McCord v. State Ex Rel. Allen

126 So. 873, 220 Ala. 466, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 23, 1930
Docket7 Div. 743.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 126 So. 873 (McCord v. State Ex Rel. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCord v. State Ex Rel. Allen, 126 So. 873, 220 Ala. 466, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 58 (Ala. 1930).

Opinions

SAYRE, J.

The proceeding in this case was instituted by the filing of an information charging appellant with misconduct in his profession as an attorney at law and seeking his disbarment because of such misconduct.

At the outset of his defense, appellant pleaded in abatement the pendency of a former proceeding against himself for the same misconduct. The proceeding in this case was prosecuted on the relation of George O. Allen and twenty-eight others. The record of the former proceeding was not set out as the rules of good pleading required in order that the court might determine for itself the legal identity of the two proceedings. The demurrer to appellant’s said plea in abatement was sustained, and that ruling furnishes the basis for the first of his more than two hundred assignments of error. This court has held that a proceeding of this nature, though not strictly criminal, is of the nature of a criminal proceeding. Thomas v. State, 58 Ala. 365. But that it is not a proceeding for the punishment of crime is abundantly shown by its inherent nature, by the first subdivision of section 6256 of the Code as follows, which makes mandatory provision for the removal of an attorney: “(1) Upon his being convicted of a felony other than manslaughter, or of a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude; in either of which cases the record of his conviction is conclusive evidence. (2) When any judgment is rendered against him, for money collected by him as attorney, upon which judgment an execution has issued, and been returned no property; in which case the record of the judgment and execution is conclusive evidence” — and the succeeding sections which have been in the Codes of the last seventy-five years without question of its constitutionality, and by the great weight of authority. 6 O. J. p. 602, § 64. It is not a proceeding inter partes. The courts all hold that such a proceeding is neither a civil action nor a criminal prosecution. “Like contempt proceedings, proceedings for disbarment are the exercise on the part of a court of their inherent right and power to preserve the orderly administration of justice.” “The order entered is but an exercise of the disciplinary jurisdiction which it (the court) has over such officers.” 6 C. J. p. 602, § 64, notes 12 and 13. In re Lentz, 65 N. J. Law, 138, 46 A. 761, 763, 50 L. R. A. 415, it was held that, in exercising summary jurisdiction over attorneys, the courts have in view two leading objects, viz.: To compel them to deal fairly and honestly with their clients; and to remove from the profession attorneys whose misconduct has proved them to be unfit for its duties and responsibilities. “In the attainment of these objects the idea of punishment has no appropriate place.” The statute, section 6256 of the Code, defines causes for which an attorney must be removed (that is, disbarred), and other causes for which he may be removed or suspended are stated in section 6257. And section 6258 provides that “the proceedings to remove or suspend an attorney, as provided for in the last two sections, may be taken by the court of its own motion, *471 or upon the motion of any third party.” These sections of the Code make no material change in the nature of the proceeding or in its method of procedure as it existed at the common law. The court is still virtually a party, knows its own record, and may be relied upon to protect an attorney under charges from unnecessary harassment. We find no authority or precedent for the plea in abatement in a cause of this character. Nor is any reason suggested by appellant why the judgment in this cause should be reversed on account of the ruling against the plea more convincing than section 5658 of the Code, which is: “In suits by inform-' ers, the first filed in the office” — meaning, as we assume, the office of the clerk of the court — “has precedence for the same cause of action, and the latter must abate.” The section was brought into the Code of 1907 at the same time with what is now section 5657. We think the purpose of both sections was to regulate suits inter partes, ordinarily so called, the especial purpose of the last-numbered section being to allow a suit by one informer to be pleaded in abatement against another suit on the same cause of action by a different informer. This last-numbered section has reference to qui tarn actions which may be brought by any person who will sue; the necessity for the section arising out of the fact that in such cases the party who first sues is entitled to the penalty. 1 C. J. p. 49, § 45. Appellant cites Town of Tallassee v. State, 206 Ala. 169, 89 So. 514, 20 A. L. R. 1127. That was an action quo warranto to annul the charter of a municipality, and the decision was that a judgment in such proceeding was res adjudicata as against a different relator seeking to dissolve the corporation upon the same ground. That case, and as well SlossSheffield Co. v. Milbra, 173 Ala. 658, 55 So. 890, the latter an action for damages for the death of a servant, is without point in the present cause. Our judgment is that there should be no reversal in this cause on account of the trial court's ruling against appellant’s plea in abatement.

The statement of grounds for disbarment contained several different specifications of improper conduct. A jury returned a special finding of fact on consideration of which the court rendered judgment finding appellant guilty of deceit and willful misconduct in' his profession as an attorney at law and fixed the punishment, as the court termed it, • at permanent removal from the practice of his profession in any court of this state. This judgment must be referred to specification 2 of the charge preferred. The findings of the jury under other specifications, if permitted to stand by the court, operated as an acquittal of the charges therein contained. Our inquiry therefore on this appeal is limited to the charge presented in the second specification.

As to specification 2, which is set out in the report, appellant contends that it does not sufficiently show whether the misconduct charged was done by him in his capacity as attorney at law or as a notary public. This refers of course to the charge that appellant, continuando, after alleging the facts in the forepart of the specification, “did falsely and fraudulently certify as a notary public that the said Amanda Knox acknowledged before him on that day that, being informed of the contents of the conveyance, she executed the same voluntarily and did make said certificate in writing as a part of said deed.” This allegation of misconduct is due to be read in connection with the preceding charge, contained in the same specification, to the effect, to state its substance in brief, that appellant having undertaken to draw a will for Amanda Knox, did falsely and fraudulently procure her to sign a deed purporting to convey the property, which she wished to devise to her daughter, to one James Wolf, an illiterate _ negro janitor in the building in which appellant kept his office, who afterwards, on appellant’s procurement, conveyed the same to appellant’s wife. It is thus made sufficiently to appear that the certificate of acknowledgment was part and parcel of a scheme to get title to Amanda Knox’s property.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sheffield v. State
248 So. 3d 38 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2017)
Board of Com'rs of Alabama State Bar v. Tarver
302 So. 2d 856 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1974)
Ex Parte Alabama State Bar
230 So. 2d 519 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1970)
Smith v. Board of Com'rs of Alabama State Bar
225 So. 2d 829 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1969)
In Re Griffith
219 So. 2d 357 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1969)
In Re Sullivan
219 So. 2d 346 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1969)
Ex Parte Acton
214 So. 2d 685 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1968)
Acton v. Board of Commissioners
214 So. 2d 685 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1968)
In Re McKay
191 So. 2d 1 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1966)
Ex Parte Grace
13 So. 2d 178 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1943)
In Re Stephenson
10 So. 2d 1 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1942)
Mitchell v. Kinney
5 So. 2d 788 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1942)
State Board of Law Examiners v. Brown
77 P.2d 626 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1938)
In Re Fite
152 So. 246 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Ex Parte Thompson
152 So. 229 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Herron v. State Bar
298 P. 474 (California Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 So. 873, 220 Ala. 466, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccord-v-state-ex-rel-allen-ala-1930.