People ex rel. Ludens v. Harris

273 Ill. 413
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 273 Ill. 413 (People ex rel. Ludens v. Harris) 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. Ludens v. Harris, 273 Ill. 413 (Ill. 1916).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Jacob J. Ludens, State’s attorney of Whiteside county, and Robert Nelson and H. L. Dollahan, residents of Lee comity, filed to the April term, 1914, of this court an information of eight counts, charging the respondent, Arthur G. Harris, of Lee county, with unprofessional and dishonorable conduct and praying that his license as an attorney at law be revoked and that his name be stricken from the roll of attorneys. Two additional counts were later filed and the information as amended was answered, and the issues thus formed were referred to Daniel H. Gregg as a commissioner to take and report the evidence and his conclusions thereon. Evidence was taken on all the counts, and the commissioner reported that the respondent was licensed to practice law by this court October 15, 1901, and set out the facts found by him under every count. His findings on the evidence are, in substance, that the information was not filed in good faith and for the purpose of maintaining the ethics of the legal profession but rather for the purpose of settling private quarrels and political differences; that while the respondent has been exceedingly careless and conducted his business with respect to collections intrusted to him in a loose and slip-shod manner, yet the evidence wholly fails to show any conduct of the respondent indicating moral turpitude, and he recommended that the information be dismissed. The relators filed exceptions' to the findings of fact by the commissioner.

The main evidential facts set out by the commissioner under every count of the information are' substantially the same in every particular as those averred in the information. In fact, there is no dispute as to the real facts in this record. The real controversy is as to what conclusion should be drawn from the evidential facts.

The first two counts of the information are based on the conduct of respondent with reference to two claims or accounts sent him for collection by Fairbanks, Morse & Co. The evidence shows that respondent collected the first claim of $71.19 by a check payable to his client for that sum, on which he indorsed the name of his client and received the full sum in cash on February 1, 1912. On May 19, 1911, he collected on the second claim of said client, which was against Robert Nelson, one of the relators, the sum of $205 as part payment. Almost three years after respondent had collected the latter amount on the Nelson judgment his client sent the claim to another attorney and then learned for the first time that respondent had collected the $205. Herbert J. Robins, the head of the credit department of Fairbanks, Morse & Co., on March 4, 1914, visited respondent at his office in Dixon and asked him how he was getting along with the Nelson claim. The respondent replied, “Well, nothing doing yet, but I hope to get something soon.” Thereupon Robins showed him the canceled check for $205, and then he admitted collecting that amount and also the amount of the first (or Rutt) claim. On being asked to make a settlement of both claims respondent asked Robins to return in an hour, and within that time he went to his bank and borrowed the money and returned and settled both claims in full for the sum of $250, the remainder being retained as his fees for the collections. Respondent had concealed from his client the fact that tie had made the collections, by making false statements in letters to them and by failing to make report on said collections when requested. After frequent requests had been made for reports and ignored by respondent, on February 5, 1912, nearly a year after he had collected the Nelson claim, he wrote his client: “I expect to be able to collect some on the Nelson judgment-soon, as have some matters tied up with him. The only danger is his going into bankruptcy iti order to wipe out everything. In fact, he wants someone to put him through the bankrupt court.” On May 24, 1913, he again wrote them: “In reference to Mr. Nelson, will say that he is doing a little business in his own name but it is hard to tell if he is paying any of his accounts or not, but I think that it is possible that we can catch him on some of his contracts. He has a great many accounts out against him. I have returned a number, but as soon as anything favorable develops will inform you.” In like manner he had, after collecting the money on the Rutt claim, been requested frequently by his client to report progress of that collection and failed to make any response thereto until in October, 1913, twenty months after the collection, he wrote his client: “In reference to the Rutt matter of Sterling, I expect to have this adjusted very soon.”

The third count charges, and the proof shows, that respondent neglected and failed to release the Nelson judgment until after demand was made on him to do so. It also charges that such neglect and failure did great injury to Nelson’s credit, but the proof shows that his credit was injured, not by the respondent’s failure to release the judgment but by his failure to pay over the money collected to Fairbanks, Morse & Co., as appears from the testimony of W. J. Hintz, salesman for said company. It is rather unusual, we think, for attorneys to enter credits or partial satisfactions on judgments for their clients before demand on them when only partial payments thereon are made to them. The $205 was only a partial payment of the Nelson judgment. The proof under this count does not show such conduct of the respondent as justifies any penalty or censure of this court, and the exceptions to the commissioner’s findings thereon are overruled.

The evidence under the fourth count is that- respondent received from William H. Winn, an attorney of Dixon, with-offices on the same floor and in the same building with respondent, another claim against Robert Nelson in favor of the Western Roofing and Supply Company. He collected on said claim $71.23 in May, 1911, and failed to pay the same over until March 5, 1914. At least on two different occasions between said last two dates Winn asked respondent if he had collected or had done anything in regard to that collection, and respondent’s answers were that he had not collected anything on the claim. But immediately after his settlement of the said two claims of Fairbanks, Morse & Co. he called Winn into his office and admitted that he had collected the claim of the Western Roofing and Supply Company and asked Winn to accept it. Winn refused the money because "he had returned the claim, and then on said date it was remitted to the company through another attorney, a mutual friend of both Winn and respondent.

The proof under the fifth count is, in substance, that the Springfield Collection Agency sent a claim to respondent for $13.20 in favor of the Bijou Film and Amusement Company against A. T. Manges; that he reduced the same to judgment, which was paid to him December 9, 1910, and neglected and refused to remit the money until J anuary 9, 1912, and deceived his client by misrepresentations leading them to believe he had not collected the claim. Frequent, demands were made on him for reports, and on two dates. they demanded a remittance of the money in case he had collected it. He ignored the following demand of his client written him April 22, 1911: “Can you not favor us with a remittance in the claim of Bijou Film and Amusement Company vs.

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

Related

In Re Teitelbaum
150 N.E.2d 873 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1958)
Phipps v. Wilson
186 F.2d 748 (Seventh Circuit, 1951)
In Re Roth
75 N.E.2d 273 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1947)
DeKrasner v. Boykin
186 S.E. 701 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1936)
In Re Burns
40 P.2d 105 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 Ill. 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-ludens-v-harris-ill-1916.