People ex rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Lally

144 N.E. 329, 313 Ill. 21
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1924
DocketNo. 15060
StatusPublished

This text of 144 N.E. 329 (People ex rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Lally) 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. Lally, 144 N.E. 329, 313 Ill. 21 (Ill. 1924).

Opinions

Per Curiam:

This is an information on relation of the Chicago Bar Association against John Hugh Lally, asking that he be disbarred from the practice of the law. The matter was referred to a commissioner, who heard the testimony and reported the same without making any specific recommendation. No objections were filed to the commissioner’s original report. A supplemental report was filed by the commissioner, and the relator, the Chicago Bar Association, moves that this supplemental report be disregarded and stricken from the files. A separate statement submitted by the commissioner recommends that the motion of the relator for disbarment be not allowed.

The information to disbar is based upon charges arising out of the application of Rosie Jendrusek for compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation act for an injury sustained while in the employ of the Francis Hughes Company, a corporation doing business in the city of Chicago. The facts found by the commissioner may be briefly stated as follows:

Both the employer and the employee were subject to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation act. Following an injury to Rosie Jendrusek, about October 16, 1919, the Francis Hughes Company paid her $13 per week for three weeks. The company subsequently paid her the sum of $8 per week for about twenty weeks but refused to pay any further or other compensation. John Wieszchowski, who had for many years acted as an interpreter for foreign litigants in the Cook county courts, called upon Mrs. Jendrusek, learned of her accident, and advised her to employ respondent, Lally, to make claim before the Industrial Commission. She did not understand the English language, and upon an interview with Lally, Wieszchowski acted as interpreter. Mrs. Jendrusek appears by the evidence in the record to have entered into a written contract whereby Lally was to take the case and was to receive one-third of whatever amount was recovered. He thereupon employed physicians to examine her and filed her claim against the Hughes Company. Upon a hearing before one of the members of the Industrial Commission there was a finding of total disability and an allowance of temporary compensation and of a pension for life. The hearing was hotly contested and an appeal taken to the full commission. Upon a subsequent hearing of several days before the full commission the finding of total disability was affirmed and compensation allowed in the sum of $3500, payable in equal weekly installments of $8 per week. Tally advanced the fees for medical witnesses and for other witnesses on behalf of the claimant. He also had the record written up at his own expense. The Hughes Company filed an appeal to the circuit court of Cook county, and the record for such appeal was written up, as we understand the record, at Tally’s expense. During the pendency of the proceedings, according to the finding of the commissioner, Tally advanced from his own funds sums amounting in the total to $115 in relief of Mrs. Jendrusek. In connection with the appeal from the award of the Industrial Commission Tally testified that he appeared in the circuit court on from fifteen to twenty-five different occasions, and that on most such occasions he was accompanied, as he deemed it necessary in order to understand his client, by Wieszchowski, who was to act as interpreter upon the trial. Wieszchowski so acted in the proceedings before the commission. On or about July 14, 1921, the attorney for the Hughes Company offered to pay the sum of $2000 as a lump sum settlement of the entire claim. Tally then had the interpreter bring Mrs. Jendrusek to the office of the Industrial Commission, where he met and explained the entire situation to M. J. Donohue, who was then acting as an information arbitrator' in the employ of the Industrial Commission, with the duty of advising claimants as to the proper action to be taken either by themselves or by their attorneys. After consulting with Donohue, Daily returned to his office and prepared a petition addressed to the Industrial Commission, in which he set out that the petitioner had received from the employer the sums of $180 and $822, and that she was desirous of making a lump sum settlement in order to purchase a small home for herself and children at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where she had relatives. Lally then returned to the office of the Industrial Commission and fully explained to Mrs. Jendrusek, through the interpreter, that she would receive $2000, and no more, if a lump sum settlement were authorized by the Industrial Commission. The commissioner finds that she was “without doubt” fully advised that in order to bring about the settlement it would be necessary for her to sign the petition stating that she had received the sum of $822, which she had not received and which she would not receive. Donohue, to whom the petition was presented, is found by the commissioner to have explained fully to Mrs. Jendrusek that she would receive only $2000 in full settlement of her claim. The papers having been signed after these explanations, were then taken to one of the industrial commissioners by the interpreter, and such commissioner approved the settlement upon receiving from the claimant a statement that she understood she was to receive only $2000 in lump sum settlement, in accordance with the petition. The industrial commissioner fixed the attorney’s fees' at the sum of $400. Payment of the $2000 was thereupon made by the Hughes Company in two checks, — one in the sum of $822 and one in the sum of $1178. Lally thereupon, through the interpreter, told Mrs. Jendrusek" that although she had made a contract to give him as attorney’s fees one-third of the amount received, the Industrial Commission had fixed the sum at $400, and asked whether she desired to have his fee limited to $400. The commissioner found that she replied she was ready to carry out her contract to give one-third of the amount received, and that she so testified in the proceedings before him. Thereupon Mrs. Jendrusek, accompanied by Lally and the interpreter, went to the First National Bank, where the checks were indorsed. An accounting was thereupon had. Lally showed that he had advanced to her the sum of $115, paid taxicab bills to the amount of $10, and the further sum of $145 for X-ray and medical services, making a total of $270. This amount, together with one-third of the lump sum settlement fixed by him at $666, left a total of $1064. Mrs. Jendrusek received $1054 in cash, which she took away with her. The discrepancy of $10 is not explained in the findings of the commissioner. She admits receiving the $1054. Lally testified that from the $666 received by him as attorney’s fees, he paid for the interpreter, attendance upon Mrs. Jendrusek, records and appearance fees, the sum of $298, leaving him a net fee of $368 after deducting the specific items of cost. The detailed items making up the $298 appear in the commissioner’s report.

■ The charges upon which this information is based are three: (1) That Lally prepared and filed a petition stating that the employer had paid $822 compensation on account of the injury, knowing that this statement was untrue; (2) that Lally falsely stated in the petition that the petitioner was desirous of purchasing a home for herself at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, knowing such statement to be untrue; (3) that after obtaining possession of the lump sum allotment of $2000, Lally disregarded the order of the Industrial Commission allowing him the sum of $400 as attorney’s fees and retained approximately $1100 out of the total lump sum allotment of $2000.

The brief on behalf of the relator concedes that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.E. 329, 313 Ill. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-chicago-bar-assn-v-lally-ill-1924.