State ex rel. Hartman v. Cadwell

40 P. 176, 16 Mont. 119, 1895 Mont. LEXIS 116
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 P. 176 (State ex rel. Hartman v. Cadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hartman v. Cadwell, 40 P. 176, 16 Mont. 119, 1895 Mont. LEXIS 116 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Pemberton, C. J.

This is a proceeding for the disbarment of the respondent who is an attorney at law, regularly licensed heretofore by this court, and enrolled as a member of the bar of this state.

The relators are all members of the bar, and comprise some of the most prominent attorneys of the state. They constitute nearly all the members of the local bar of Gallatin county.

The respondent, as the records of this court show, was admitted to practice law in this state on the 16th day of February, 1891. He has acquired a considerable practice, and achieved,a prominent position among the members of the profession.

The respondent is charged with being guilty of malconduct in his profession as an attorney and counselor at law. It is also charged that he is a person whose general moral character is bad; and that he has been guilty of such fraudulent, deceitful, and immoral conduct and practices as to render him- an unfit person to practice law in this state, or to be an attorney [121]*121and counselor of this court. The specifications of malconduct and of bad moral character are very numerous. Upon the filing of the pleadings in the case this court appointed E. C. Day, Esq., whose reputation for ability and integrity is second to no member of the bar of this state, referee, to take the testimony in the cause and report the findings of fact to this court. This report has been made in which the referee finds that some 17 of the charges are supported by the evidence. This court is now asked to adopt these findings, and enter the proper order and judgment in the case.

The specifications of malconduct are too numerous to discuss seriatim, and to do so would be useless, and without profit. ■> We shall therefore confine our treatment to a few specifications, which are gravest in their character.

Specification “D” is as follows: “That prior and up to the '28th day of June, A. D. 1893, the case of Barbara Spieth vs. D. E. Grogan and J. P. Grogan, partners as D. F. Grogan & Bro., and Jesse H. Grogan, was pending in the ninth judicial district court of the state of Montana, in and for the county of Gallatin, upon the cross complaint and answer of said Jesse H. Grogan, and the answer and reply thereto of the said Barbara Spieth. That on or about the 27th day of June, the Hon. F. K. Armstrong, judge of said court, tried the same, a jury therein having been waived by the parties, and made certain findings of fact, and, pursuant to the practice in the said court, required the attorneys for the parties thereto to prepare a decree, and on or about the 29th day of June, A. D. 1893, the said E. P. Cadwell, defendant herein, being the attorney for the said Barbara Spieth, plaintiff, and Messrs. Cockrill & Pierce, two of the relators herein, being the attorneys for the defendant Jesse H. Grogan, appeared in open court before the said judge, and the said E. P. Cadwell, having theretofore prepared a decree in said case, submitted the same in open court to the said Cockrill & Pierce, attorneys for the said Jesse H. Grogan, as aforesaid, and the said Cockrill & Pierce, having examined the said decree, and being satisfied therewith, agreed [122]*122with the said Cadwell, in the presence of the said court, that the said decree was satisfactory, and the said E. P. Cadwell immediately handed the same to the said F. K. Armstrong, judge, as aforesaid, for his signature, and thereupon the judge signed the same as so agreed upon, and handed the same back to this defendant, E. P. Cadwell; a copy of which decree so agreed upon and so signed by the said court as aforesaid is attached hereto, and marked ‘‘Exhibit A,” and made a part of this charge, and thereupon, after receiving said decree, so signed as aforesaid, the said E. P. Cadwell, without the knowledge and consent of the said Cockrill & Pierce, or the said court, or either of them, retained the said decree in his possession and control, and kept it there, and did not file the same with the clerk of the said district court for record, as by law provided, nor would he or did he file the said decree until October 28, A. D. 1893, upon which date, upon motion of the said attorneys, Messrs. Cockrill & Pierce, the said judge entered a peremptory order to the said E. P. Cadwell, requiring him to file the said decree by four o’clock of said day. Aud your relators aver that prior to the filing of the said decree by said Cadwell, this defendant, and subsequent to the signing thereof, on the 29th day of June, A. D. 1893, as aforesaid, and while the same was in his possession, custody, and control, he, the said E. P. Cadwell, this defendant, without the knowledge or consent of the said Cockrill & Pierce, or either or both of them, or the said judge of the said court, made in the said decree such interlineations as to wholly change the tenor and effect thereof, and filed the same, under order of the court as aforesaid, and with the clerk of said district court, on the 28th day of October, A. D. 1893; and upon the same or following day, the said H. C. Cockrill, one of the relators herein, went to the office of the clerk of the said court, and found the decree, as interlined, nearly recorded by the said clerk, and, upon an examination thereof, discovered the said interlineations for the first time (a copy of the said decree, so interlined by the said E. P. Cadwell, as aforesaid, is filed herewith, attached hereto, [123]*123marked ‘Exhibit B, ’ and made a part of this charge); he, the said E. P. Cadwell, thereby intending to cheat and defraud the said Jesse H. Grogan of his right and interest in and to the real estate described in the said decree. That prior to the rendition of the said decree marked ‘Exhibit A, ’ and attached hereto, there had been rendered in the said suit another decree in favor. of Barbara Spieth against the said D. F. Grogan and J. P. Grogan, under and by virtue of which decree the property mentioned in Exhibit A had been sold to the said E. P. Cadwell, by the sheriff of the said county, he, the said Cad-well, talcing the sheriff’s certificate of sale in his own name, notwithstanding that he was at that time the attorney for the said Barbera Spieth. And at the time of the said interlineations the said E. P. Cadwell claimed to own all the right, title and interest of the said Barbara Spieth in and to the said certificate of sale of said real estate, and in and to the said decree in her favor, and also all the right, title and interest of the said D. F. and J. P. Grogan in and to the said real estate, under the said certificate of sale, the time for redemption of which by the said D. F. and J. P. Grogan or by J. H. Grogan had fully expired before the said decree was filed by the said Cadwell, as interlined as aforesaid, but had not expired at the date of the rendition of the said decree, and had not expired until on or about the 22nd day of September. A. D. 1893. That afterwards, some time in the month of September, 1893, the said E. P. Cadwell was discharged by the said Barbara Spieth, and ceased to act as her said attorney in the said cause, or in any other action in the said court, and was fully paid by the said Barbara Spieth for all services by him heretofore rendered. That, notwithstanding such discharge and payment, the said E. P. Cad-well (this defendant) having received an intimation that proceedings were likely to be instituted against him for disbarment or otherwise, by reason of such interlineation in said decree, as shown by said Exhibit B, hereto attached, filed in the said court on the 4th day of January, A. D. 1894, a written motion, as the attorney for the said Barbara Spieth, to [124]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P. 176, 16 Mont. 119, 1895 Mont. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hartman-v-cadwell-mont-1895.