Petition of Nelson

259 A.2d 839, 106 R.I. 355, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 635
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 19, 1969
Docket849-M.P
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 259 A.2d 839 (Petition of Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of Nelson, 259 A.2d 839, 106 R.I. 355, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 635 (R.I. 1969).

Opinion

*356 Per Curiam.

This is a petition brought by the above-named individuals to review rulings of the Board of Bar Examiners relative to the aforesaid individuals’ applications for permission to take the bar examination to be given on September 25 and 26, 1969, and seeking to have said rulings, which were adverse to the petitioners, reversed.

The record establishes that on September 2, 1969, both Nelson and Thoms filed separate applications as required by Rule 1 of the Rules of the Supreme Court. It provides in pertinent part:

“1. Admission on Examination: Every person applying for admission to the bar upon examination shall file a written application, under oath, in the clerk’s office and shall satisfy the board of bar examiners that: * * * *357 “(c) If admitted, he intends to practice law in this state * *

Rule 3 of said Supreme Court Rules provides that at least ten days prior to examination, the Board shall cause the names of all applicants to be published in a legal notice or news story in a daily newspaper of general circulation in this state. Although not established by the record before us, there is a legal presumption that the Board complied with the requirement of Rule 3 and caused the names of applicants Nelson and Thoms to be published in the manner prescribed. Olson v. Zoning Board of Revieio, 96 R. I. 1, 188 A.2d 367; Greenough, ex rel. v. Board of Canvassers, 33 R. I. 559, 82 A. 406.

In any event, petitioners were called to appear before the Board on September 19,1969, at which time they were questioned regarding their intentions to practice law in this state, if admitted. Whether this questioning arose out of information received by the Board as a result of the publication of petitioners’ applications, or resulted from information otherwise acquired, is not made clear by the record. What is clear, however, is that both Nelson and Thoms were residents of this state less than one month prior to filing their applications and that they came to Rhode Island to accept engagements with The Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc., a federally sponsored program providing legal services to the poor.

It further appears that both petitioners were engaged by The Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc., as a consequence of their having received fellowship grants from the Reginald Heber Smith Fellowship, a foundation administered by the University of Pennsylvania Law School. A fellowship recipient is free to choose which of the 250 legal service programs located in divers regions of the country with which he wishes to be affiliated, and is assigned accordingly. Compensation for the work performed on behalf of the particular *358 legal service program with which a Smith Fellowship recipient becomes associated is made by the Smith Fellowship program but, at least with regard to the instant petitioners, all other terms of employment are within the control of The Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc. One such condition having significance here is that petitioners' engagement with The Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc. was for a period of one year. Also having significance is the fact that petitioner Nelson’s application discloses he was admitted to the practice of law in Indiana in October 1968, and that of petitioner Thoms discloses that he had been admitted to the practice of law in Connecticut in September 1968.

It was against the background of the foregoing information that the Board questioned petitioners regarding their intent to practice law in this state, if admitted. No transcript was made of the September 19th hearing and the only •record bearing thereon is to be found in a summation of the Board’s findings as set forth in a written communication from their secretary to this court. Their summation is as follows:

“In one instance the applicant said his present intention was that he would probably not locate a law practice here but there was a possibility that he might do so. Another of the applicants stated that he didn’t have any specific intention to locate in any particular jurisdiction and that he might practice here.”

On the basis of these findings, the Board concluded that petitioners had not established that they, if admitted, intended to practice law in this state within the meaning of Rule 1 (c) of the rules of this court.

Having made this determination, the Board denied petitioners’ applications and they were so notified. Thereafter, specifically on September 23, 1969, Nelson and Thoms filed the instant petition in this court. Attached to said petition were affidavits of both Nelson and Thoms, in each of which *359 the respective petitioner states categorically that at the September 19th hearing he informed the Board that it was his intention to practice law in this state, if admitted.

Since the examination for which the applications were filed would commence two days hence, we gave immediate consideration to the instant petition on the day it was filed, and on that day, September 23, 1969, instructed the Board of Bar Examiners to permit petitioners to take said examination without prejudice, however, “to any of the parties hereto on the merits of the written petitions which shall be heard by this Court in due course.” We adopted this procedure in order to give petitioners, or either of them, the benefit to be realized on a successful passing of said examination should they, or either of them, ultimately prevail on the merits of their petition to review the adverse ruling of the Board.

Subsequently, in furtherance of our September 23rd order, the instant petition was assigned for oral arguments to and was heard on December 1, 1969. In connection, therewith, a brief was filed by petitioners, but not by the Board. The members thereof appeared, not as adversaries in a strict sense, but in their court-appointed capacity for the purpose of being of such assistance as the court might require in explanation of their findings and resulting denial of petitioners’ applications.

In their oral arguments and brief, petitioners concede that the scope of the provision of Rule 1(c) namely, “if admitted, he intends to practice law in this state” is the essential issue before this court. There are, however, they point out in their brief, two areas of construction of Rule 1(c), either of which might have been determinative of the Board’s decision that petitioners had failed to qualify within the meaning of the rule. The ruling of the Board, however, they further argue in their brief, fails to indicate by which of said two constructions the Board found that petitioners *360 failed to meet the requirement of the rule in question. In any event, it is petitioners’ contention the Board misconceived the intendment of Rule 1(c).

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Related

In re Roney
341 A.2d 752 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1975)
Petition of Fisher
259 A.2d 843 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1969)
In re Fisher
106 R.I. 825 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 A.2d 839, 106 R.I. 355, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-nelson-ri-1969.