Pike County Rules of Court

41 Pa. D. & C. 223, 1941 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 284
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Pike County
DecidedFebruary 17, 1941
Docketno. 57A
StatusPublished

This text of 41 Pa. D. & C. 223 (Pike County Rules of Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Pike County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pike County Rules of Court, 41 Pa. D. & C. 223, 1941 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 284 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

McCluskey, P. J.,

third judicial district, specially presiding,

The instant action is a request to the court by members of the Pike County Bar, resident in Pike County, to sign an order repealing Rule VIII of the Forty-third Judicial District of the State of Pennsylvania, insofar as it applies to Pike County, and adopting a new rule governing the right of attorneys to practice before the Common Pleas Court of Pike County.

Since July 18, 1901, Monroe and Pike Counties have formed the Forty-third Judicial District of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. One judge is elected to sit in the two counties. The courts of Pike County and the courts of Monroe County, however, are conducted as separate entities, having each their separate prothonotary, sheriff, and juries. In December of 1929, rules of court prepared by five attorneys, three of whom were residents of Monroe County and two of whom were residents of Pike County, were promulgated for the Forty-third Judicial District of the State of Pennsylvania and were approved by the court. Of these rules which have remained and currently are in force, article VIII, sec. 13, provides as follows:

“Sec. 13. An applicant for admission to the bar shall submit to the local Board of Examiners his certificate [225]*225verified by his affidavit that he does now, or that he intends immediately to, reside in one of the Counties of the Forty-third Judicial District, or that he has, or intends immediately to have and maintain, an office within said county, stating the postoffice address thereof. A failure to continue to reside or maintain an office within said county shall be ground to revoke the admission to the bar of this Court of any person admitted after the adoption of this rule, which action may be taken by the Court upon the application of the local Board of Examiners.”

Under the preceding article and section of the present rules, members of the bar who resided in Monroe County have practiced law in Pike County, accepting retainers from clients resident within Pike County, representing litigants in all the courts of Pike County, signing prae-cipes, issuing legal process, appearing before the court, conducting trial, holding argument, and in general performing all the services of attorneys engaged in the legal business of their clients. Members of the bar residing in Pike County have likewise and in like manner practiced before the several courts of Monroe County.

On March 18,1940, members of the bar of Pike County, residing in Pike County, requested the president judge of the district to sign an order repealing article VIII of the district rules, insofar as it applies to Pike County, and adopting a new rule which provides in part material to these proceedings as follows:

“Sec. 1. Practice in the Courts of Pike County, Pennsylvania, shall be restricted to those persons, learned in the law, who at the time of the adoption of this rule, maintain their bona fide legal residence in said County or who maintain their principal office within said County or who may thereafter be admitted in accordance with these rules.”

“Sec. 4. Every praecipe, pleading, motion, rule, petition, caveat or other paper whatsoever filed in any case commenced or pending in any of the Courts of this County or before the Register of Wills, to which the signature of [226]*226an attorney-at-law is required to be affixed, must bear the signature or contain the name of at least one resident attorney of this Bar. The Prothonotary, Clerk of the Court of Quarter Sessions, Clerk of the Court of Oyer and Ter-miner, Clerk of the Orphans’ Court and the Register of Wills are directed to refuse to file any paper offered which is not in conformity with this rule.”

“Sec. 5(d). Any attorney who shall hereafter be admitted to this Bar upon his sworn declaration of intention permanently to practice in this County and to open and maintain his principal office therein within three weeks who shall fail to do so, or shall subsequently remove his principal office to another jurisdiction, shall forfeit his membership in this Bar, and upon the matter being brought to the attention of the Court by the County Board of Law Examiners, his name shall be stricken from the Roll.”

“Sec. 7. Every Applicant • for admission to the Bar shall satisfy the County Board of Law Examiners: . . .

‘(e) That he has maintained a bona fide legal residence within the County of Pike for at least one (1) year prior to the date of his application for admission.

“‘(/) Such applicant shall also deliver to the said Board a declaration signed by him, setting forth that he intends permanently to practice in this County on his own account and not as a member of a partnership or a representative of a firm, individual, or a corporation located outside of the County of Pike and will within three weeks of his admission open and maintain his principal office in the County of Pike, and deliver to the said Board a declaration signed by him to that effect and that failure to do so, or removal of his principal office to another County shall be construed as a request by him to have his name stricken from the Roll of the Bar of this County. If said Board should approve the applicant, this declaration shall be attached by the Board to their certificate recommending his admission which shall be produced in open Court when his motion for admission is made and shall be filed thereafter with the prothonotary.’

[227]*227“Sec. 8(a). Should the applicant be a member of the Bar of the Court of another County, he shall not only comply with the foregoing requirements (a, b, d, e and /) but also shall satisfy the County Board of Law Examiners that he has practiced at least five (5) years in such other County and that he is of reputable professional standing and good moral character.”

When the request by the resident members of the bar of Pike County was presented, the president judge had the proposed rule read in open court and made the following order:

“And now, March 18, 1940, the Rules Committee of Pike County having submitted and requested the adoption of the above changes in the Rules of Court of Pike County, the matter is held under advisement by the court until the 15th day of April, 1940, and it is directed that notice, together with a copy of the proposed rules be given to every member of the bar now qualified to practice in the courts of Pike County, at least 15 days prior to April. 15, 1940.”

Notice and copy of the said rules having been given as directed by the court to every member of the bar qualified under the current rule to practice in the courts of Pike County and specifically to all those practicing members resident in Monroe County, the members of the bar resident in Monroe County thereupon filed a petition requesting the court not to repeal the current rule and not to adopt the proposed new rule unless the practicing members of the bar resident in Monroe County are excepted from the operation of the new rule. On January 8, 1941, the cause came on for a hearing before Prank P. Mc-Cluskey, President Judge of the Third Judicial District of Pennsylvania, presiding by special appointment in the Forty-third Judicial District of Pennsylvania at the Court House, at Stroudsburg, Pa., and testimony was taken.

The petitioning members of the bar resident in Monroe County upon argument contend that repeal of the present rule VIII, insofar as it relates to the courts of [228]

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Related

Olmsted's Case
140 A. 634 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Pa. D. & C. 223, 1941 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-county-rules-of-court-pactcomplpike-1941.