rehearing was denied August 26, 1974.

Subsequently, on July 9, 1975, petitioners filed a petition requesting permission to file a brief and be heard in oral argument in connection with their petitions for admission by examination and the Court’s ruling with respect to Senate Bill No. 630. The petition was granted by court order of July 21, 1975.

On Wednesday, September 10, 1975, petitioners appeared by counsel, Thomas A. Dooling, Dillon, Montana. The State Bar of Montana appeared in opposition through its counsel Alan F. Cain, of the firm of Hughes, Bennett & Cain and Stuart L. Kellner of Helena, Montana. Briefs were filed and oral arguments had before the Court and the matter submitted.

*336 The sole issue presented to the Court at this time is whether or not the Court’s construction of Article VII, section 2(3), 1972 Montana Constitution, as set forth in In re Senate Bill No. 630, was so manifestly wrong as to require that it now be overturned.

Article YU, Section 2, 1972 Montana Constitution provides:

“Section 2. Supreme court jurisdiction. (1) The supreme court has appellate jurisdiction and may issue, hear, and determine writs appropriate thereto. It has original jurisdiction to issue, hear, and determine writs of habeas corpus and such other writs as may be provided by law.

“(2) It has general supervisory control over all other courts.

“(3) It may make rules governing appellate, procedure, practice and procedure for all other courts, admission to the bar and conduct of its members. Buies of procedure shall be subject to disapproval by the legislature in either of the tivo sessions folloiuing promulgation.

“(4) Supreme court process shall extend to all parts of the state.” (Emphasis ádded)

Petitioners dwell at length on the history of admission of attorneys, inherent power and legislative grants of power but do not argue that the 1972 Montana Constitution speaks directly to the question at hand and is completely dispositive of the issue.

Petitioners have already taken and failed the Montana Bar Examination — on two occasions in the case of petitioner Mc-Cabe. As noted by petitioners in their brief, unless this Court’s decision in In re Senate Bill No. 630 is overturned by this Court, petitioners have no standing to apply to take the Montana Bar Examination in 1975.

With petitioners’ applications to take the 1974 Montana Bar examination before it, this Court examined Bule XXY B2 of the rules of this Court which disqualifies persons who did not graduate from a law school accredited by the American Bar *337 Association from applying to take the Montana Bar examination in all cases after December 31, 1973.

The matter of In re Senate Bill No. 630 was occasioned by the passage by the 1974 Montana legislature of an amendment to section 93-2002(2), B.C.M.1947, which purported to extend the privilege of taking the Montana Bar examination to non-graduates of accredited law schools to December 31, 1975.

Such action by the legislature was in direct conflict with Article VII, Section 2(3), 1972 Montana Constitution, thus requiring this Court to construe and interpret the foregoing-Constitutional provision in order to rule on applications for the 1974 Bar Examination. In doing this, the Court specifically held that the attempt by the legislature in Senate Bill No. 630' to control the qualifications of those who practice before this Court violated the provisions of Article VII, Section 2(3) of the 1972 Montana Constitution and the provisions of that Constitution relating to separation of powers.

By brief and in oral argument before the Court, in the instant proceedings, petitioners have failed to demonstrate any sufficient reason for this Court to overturn its construction of Article VII, Section 2(3), 1972 Montana Constitution, and further failed to demonstrate why this Court should depart from the time honored rule that questions once presented and decided should be considered settled.

The rule is clearly stated in Peery v. Dist. Ct., 145 Mont. 287, 310, 400 P.2d 648, 660:

“ 'The general rule is that when the highest court of a state has construed a constitutional provision, the rule of stare decisis —that a question once deliberately examined and decided should be considered as settled — applies, unless it is demonstrably made to appear that the construction manifestly is. wrong. Decisions construing the Constitution should be followed, in the absence of cogent reasons to the contrary, as it is of the utmost importance that our organic law be of certain meaning and fixed in interpretation.’ ”

*338 This Court measured Senate Bill No. 630 against Art. VII, 'Section 2(3) and Article III, Section 1 of the 1972 Montana Constitution. In the course of such examination the Court •construed the language of Article VII, Section 2(3) as vesting in the Court the exclusive control over the admission of •attorneys and to make rules governing admission to the bar .and struck down Senate Bill No. 630 as violating the Constitutional mandate calling for separation of powers.

In their brief petitioners devote considerable time and effort to a semantic argument wherein petitioners attempt to show “that a reading of Article VII, Section 2(3), 1972 Montana Constitution, leads irresistibly to the conclusion that the legislature was granted the authority to disapprove rules for admission of attorneys which might be promulgated by this Court.

Petitioners then launch a secondary discussion based on the .application of the doctrine of ejusdem generis, citing Aleksich v. Industrial Acc. Fund, 116 Mont. 127, 139, 151 P.2d 1016, 1021, where that doctrine is defined as:

“* * * where an enumeration of specific things is followed by some more general word or phrase, such general phrase is to be held to refer to things of the same kind as those enumerated.” (Emphasis supplied).

We do not have that situation here. We have a specific ■enumeration in one sentence and a specific and unambiguous grant of veto power in the next full sentence. In Burk v. Montana Power Co., 79 Mont. 52, 64, 255 P. 337, 338, this Court held:

“The rule ejusdem generis

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 P.2d 825, 168 Mont. 334, 1975 Mont. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-mccabe-mont-1975.