Rountree Corp. v. Evans

8 Va. Cir. 477, 1967 Va. Cir. LEXIS 6
CourtRichmond City Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1967
DocketCases No. A-9258 and A-9263
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Va. Cir. 477 (Rountree Corp. v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richmond City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rountree Corp. v. Evans, 8 Va. Cir. 477, 1967 Va. Cir. LEXIS 6 (Va. Super. Ct. 1967).

Opinion

By JUDGE A. CHRISTIAN COMPTON

Attached you will find copies of the orders entered today granting judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in each of the above cases.

These matters are before the Court on appeal from the orders of dismissal entered in the Civil Justice Court of the City of Richmond, Part Two. As you of course know, Mr. Morton L. Wallerstein has appeared in the Rountree case as amicus curiae for The Retail Merchants Association of Richmond, Virginia, Inc., and Messrs. Howard W. Dobbins and William A. Young, Jr., have appeared for the plaintiffs, having limited their appearance to the presentation of the law in each case. The defendants are in default having made no appearance in the Court below or here.

[478]*478The merits of each case raise no real problem in view of the default of the respective defendants. Each case was dismissed below upon the Court’s motion by order entered on the return day of each warrant because, as the record in the Rountree case shows, the warrant was "based on a memorandum prepared on behalf of a corporation by one of its employees not licensed to practice law, in violation of Rule I for Integration of the Virginia State Bar." The able and respected judge of the court below states his reasons for so holding in a letter to counsel dated August 24, 1966, a copy of which letter is incorporated by reference in the Order of Dismissal in the Peoples Finance file.

The narrow issue to be decided is whether or not a regular bona fide employee of a business, incorporated or otherwise, may properly obtain the issuance of a civil warrant in a court not of record, give testimony as to facts and figures and have a judgment rendered by the trial judge as a matter of course without being engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. This issue must be decided in the affirmative.

As can be anticipated, there is abundant authority throughout this country as to the nature of the acts which constitute the practice of law. 7 Am. Jur. 2d, Attorneys at Law, Section 73 et seq.; 111 A.L.R. 19; 125 A.L.R. 1173; 151 A.L.R. 781; 2 A.L.R.3d 724. The search for the answer to the issue presented need not extend beyond Virginia, however, because the solution is found in our statutes, Rules and the cases decided thereunder. -Furthermore, we are assisted by opinions of the Attorney General of Virginia and by advisory opinions of the Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee of the Virginia State Bar.

In 1938, pursuant to legislative authorization now found in Code Section 54-48, the Supreme Court of Appeals adopted and promulgated The Rules for the Integration of the Virginia State Bar and defined the practice of law. 205 Va. 1011. This definition, was formulated against the background of Chapter 415 of the Acts of 1924 (Section 3426a, Code 1930) which prohibited persons other than attorneys from representing claims of other persons before a court and provided, in part, that:

[479]*479Nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent any person, firm or corporation from representing his or their claim or cause before any of the courts of this Commonwealth, or from preventing any person, firm or corporation from having his or their regularly employed agent or employee from appearing before any of the courts of this Commonwealth to represent said person, firm or corporation where such agent or employee, so appearing, is regularly employed on a salary basis. (Italics added.)

The repeal of this act was approved on March 15, 1938, (Acts 1938, p. 213) and by Act approved by the Legislature on April 1, 1938, the attorneys of this State were integrated into the Virginia State Bar (Acts 1938, p. 771). On October 21, 1938, the Rules for the Integration of the Virginia State Bar were promulgated which included the definition now under consideration. This was the first official attempt to formulate an all-inclusive definition of the practice of law. Commonwealth v. Jones & Robins, Inc., 186 Va. 30, 33 (1947). Prior to this time, the Court of Appeals had been called upon to declare certain acts or practices as constituting the unlawful practice of law. Richmond Assoc. of Credit Men v. Bar Ass’n., 167 Va. 327 (1937); Norfolk and Portsmouth Bar Ass’n. v. Drewry, 161 Va. 833 (1934); Bryce v. Gillespie, 160 Va. 137 (1933). The Jones & Robins case, supra, describes the careful consideration given to the language of the definition by the drafting committee composed of forty experienced attorneys representing all sections of the State, "many of whom have been studying the integration of the Bar for a number of years." 186 Va. 40. As a part of this consideration, the drafters of the definition were certainly mindful that the proceedings in those courts which are now designated courts not of record of this State were informal and in a great many cases the claims are uncontested. As was stated in the Bryce case, supra, at page 141:

By far the greater part of modern business is conducted through regularly engaged employees. To have required all claims growing out of such transactions to be represented in the [480]*480inferior courts by attorneys or the owners themselves would have been a harsh restriction, and an unnecessary burden on claims arising from such transactions.

It was against the above background as it related to the courts not of record that the definition was drawn. While there were sweeping changes with respect to these courts not of record made by the 1954 General Assembly which culminated in the enactment of Title 16.1 of the Code effective July 1, 1956, the important place which these courts occupy in our judicial structure as the "people’s courts" has not changed over the years. One important consideration which is kept clearly in view by these courts is their traditional accessibility to people who desire to prosecute their claims in that forum. At the same time these courts are mindful of their duty to protect society from the abuses resulting from the actions of those who practice law without being properly trained and licensed.

Having set the stage with the background of the definition as it relates to courts not of record, the pertinent provisions of the Rule as it relates to the issue here presented is as follows:

Generally, the relation of attorney and client exists, and one is deemed to be practicing law, whenever he furnishes to another advice or service under circumstances which imply his possession and use of legal knowledge or skill.
Specifically, the relation of attorney and client exists, and one is deemed to be practicing law, whenever.. .
(2) One, other than as a regular employee acting for his employer, undertakes, with or without compensation, to prepare for another legal instruments of any character, other than notices or contracts incident to the regular course of conducting a licensed business.
(3) One undertakes, with or without compensation, to represent the interest of another before any tribunal, judicial, administrative, or executive, otherwise than in the presentation [481]*481of facts, figures, or factual conclusions, as distinguished from legal conclusions, by an employee regularly and bona fide

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Related

RICH. ASS'N OF MEN v. Bar Ass'n
189 S.E. 153 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1937)
Bryce v. Gillespie
168 S.E. 653 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1933)
Norfolk & Portsmouth Bar Ass'n v. Drewry
172 S.E. 282 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1934)
Commonwealth v. Jones & Robins, Inc.
41 S.E.2d 720 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Va. Cir. 477, 1967 Va. Cir. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rountree-corp-v-evans-vaccrichcity-1967.