Rowland v. State

55 S.W.2d 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1932
DocketNo. 12721.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 133 (Rowland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland v. State, 55 S.W.2d 133 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LATTIMORE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment suspending for six months Chas. T. Rowland, as an attorney at law, from the practice of law. The complaint was signed by seven practicing-attorneys. While article 314, Rev. Statutes, says “a practicing attorney * * * may file * ⅜ * a sworn complaint,” etc., still there is no statutory prohibition against more than one such joining in the complaint. We are not able to believe that a jury who heard the testimony and were properly instructed as to the law would 'be so unmindful of their oath as to give any evidentiary weight to the fact that seven lawyers signed the complaint. No argument was made to the jury that these signatures added any probative value to the case, and the record is wholly silent of any fact suggesting that it did in fact influence the jury. The first assignment of error is overruled.

The affidavit of the attorneys who signed ■the complaint was that “each for himself deposes and says upon his oath that he has read tlje above and foregoing petition and complaint, and is cognizant of the statements and allegations therein contained; that he is informed that such allegations and statements in said complaint are true in substance and in fact.” It is true that such affidavit would place a greater burden of proof upon one seeking to establish false swearing against the maker of such affidavit than if the affidávit had been an unqualified declaration of the truth of the facts pleaded in the complaint. It is likewise true that in the pleading of an ordinary civil case the statutes which require the same to be sworn to have been uniformly held not satisfied with an affidavit on information and belief. However, the matter has been passed on in Houtchens v. State (Tex. Civ. App.) 47 S.W. (2d) 679, on an affidavit in most respects similar to this and the complaint sustained. That case is now in the Supreme Court of this state on writ of error granted. The reasoning of Mr. Justice Levy is applicable to this jurat. In addition to those reasons, it seems to us that, when we apply the well-recognized rule of looking to the evil sought by the Legislature to be eliminated and the cure approved by that body, we can reach no other conclusion. Any other holding would practically destroy the remedy of disbarment. The Statute, article 314, limits those who mdy file disbarment proceedings to “the judge of any court, a practicing attorney, a county commissioner or justice of the peace.” Evidently the Legislature had in mind the fact that the very nature of an attorney’s business is such that he has enemies, those litigants who may have been on the opposite side of a lawsuit, people angered because the lawyer’s advice was adverse to their desires, any of whom might from selfish motives or anger or disappointment be willing to lend themselves unworthily to humiliate the lawyer who had crossed their path. To avoid such event, the Legislature selected a class evidently believed to be free from such prejudice and a class whose daily life gave them access to abundant information with which to bear that responsibility thus placed on them. If that be true, then the very selection of the class makes the importance of a flat verification of the complaint dwindle.

But, if the complainant must swear un-qualifiedly that the facts in the complaint are personally known by him to be true, and cannot be sworn to on information found to b'e reliable, and can only be filed by one of the above-named class, then the unscrupulous lawyer, the shyster, could prey with impunity upon the public, taking care to see that his misdeeds wore not done in the presence or hearing of one of the above class. Such would destroy the beneficent value of the statute. We think the better view is that those who may by law file a com plaint are named and charged with a sacred trust and duty to see that the unworthy, the unfaithful, are discharged from that great army whom the people have elected to lead them in an orderly and just management of their affairs with each other. As the shadow follows the substance, the law follows the development of society, and, as the law changes, the methods of the practitioner change. In no walk of life is so much trusted as to the lawyer. Money and property, titles, without receipt, confidences too sacred to disclose, mistakes too terrible to undo, reputation, honor, life, and liberty, all these rest in the hands of the chosen lawyer. In such a day the compliment paid the profession by the Legislature in selecting largely from the profession those who are charged with careful‘watch of the fraternity to see that none profane its sacred vows is not unappreciated, and the corollary is that their hands must be upheld. The second assignment of error is overruled.

We have examined the complaint, and have considered carefully each of the exceptions thereto. The various paragraphs of the complaint end with the charge that the facts therein constitute malpractice, fraudulent or dishonorable conduct. While each paragraph does not within its confines allege such a complete case, still, construed together, they do allege fully the various facts which were evidenced. Assignments of error 3 and 14, inclusive, are overruled.

Assignments of error 15 to 28 complain of various testimony of witnesses as to matters occurring out of the presence of defendant and with which he contends he was not shown to be connected. We review the state’s case as presented: A Mrs. Johnson, who was *135 going under the name of Rolfe, had come with a friend, Helen Gibson, to Fort Worth from Oklahoma, and employed attorneys (not appellant) to file suit for her child for an interest in a large estate. A tentative agreement to settle this suit for $25,000 had been reached. Fred Strang, not an attorney, had gone to attorneys for the estate and arranged with them to assist them for $1,000 in making a settlement advantageous to the estate prior to the time the tentative agreement was reached, and had employed Rowland to advise him and promise him a portion of this $1,000 as his.fee. Strang, after this $25,000 settlement appeared agreed to, procured Emma Rudd, a manicurist, to approach Mrs. Johnson and represent to her that -she had overheard in a barber shop a conversation to the effect that the estate was actually paying $175,000 on this settlement, and that her lawyers were joining with the estate’s lawyers to defraud her out of the difference, and that she (Mrs. Rudd) had a lawyer friend, Strang, who would do better by her. Mrs. Rudd carried out these instructions, and returned to Strang with Mrs. Johnson’s invitation to Strang to call on her, Strang stating to Mrs. Rudd, “If this steal goes over, you get $5,000.00 out of it.” Strang called on Mrs. Johnson, told her, in long detail’ not necessary here to repeat, that she was a victim of ignorant and unfaithful attorneys, and that he, Strang, and his partner, Rowland (the appellant), would get her more money, and requested her to discharge her attorneys and turn the representation of her rights over to Strang and appellant. He left, and Mrs. Rudd called later, and Mrs. Johnson told her to send her friend to see her, that she hah decided to commit her ease to his hands. Strang procured her signature to letters discharging her then attorneys, and took Mrs. Gibson away from the presence of Mrs. Johnson “to talk to her.”. This engagement lasted for two hours or more. Thereafter Strang moved the two to an apartment and paid the rent. Strang told Mrs. Gibson to keep Mrs. Johnson in the background, and he would transact his business with the latter through the for- • mer.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-state-texapp-1932.