People Ex Rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Johnson

176 N.E. 278, 344 Ill. 132
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1931
DocketNo. 19941. Rule made absolute.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 N.E. 278 (People Ex Rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Johnson, 176 N.E. 278, 344 Ill. 132 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

An information was filed, upon leave given, on the relation of the Chicago Bar Association against Will N. Johnson, charging him with unprofessional conduct and praying that a rule issue requiring him to show cause why his name should not be stricken from the roll of attorneys. The rule was issued, the respondent answered and the cause was referred to a commissioner, who took the evidence and reported his conclusions of fact and law.

The charge against the respondent was based upon his acts in connection with the conduct and management of a divorce suit in the superior court of Cook county as solicitor for the complainant, Joseph Henderson. The information alleged that about July, 1926, Henderson consulted the respondent about securing a divorce from his wife, Anna, and the respondent agreed to procure a divorce for him, and further agreed that Henderson should do certain carpenter work for him in full payment of the fees, court costs and expenses of procuring the divorce; that thereupon Henderson fully performed the carpenter work for the respondent in accordance with their agreement, and it became the duty of the respondent to bring the divorce proceeding for Henderson, defray the costs necessary to be expended, and procure a decree of divorce if the facts warranted the court in giving the relief. It was further alleged that Henderson had just ground for the divorce from his wife, and if the cause had been properly presented would have been entitled to the entry of a decree; that the respondent thereafter filed in the superior court of Cook county a bill for divorce on behalf of Henderson against his wife but failed to further properly perform his services in the matter, and by various frauds committed upon the court after the filing of the bill so prejudiced the rights of Henderson that no decree has been entered, although the respondent had received, by way of services from Henderson, full payment for all costs, fees and expenses in said matter. It was alleged in the information that the respondent prepared and presented to the court a pretended affidavit of Henderson that he was unable to pay the costs and had not paid the costs or any attorney’s fees in the matter, and also presented to the court his own affidavit to the effect that he, the respondent, had received no money or other consideration on account of services or court costs in the matter, and "fraudulently induced the court to permit the bill to be filed and the cause prosecuted as if Henderson was a poor person and unable to pay the costs; that Henderson was not a poor person and was not unable to pay the costs, and these facts were well known to the respondent; that he fraudulently and falsely signed the name of Henderson to the pretended affidavit and falsely affixed thereto a jurat stating that Henderson had signed and sworn to the affidavit, to which jurat the respondent attached his signature as a notary public. The information further alleged that at the time of the filing of the bill the respondent also filed therewith and presented to the court an affidavit signed by him with the name of William N. Johnson, in which the respondent falsely stated to the court that he had received no money or other consideration on account of services in said cause or attorney’s fees or court costs, and fraudulently failed to state in the affidavit or reveal to the court the fact that Henderson had previously rendered the respondent services as carpenter in full payment of all costs and attorney’s fees in the matter; that he attached to the pretended affidavit made by him a jurat stating that he had duly subscribed and sworn to the affidavit; that further to deceive the court he signed the jurat with the name “Will N. Johnson,” under which name he held a commission as notary public, which name was written in a different handwriting in order to deceive the court into believing that he had executed the affidavit before another person as notary public, and by reason of these misrepresentations made by him the court was induced to permit the filing and prosecution of the divorce suit without payment of costs. At the time of the filing of the .bill of complaint the information alleges that there was in force in the superior court a rule of court with reference to suits in forma pauperis which provided that in view of the large number of applications for leave to sue as a poor person and for the protection of the clerk’s office against imposition, it is ordered that “hereafter all such applications must be accompanied by an affidavit stating that the plaintiff or complainant has a meritorious cause of action; also stating the applicant’s occupation, means of subsistence, income during the year preceding the application, if any, and sources and amount of expected income, if any; that he or she is unable to pay the costs, and that he or she will not settle or compromise the claim or release the defendant until all accrued costs are paid. The attorney or solicitor for such person shall also make affidavit in writing that he has investigated the facts and that he believes the party has a meritorious cause of action, and further, that he will not accept any compensation from the plaintiff or complainant nor from any person until all costs are paid.” It was further alleged that although the defendant, Anna Henderson, was a resident of Chicago and was known by the respondent to be a resident of Chicago, he upon the delivery of the summons to the sheriff instructed the sheriff to return it “not found;” that thereupon the respondent prepared a paper to be signed by the defendant which falsely stated that she had filed an answer to the bill of complaint and that she waived service of process and consented to an immediate hearing in said cause; that the respondent secured her signature to that paper under representations unknown to the relator, but that such acts were prejudicial to her rights and contrary to the duty of the respondent as an attorney and solicitor under the canons of ethics of the legal profession; that the respondent procured or forged, or caused to be forged to said paper, the signature of B. B. White over the words, “Solicitor for defendant, Anna Henderson,” and about May i, 1929, the respondent caused the proceeding to be set for hearing before the Hon. Walter P. Steffen, one of the judges of the superior court, and upon the hearing before Judge Steffen fraudulently and falsely represented to the court that personal service had been procured on the defendant, and in support of such fraudulent and false representation presented to the court the paper upon which he had fraudulently secured the signature of Anna Henderson, and to which he, or someone under his direction, had forged the name of B. B. White as solicitor for Anna Henderson; that believing such representations the court heard the evidence in the cause and directed the same to be written up and a decree to be entered; that the evidence was written up and filed in the cause, and the respondent presented or caused to be presented to the court a decree containing false recitals that the court had jurisdiction of the parties in the matter, but before the decree was actually entered the foregoing facts came to light and the same remains on.file in the cause though not entered as the decree of the court.

The respondent’s answer admitted that he was licensed to practice law on or about October 8, 1919, and the existence of the rule alleged in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.E. 278, 344 Ill. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-chicago-bar-assn-v-johnson-ill-1931.