State ex rel. Hawke v. Le Blond

108 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1923
DocketNo. 17837
StatusPublished

This text of 108 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126 (State ex rel. Hawke v. Le Blond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio 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. Hawke v. Le Blond, 108 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126 (Ohio 1923).

Opinion

Mabshall, C. J.

There are three major questions for determination: (1) Did three judges of the court of common pleas of Hamilton county have jurisdiction over a disbarment proceeding? (2) Was the order of indefinite suspension null and void? (3) Can such a judgment be collaterally attached ?

[129]*129The jurisdiction of the court of common pleas to hear a disbarment proceeding is conferred by Section 1707, General Code:

“The Supreme Court, Circuit Court, or court of common pleas may suspend or remove an attorney at law from office, for misconduct in office, conviction of crime involving moral turpitude, or unprofessional conduct involving moral turpitude. Such suspension or removal shall operate as a suspension or removal in all the courts of the state. Judges of such courts are required to cause proceedings to be instituted against an attorney at law, when it comes to the knowledge of any such judge in whose court such attorney practices, that he is probably guilty of any of the causes of suspension or removal.”

It is claimed that the “court of common pleas” refers to all of the judges of the court of common pleas of the county in which such a proceeding is instituted, and that three judges in Hamilton county, where nine judges regularly hold office, do not have jurisdiction to hear and determine a disbarment proceeding, and that the judgment actually entered is for that reason null and void. This suggestion gives rise to many inquiries: Is a disbarment proceeding different from any other proceeding which may be instituted in the court of common pleas? In a disbarment proceeding, may the court of common pleas in Hamilton county be constituted by a single judge, or by any number of judges less than the whole number If not, must the entire number of judges elected or appointed actually sit in banc to constitute a “court,” or will physical or [130]*130legal disability or absence from any cause of one or more of the judges qualify the remainder to sit as a valid court, in the absence of those who are absent or disqualified? If so, how and by whom is such alleged or pretended disqualification determined? If the respondent raises the point that one or more of the judges is disqualified on the ground of prejudice or bias, and it is so adjudged, or in the event such disqualification is admitted by such judge or judges, who thereupon voluntarily stand aside, must other judges from other counties be designated to sit in their place? If the “court” consists of the entire number, may a majority sit, or may any number less than the whole constitute a quorum? If the entire number sits, may a majority or any number less than the whole render a valid judgment? In the event of an even number of judges holding office in any county, what would be the result of a tie vote? If the “court” means the entire number of judges, is the absence of one or more fatal to the jurisdiction, or is it an irregularity which may be waived, and does failure to object, or acquiescence in a hearing by only a portion, estop the respondent from complaining? Is it in the power of a single judge to prevent the hearing of a disbarment proceeding by refusing to participate therein? It sometimes happens that there are as many as eight common pleas judges sitting in Cuyahoga county by the designation of the Chief Justice, which number, added to the twelve resident judges, makes a total of twenty separate and distinct courts of common pleas sitting at one time, each and all hearing separate cases and entering orders and judgments; all such orders and judgments being the judgments of [131]*131the court of common pleas of that county. If a disbarment proceeding should come on for hearing during the time such additional judges were sitting in that county, would it be necessary for the eight foreign judges to participate in the hearing and decision of the disbarment proceeding? If a disbarment proceeding should be instituted in a county having only one common pleas judge, who did not feel qualified to sit, could the Chief Justice appoint another in his place? In such event, is it in the power of the Chief Justice to appoint a commission of several judges?

It is conceivable that any of the foregoing situations might arise, and the foregoing are only examples, and by no means all, of the contingencies which might be presented for determination if the contentions of the relator in this case should be sustained.

The foregoing interrogatories are propounded, not because an answer either in the affirmative or the negative would be decisive of the questions involved in this case, but because they show the absurd consequences which would follow a general rule which would declare that the “court of common pleas” means a joint session of all qualified judges of the county.

It is sought by relator to throw further light upon the meaning of the word “court” in the mind of the Ohio Legislature, by pointing to some sections of the General Code of Ohio wherein powers relating to certain provisional remedies are conferred upon “the court or a judge thereof,” as, for example, in granting an attachment, Section 11869; an injunction, Section 11877; a receivership, Section 11894; writ of habeas corpus, Section 12162; quo warranto, [132]*132Section 12306; and mandamus, Section 12288. As 8 concrete example of those statutes pertaining to provisional remedies we quote a part of Section 11869: “Such attachment may be granted by the court in which the action is brought, or by a judge thereof.” From this language, and similar language found in other related statutes, relator contends, not only that the conclusive inference must be drawn that a distinction is made, between courts and judges, but the further inference is claimed that the word “court” can never mean a single judge, but must always include all judges holding office in the county where the court is situated.

By reference to the Constitution, Section 2, Article IV, it is found that the Supreme Court is expressly made to consist of a Chief Justice and six judges, and that a majority shall be necessary to constitute a quorum or to pronounce a decision in ordinary cases. The Constitution contains no such provision concerning the court of common pleas, but, as will hereinafter be noticed, even contains a contrary provision.

It cannot be doubted that by these statutes, the Ohio Legislature has recognized the distinction between courts and judges. It is apparent, however, that no artificial or unusual distinctions are made, but, on the contrary, they are in perfect harmony with the distinctions recognized throughout English and American jurisprudence.

The court is a tribunal organized for the purpose of administering justice, while the judge is the officer who presides over that tribunal.

The terms “court” and “judge” are sometimes used interchangeably and synonymously, but they are never technically the same in meaning.

[133]*133A court is an incorporeal, political being, composed of one or more judges, who sit at fixed times and places, attended by proper officers, pursuant to lawful authority, for the administration of justice. It is only when a court is in session thus regularly constituted that it may lawfully perform its fixed and permanent functions, and it is in this sense that the term “court of common pleas” is used in Section 1707, General Code.

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Related

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17 U.S. 316 (Supreme Court, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 Ohio St. (N.S.) 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hawke-v-le-blond-ohio-1923.