Matter of Moore

272 S.E.2d 826, 301 N.C. 634, 1981 N.C. LEXIS 1007
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 6, 1981
Docket12
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 272 S.E.2d 826 (Matter of Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Moore, 272 S.E.2d 826, 301 N.C. 634, 1981 N.C. LEXIS 1007 (N.C. 1981).

Opinion

EXUM, Justice.

Appellant Jerry Banks Moore is an applicant for admission to the North Carolina Bar. He was denied permission to stand for the 1978 Bar Examination by the Board of Law Examiners (herein “Board”) because of its decision that he had failed to demonstrate his good moral character. The principal question presented is whether certain findings of fact made by the Board adequately resolve the factual issues to which they are addressed. We conclude that two of them do not. We therefore reverse the judgment of the superior court which affirmed the Board’s order, and remand for further proceedings.

Applicant Moore filed his application for admission to the bar in January, 1978. His application was complete. It was accompanied by four certificates of moral character signed by .persons acquainted with him. Subsequently the Board twice summoned Moore to appear before it for inquiry into his moral character. The first hearing was held on 5 July and 7 July, 1978. Five days later the Board notified Moore that he would be permitted to take the 1978 Bar Examination but that the results would be withheld pending further investigation. Moore took the examination. A second hearing was held on 18 October 1978. On 27 December 1978 the Board issued an order which in effect denied Moore permission to be admitted to the bar because he failed to satisfy the Board “that he is of such good moral character as to be entitled to the high regard and confidence of the public.” On applicant’s appeal to Wake Superior Court Judge Herring affirmed this order.

Undisputed facts, adduced at the hearings, are essentially as follows: In 1963 Moore secured employment as a pharmaceutical representative and moved to Cary, North Carolina. He became a citizen of good standing in the community and was involved in a number of civic and church activities. In 1966, however, Moore and his wife began experiencing marital difficulties. On 20 July 1966 Moore discovered his wife with another man; and, after his wife brandished a handgun, struck her in the face. This incident led to Moore’s subsequent trial and conviction for assault upon a female, whereupon he paid eleven dollars in court costs and a fifty dollar fine. Several weeks later, in mid-August, 1966, Moore and his wife separated. On 29 August 1966 Moore shot and killed a Mr. Barney Adler, Moore’s estranged wife’s paramour. Moore was tried for *637 first degree murder in Wake Superior Court and, despite his contention of self-defense, was convicted of second degree murder. Moore was incarcerated for over six years during which time he participated in work-release and college study-release programs. He graduated from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte (UNC-C) with honors in religion, and subsequently attended and graduated from South Texas Law School. Moore’s parole was terminated unconditionally in 1975 and his rights of citizenship were restored at that time.

In response to a question asking for a listing of all arrests and convictions other than parking violations Moore failed to list his conviction for assault on a female either on his application or registration forms filed, respectively, on 5 January 1978 and 10 February 1978. He did ultimately disclose this incident by an amendment to his application filed 1 July 1978.

The central factual dispute in the record arises out of a conflict between Moore’s testimony and that given by Mr. Sam Adler, father of Barney Adler, and Ms. Ira Myers, secretary to Dean William S. Mathis at UNC-C. Both Mr. Adler and Ms. Myers testified at the 18 October 1978 hearing. Mr. Adler testified that on or about 13 August 1966 Moore came to the Adler residence and warned Barney that “I don’t want you to see my wife, if you do I’ll kill you.” Ms. Myers testified that Moore, in a conversation with her during the summer of 1970, made a statement to the effect that “My government took me into service, they taught me how to kill, and the more people I killed, the more medals and pay I received, but when I came home and did what my government taught me, they punished me.” She further testified that during either the summer of 1973 or the summer of 1974 Moore made a statement to the effect' that “I don’t like to see anyone hurt the woman I love. I have already killed one man and I have paid for it; it did me no harm and I would not hesitate to kill another man who hurt the woman I love.” Ms. Myers intimated that Moore’s remark was in reference to Dean Mathis who was then involved in a tenure dispute with Moore’s second wife. Applicant Moore repeatedly denied that he threatened to kill Barney Adler or that he made any such statements to Ms. Myers. The issue thus becomes whether Moore did in fact make these belligerent statements or any of those attributed to him.

Another factual issue arose when Moore explained that he had not originally listed the assault on a female conviction because “it *638 was a part of a chain of events which led up to the second degree murder of Mr. Barney Adler .... There’s no desire on my part to hide anything from the bar. I’m quite aware that the bar has the power to check FBI records.” This issue thus became whether Moore inadvertently omitted this incident because he had ceased to recall it as an incident separate and apart from the murder itself or whether the omission was willful and intended to mislead the Board.

The Board, in concluding that Moore had failed to demonstrate his moral character, made the following findings of fact and conclusion:

“1. The applicant was charged with first-degree murder and convicted of second-degree murder in the Superior Court for Wake County, North Carolina, in 1966, and was duly sentenced to confinement in the prison system of the State.
2. The applicant, after serving a portion of the term for which he was sentenced, was duly paroled by lawful authority.
3. On several occasions in his testimony before the Board, the applicant made false statements under oath on matters material to his fitness of character.
4. In response to a question on the registration and a similar question on the application requiring that all of his arrests and convictions other than parking violations be listed, the applicant failed to disclose that in 1966 he had been arrested, tried and convicted in Durham County, North Carolina, for assault and battery on a female. Although the applicant filed his registration and his application with the Board on February 10,1978 and January 5, 1978, respectively, he first disclosed this arrest and conviction to the Board by an amendment to his application filed on July 1, 1978 shortly before a hearing by the Board on July 6, 1978 as to his fitness of character, the Board having given notice to the application of that hearing on June 22, 1978.
Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact, the Board concludes that the applicant has failed to satisfy the Board that he is of such good moral character as to be *639 entitled to the high regard and confidence of the public and therefore to take the 1978 North Carolina Bar Examination.”

Accordingly, the Board ordered that Moore’s application to take the 1978 Bar Examination be denied and that the results of his examination be permanently sealed.

I

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.E.2d 826, 301 N.C. 634, 1981 N.C. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-moore-nc-1981.