State Ex Rel. Greene County Bar v. Huddleston

293 S.W. 353, 173 Ark. 686, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 18, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 353 (State Ex Rel. Greene County Bar v. Huddleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Greene County Bar v. Huddleston, 293 S.W. 353, 173 Ark. 686, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 243 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Wood, J.

On the 17th of August, 1925, certain mem- ' bers of the Bar Association of Greene County, Arkansas, exhibited charges of such association against M. P. Huddleston. It was charged, in substance, that Huddle: ston was a member of the association; that one John Lane was indicted in the Greene County Circuit Court for the larceny of $20,200 of United States Liberty bonds, the property of one Jaméis W. Alexander; that he was tried at the December term, 1924, of the court, and convicted, and thereafter appealed to the Supreme Court, where the judgment of conviction was reversed, and the cause. remanded for a new trial. On the day Lane was arrested for the larceny of the bonds, Alexander instituted a civil action against him to replevy the 'bonds, and caused a capias to be issued with the summons. The trial of the civil action resulted in a judgment in favor of Alexander for the return of the bonds. Lane admitted in open court that he had the bonds, but refused to surrender them, and was adjudged guilty of contempt in refusing to return them. An appeal was lodged by Lane in the civil action for recovery of the bonds, and also from the judgment against Lane imprisoning him for contempt. These judgments were affirmed by the Supreme Court on April 127, 1925. On June 6,1925, the kw firm of Gautney & Dudley were employed by Lane to petition the circuit court of Greene County asking that he be purged of contempt. Lane set forth in his petition that he had buried the bonds in controversy upon his father’s farm, and that same had been stolen from the place where he had buried them. He stated that $17,600 of the bonds were buried by him in a glass jar in November, 1924, and that, so far as he knew, no one else knew where the bonds were buried; that he sent certain parties to the place where the bonds Avere buried, and they reported that they did not find the bonds in the place indicated, but found the place, which looked as if something had been buried and very recently removed. In the action to recover the bonds and in the contempt proceedings against Lane, Huddleston was one of his attorneys. He Avas not Lane’s attorney in the petition of Lane asking that he be purged of contempt..

On July 30, 1925, Block & Kirsch, a firm of lawyers at Paragould, Greene County, Arkansas, xvho Avere attorneys for Alexander in his action to recover the bonds, received information that the bonds had been sold in St. Louis, Missouri, on the 30th of April, 1925. These attorneys went to St- Louis and ascertained that Huddleston had sold and delivered $17,100 of the bonds through a friend of his in St. Louis, and had directed his friend to receive the proceeds in cash; that Huddleston had rented a safety-deposit, box in St. Louis in the name of Ixis friend, and stated that he would call for the money later. Huddleston, through his friend, drew out of the proceeds of the sale of the bonds the sum of $6,850, leaving ..the sum of $10,000 in the safety-deposit box, from which his friend afterwards used the sum of ■ $1,250, which latter sum was later replaced. It was charged that Huddleston, on the first day of August, 1925, was confronted with the above facts, and that he admitted that he had delivered the bonds to his friend in St. Louis for sale three days after the Supreme Court determined that the bonds belonged to Alexander. He admitted that he had used $6,850 of the proceeds of the bond sale, and that he was liable for their conversion, and that he also had in his possession a bond for $500 which Lane had placed with him in October, 1924-. On the 3d of August, 1925, Huddleston paid to the attorneys for Alexander the sum of $1,680 and delivered also'the bond for $500, and gave an order to the agent of the United States Government releasing his friend in St. Louis from liability and directing.the said agent to deliver the $11,250, proceeds of the bonds in his possession, to J. W. Alexander, or his attorneys.

At a meeting of the Greene County Bar Association to consider these charges on August 28,1925, Huddleston appeared, and, after reading the written charges preferred against him, declared said charges to be correct, and that he only wished to add'that the $500 bond which Lane placed with him in October, 1924, was taken as collateral securit}r for a loan which he bad made to Lane. Huddleston asked the bar association to defer the charges against him until after the December term, 1925, of the circuit court of Greene County, in order to give him an opportunity to try the case of State against Lane et al. Huddleston further declared before the bar association that it was his intention, as soon as he could borrow the money, to repay Alexander the amount due for the bonds, and was assured by the chairman of the meeting of the bar association that that was a matter with which the association was not concerned. A motion was made and unanimously adopted by the bar association expressing it to be the sense of the association that the conduct of Huddleston was so reprehensible and unbecoming as to warrant immediate disbarment proceedings.

On the 3d day of September, 1925, thereafter, a complaint was filed in the circuit court of Greene County by the prosecuting attorney of the Second Judicial Circuit, joined in by nine members of the bar association of Greene County. The complaint alleged,.in substance, the above facts, and, further, that these facts proved a scheme-on the part of Huddleston and Lane to defraud Alexander and to prevent the recovery of the bonds, which both the Circuit and Supreme courts had adjudged to belong to him. The complaint alleged that such conduct on the part of Huddleston was an attempt to put at naught the judgments rendered by both the circuit and Supreme courts, and was a fraud on both of such courts, and grossly unprofessional. The prayer was that a citation issue to be served upon Huddleston, and that, upon a hearing, his license to practice hiw be revoked, and that he be hereafter debarred from practicing the profession of an attorney at law in the State of Arkansas. A citation ivas issued on the above complaint and served on Huddleston September 25,1925. No answer was filed by Huddleston to the complaint. A jury was impaneled to try the issues of fact, and testimony was adduced by the plaintiff which tended to prove the allegations of the complaint. It was proved that, in the civil action by Alexander to recover the bonds, the sheriff returned that he was unable to get possession of the property. The testimony of botín Block and Kirsch ivas to the effect that they were the attorneys for Alexander in the civil proceedings to recover possession of the bonds, and that the facts were as set forth in the exhibit of the charges before the bar association of Greene County and in the complaint of the plaintiffs. In addition to the facts there stated, their testimony was to the effect that Huddleston, in their office, stated that he had some additional testimony in the' criminal case against Lane, and that he did not believe that Lane stole the bonds. He also stated that he sold the bonds as the agent of Lane, and did not think he had done anything wrong. These attorneys also stated that they and Huddleston agreed on the balances to be paid by,him, $5,611.45, as of August 1, 1925; that Huddleston agreed to enter his appearance for the balance 'due, and that judgment might go against him. Huddleston was given permission to read the charges preferred against him before the bar association, and he stated that these charges were correct, except that the $500 bond had come to him as an innocent purchaser, with the understanding that Lane had won it in a game of dice.

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 353, 173 Ark. 686, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-greene-county-bar-v-huddleston-ark-1927.