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

54 N.E.2d 533, 386 Ill. 536
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1944
DocketNo. 27797. Dismissed as to Haase; judgment of contempt as to Novotny.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 54 N.E.2d 533 (People Ex Rel. Chicago Bar Ass'n v. Novotny) 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. Novotny, 54 N.E.2d 533, 386 Ill. 536 (Ill. 1944).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

This is an original proceeding brought by the People of the State of Illinois, upon relation of the Chicago Bar Association, against Thomas V. Novotny, Sr., charging him with contempt and holding himself out to be a lawyer admitted or licensed to practice law in the State of Illinois, and practicing law when in fact he is a layman and not authorized so to do. The information also charges that Hermann P. Haase was aiding and abetting respondent Novotny in the unauthorized and illegal practice of law, and is also guilty of contempt. Both respondents were by order of this court required to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt, and thereupon both have filed their respective answers in response to such rule entered upon the filing of the information.

The information charges that Novotny maintains an office located at No. 82 West Washington street, Chicago, Illinois; that these offices are shared with Hermann P. Haase; that Novotny is a layman and not admitted to practice law; that he has placed upon the doors of his office, and upon his letterheads, and upon his pleadings words designating he is an attorney at law; that he has also caused his name to be inserted in certain legal directories advertising he is a lawyer; that he has caused certain advertisements and notices to be printed and distributed advertising he is an attorney at law; that he has appeared in a certain cause now pending in this court, in the abstract, brief and argument of which he is designated as attorney for appellant; and that in the suggestions in opposition to the motion for leave to file an information there is shown upon the outside wrapper a designation he is an attorney at law. The information also alleges that at the January term, 1943, of this court he filed a petition to have his name placed upon the roll of attorneys, claiming he was entitled thereto because of a motion claimed to have been made before this court June 22, 1912, based upon a license obtained in the State of Minnesota, and that he is now holding himself out as a duly admitted and licensed lawyer in violation of the laws of Illinois, and in contempt of this court, and prays that he may be restrained from further practicing and be punished for contempt.

The answer of respondent Novotny denies he is a layman, and alleges he has been for the past thirty-one years a duly licensed and qualified attorney at law in the State of Illinois, and has complied with all of the rules and regulations of this court; admits the specific act of practicing law alleged in the information. He also admits he filed his petition in this court at the January term, 1943, to have his name placed upon the roll of attorneys, and says that he has not been notified of the court denying such right or privilege to have his name placed upon the roll of attorneys, but says he was notified said petition was dismissed as not being sufficient in law, because it did not state facts upon which this court could grant the prayer. He also says he is a graduate of St. Paul’s College of Law; that he was admitted to practice law in the State of Minnesota in 1907;. that he came to Illinois at the request of another attorney in 1912, and associated himself with another law firm, and that June 22, 1912, upon the motion of two lawyers, and upon presenting to this court a certificate of good moral character, this honorable court instructed the clerk to administer the oath of office, and to enroll his name upon the roll of attorneys of record of this court, and that he did take the oath of office, and in due time a certificate of admission was mailed to and received by respondent.

Further by way of answer he claims that in 1929 a complaint was filed against him in the municipal court of Cook county charging him with the practicing of law without a license, and that upon a trial before a jury he was found not guilty; that for thirty-one years, with the knowledge of the State’s Attorney of Cook county, the Attorney General and the Bar Association he has held himself out as a duly licensed and qualified attorney at law, and that he has been authorized to consult with prisoners in the county jail of Cook county as a licensed attorney, and that because for thirty-one years no information has been filed the People have been guilty of laches, and prays that if the court is not inclined to dismiss the information because of the matters set forth in- the answer, then in the alternative to refer the information and answer to a commissioner, where they may be more fully heard.

The information also charges respondent was disbarred in the State of Minnesota, July 25, 1913, as shown in the 122 Minn. Supreme Court Reports, page 490, and that his reinstatement was denied in that State in 1925 in 161 Minn. 503. No answer or denial is filed to this charge in the information.

Respondent is proceeding upon the theory that receiving a certificate from the Clerk of the Supreme Court is sufficient to make him a duly constituted and qualified lawyer authorized to practice in this State. From time immemorial the names of authorized attorneys have appeared upon the roll of attorneys in the place designated for such purpose. (In re Day, 181 Ill. 73.) In In re Fellows, 2 Scam. 369, we held that an attorney who had neglected to have his name enrolled on the roll of attorneys at the date of his license cannot thereafter have it enrolled nunc pro tunc to avoid liability for practicing as an attorney or receiving fees before his name was enrolled.'

Section 5 of the act relating to attorneys and counselors (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 13, par. 5,) provides: “It shall be the duty of the clerk of the supreme court, * * * to make and keep a record, stating at the head thereof that the persons whose names are therein written have been regularly licensed and admitted to practice as attorneys and counselors at law within this state, and that they have duly taken the oath of office as prescribed by law, which shall be certified and indorsed on the said license.” Section 6 of the same act provides “No person, whose name is not on the said roll, * * * shall be suffered or admitted to practice as an attorney or counselor at law in any court of record within this state, * * The practice before the enactment of such statute required, and the statute now in force requires, enrollment as the proof of the right to engage in the practice of law. The admission of an individual to practice is a judicial matter and can be exercised only by the courts, but the manner of establishing proof that one is a. licensed attorney, when the question is properly in controversy, is a legislative matter. The provision requiring enrollment is not only for the purpose of making it the proof of admission to practice, but also to prevent frauds by the existence of fictitious certificates.

The information alleges that respondent Novotny is a layman. In his answer Novotny admits he is not enrolled. He claims he received a certificate from the Clerk of the Supreme Court in June, 1912, but it is obvious that this alone does not meet the requirements of the practice at common law or of the statute. The requirement. is that his name appear upon the roll of attorneys. Permitting the clerk’s certificate to constitute proof of admission, when directly questioned, might lead to fraud, but enrollment would foreclose such a possibility, and is therefore made the test. The other matters set out in the answer of Novotny do not tend to make a defense or disprove the offense charged in the information.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E.2d 533, 386 Ill. 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-chicago-bar-assn-v-novotny-ill-1944.