State Bar v. Langert

276 P.2d 596, 43 Cal. 2d 636, 1954 Cal. LEXIS 283
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1954
DocketS. F. 18981
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 596 (State Bar v. Langert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bar v. Langert, 276 P.2d 596, 43 Cal. 2d 636, 1954 Cal. LEXIS 283 (Cal. 1954).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

This original proceeding was brought by The State Bar to revoke an order admitting Eli David Langert to practice as an attorney at law. The petition alleges that Langert, with intent to conceal from the Committee of Bar Examiners certain material facts relating to his moral qualifications, knowingly falsified in answering certain questions bearing upon his eligibility to become a member of the bar of this state.

More specifically, The State Bar pleads the following facts: In 1944, in his verified application to take the bar examination, Langert stated that he had never previously been examined for admission to practice law except in this state in 1943; that he had never held a license, the procurement of which required proof of good character; that he had never been reprimanded, censured or otherwise disciplined as an attorney or member of any profession or organization and that no charges had ever been made or filed or proceedings instituted against him. Other answers made by him were that his various addresses from 1927 to 1938 were Chicago, Illinois; Peoria, Illinois; and Henry, Illinois. During the same period, he said, he had worked in several capacities, none of which was the practice of law.

Langert took the bar examination and received a passing grade. Thereafter, the committee certified to this court that he had met the requirements for admission to practice, and recommended that he be admitted. The order admitting him to practice was entered in December, 1944.

Upon information and belief, The State Bar alleges that, contrary to the statements in the application, Langert, upon an examination in Illinois, was admitted to the practice of law in that state in 1927; that his only address from 1927 to 1938 was Rock Island, Illinois, in which city for the same *638 period he was actively engaged in the practice of law. It is also said that five charges of unprofessional conduct as an attorney were made against him before the Grievance Committee of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Illinois prior to August, 1938, to which Langert had filed written answers. A further statement in the petition is that subsequent to August, 1938, after Langert had left Bock Island, three additional charges were filed.

In 1941, the petition continues, the Committee on Grievances of the Illinois State Bar Association, acting as commissioners of the Illinois Supreme Court, held a hearing on the eight charges. The committee found that three of these charges, all of which were filed before August, 1938, and of which he had actual knowledge, were true and recommended that Langert be disbarred. Thereafter, the Board of Governors of the Illinois State Bar Association referred the matter back to the Committee on Grievances to prepare a more complete record. There were no further proceedings in the State of Illinois.

The State Bar has presented the testimony of Langert before a committee appointed to investigate the record upon which he obtained admission to practice in the state. He freely told the committee that certain of the addresses and employments he had given in his application were untrue. He also admitted his practice of law in Illinois and the filing of charges against him upon which the Board of Governors and the Committee on Grievances of the Illinois State Bar Association, acting as Commissioners of the Supreme Court of Illinois, recommended disbarment.

In his return to the petition of The State Bar, Langert also admits the falsity of his answers but he pleads that they were justified by his circumstances. He says that the fictitious list of residences and employments in Illinois was compiled upon the recommendation of a local employment agency “in keeping with local custom” and was “necessitated by his economic situation.” He continued this deception, he adds, on three applications made to obtain a bond. This was done “in order to be consistent.”

At the time he left Illinois, he also pleads, hS “was advised that all proceedings then pending against him before the Grievance Committee . . . would be dropped and expunged from the record . . . [and] that at the time he made his applications for the Bar Examination ... he fully believed that all proceedings had been dropped and expunged from *639 the record. ...” “ His economic position was precarious and he feared that if he failed to pass the Bar Examination and lost his position at about the same time [as a consequence of informing The State Bar of his past activities], that he would be unable to provide for himself and his family. ’ ’ Finally, he says, had he disclosed his past history in its entirety, his former wife would have learned of his whereabouts and caused him and his second wife extreme embarrassment.

It was Langert’s plain duty to truly reply to the questions asked by the Committee of Bar Examiners. (In re Jacobsen, 105 Cal.App. 236 [287 P. 131]; In re Lasley, 61 Cal.App. 59, 60 [214 P. 284].) The facts with respect to his prior conduct in the practice of the law in Illinois might have justified an order refusing to allow him to take the bar examination in this state. Truthful answers to questions bearing upon his conduct in the communities in which he had lived before coming to California, at the least, would have justified further investigation of his record. The only reasonable inference which may be drawn from the record is that the committee’s approval of Langert as an applicant for the bar examination and its subsequent certification of him as one who had met the requirements for admission to practice law were based upon the admittedly false answers in his application.

A deliberate concealment of charges of misconduct in another state has consistently been held grounds for revocation of a license by the courts of California. (Spears v. State Bar, 211 Cal. 183 [294 P. 697, 72 A.L.R. 923]; In re Jacobsen, 105 Cal.App. 236 [287 P. 131] ; In re Lasley, 61 Cal.App. 59 [214 P. 284] ; In re Wells, 36 Cal.App. 785 [172 P. 93]; In re Mash, 28 Cal.App. 692 [153 P. 961].)

Langert relies upon In re Hovey, 7 Cal.Unrep. 203 [81 P. 1019], as authority to the contrary. But Hovey made no false affidavit and was admitted upon motion. The question here is whether a deliberate concealment of a material fact in a verified application to the Committee of Bar Examiners justifies revocation of the order admitting one to practice.

Langert argues that he is entitled to have the issue of his moral character redetermined by this court. He contends that the order admitting him to practice should stand unless this court finds that at the present time he is not of good character. He contends that In re Wells, 174 Cal. 467 [163 P. 657] justifies such procedure.

*640 In that case, it was alleged that Wells twice withdrew an application to the District Court of Appeal, Second District, because objections to his character had been filed. He then went to Nevada, was admitted to the bar of that state and returned immediately to California. He applied to the District Court of Appeal, Third District, and was admitted to practice under the provisions of section 279 of the Code of Civil Procedure as then in effect.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 596, 43 Cal. 2d 636, 1954 Cal. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bar-v-langert-cal-1954.