Rubin v. State

211 N.W. 926, 192 Wis. 1, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 130
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 926 (Rubin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rubin v. State, 211 N.W. 926, 192 Wis. 1, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 130 (Wis. 1927).

Opinion

Owen, J.

The defendant is a practicing attorney of long experience. He has a thorough understanding of professional ethics, the relations that should obtain between court and counsel, and that degree of respect due from the bar to the court. In his brief the defendant gives expression to rather high-minded abstract principles which he concedes [6]*6should prevail in the conduct of court proceedings. For instance, he says:

"We firmly hold that in the interest of justice there should be orderly procedure; that a proceeding in court should at all times be dignified; that neither judge nor attorney should, toward each other, or toward litigant or witness, engage in any conduct or language that shall invite disrespectful criticism. We concede that the court has the inherent right summarily to punish counsel for contempt. We concede also that the judge should have that inherent power without interference or interruption and that he should exercise it without fear or favor and with great expedition. ... We neither claim nor expect immunity from punishment for contempt because of age, experience, acquaintance, or influence.”

In another portion of the brief he says:

“In the interest of a courageous bar, however; ever mindful of the oath that a lawyer takes, but feeling that ‘due respect for and courtesy to the bench’ does not mean sycophancy, and at the request of other members of the profession in Milwaukee as a protest against arbitrary judicial conduct which is on the rise, as well as in vindication of a personal right, this matter is brought here for review.”

While the foregoing expressions indicate that the defendant has a rather clear conception, in the abstract, of the relations which should obtain between court and counsel, it appears that he is not quite so clear when he comes to apply such abstract principles to concrete situations. If it be true that this appeal has been encouraged “by other members of the profession in Milwaukee as a protest against arbitrary judicial conduct which is on the rise,” then it would seem that a recurrence to fundamental principles is timely.

Courts are institutions, set up by society for the purpose of administering justice, the attainment of which is the ultimate end of organized government. Because of the grave and delicate nature of their functions, society, from time im[7]*7memorial, has accorded to courts the greatest respect. This respect proceeds from an intuitive and deep-seated sense of propriety. Human instinct decrees it as the appropriate attitude for society to assume towards the most exalted institution of its creation. This respect is not accorded to the Judge — the man. The Judge presiding over a court is one character. The Judge in his chambers another. The Judge in his home or on the street quite another. The Judge as an individual may or may not be accorded the respect which by common consent belongs to the institution — the Court. The Judge as the individual is not entitled per se to any particular degree of respect. He is entitled only to that regard to which his standing and character in the community entitles him. As an individual he has no power to coerce respect. It is the institution — the Court — to which belongs that degree of respect commensurate with the place which it occupies in the scheme of organized society. The Judge and the Court are not identical. The Judge is a man. The Court is an institution. It requires something more than a Judge sitting on the bench to constitute a Court. It requires, in addition, the existence of conditions authorizing the exercise of the powers of a court. It requires the presence of that upon or over which the powers of a court may be exerted, namely, a controversy involving legal or human rights. It requires the presence of litigants, generally attorneys, usually officers, such as bailiff, clerk; etc., and frequently jurors. To constitute a court, some of these elements must concur with the presence of a presiding judge. It is this institution, as distinguished from the Judge, that merits and enjoys the respect of society.

The procedure of courts should be characterized by order and dignity becoming to the responsible and delicate nature of their functions. The usefulness of the individual court and the repute in which it is held depends in no small degree [8]*8upon the manner in which the work of the court is conducted. Society entertains high ideals in this respect, ideals that cannot be slighted without a corresponding loss of respect. Upon the Judge first of all devolves the duty, by his attitude and demeanor, of maintaining the dignity of the court over which he presides. Pie should be dignified in his bearing, gentlemanly in his address. He should manifest an appreciation of the gravity of his duties and a conscientious consideration in the discharge thereof. He should maintain impartial poise. He should be conscious of no bias or prejudice. He should avoid display of temper. He should neither indulge nor permit heated controversy between court and counsel. He should at all times keep the proceedings of his court under firm control and within the bounds of court propriety.

Next in order of responsibility in this respect is the attorney. He is an officer of the court. His oath as such attorney requires him to “maintain the respect due to courts of justice and judicial officers.” He is charged with a thorough understanding of the relations that should obtain between court and counsel and of the proprieties of court decorum. Plis conduct in court and his attitude towards the presiding judge should be such as to lend dignity to the court, and to inspire those less schooled in the amenities of court decorum with respect for the institution. True it is that the lawyer occupies something of a dual capacity. He owes a duty to his client and to the court, but the duty which he owes his client never requires him to go to the extreme of manifesting a contemptuous attitude towards the court. He should protect the interests of his client, but he should never forget that he is engaged in a serious undertaking — a search for the truth — and an effort to declare justice. Pie should not forget that he is one party to a controversy — a controversy conducted in an orderly and dignified manner, and [9]*9which must be decided by the court or jury. The law invests the court with power and authority to enforce an orderly and. dignified investigation, and it is the duty of the attorney to promote rather than frustrate an orderly investigation of the facts involved in the controversy. The law and the rules of court enable him properly to protect the interests of his client, without casting aspersions upon the learning or integrity of the presiding judge. He is entitled to make objections. He is entitled to exceptions to the rulings of the court. He is entitled reasonably to be heard upon questions presented for the decision of the court. The extent to which he shall be heard is a matter which must rest largely in the discretion of the presiding judge. He is not entitled to argue at length all petty and frivolous objections, but courts will always grant counsel opportunity of being heard upon doubtful and serious questions. -However, when the court rules upon questions before it, it is the duty of counsel to respectfully acquiesce in such rulings. He owes no duty to his client which will justify him in indulging in flippant, sarcastic, or contemptuous comment upon such rulings. This practice on the part of attorneys is most reprehensible, and brings disrepute upon the institution which it is their sworn duty to respect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 926, 192 Wis. 1, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubin-v-state-wis-1927.