State ex rel. Lentz v. Port

178 Mo. 518
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 178 Mo. 518 (State ex rel. Lentz v. Port) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Lentz v. Port, 178 Mo. 518 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

ROBINSON, C. J.

This is a proceeding by prohibition to prevent respondent, as judge of the circuit ‘ court of Butler county, from taking further action in and about the disbarment of relator; which proceeding to disbar relator, the respondent judge had caused to be instituted in the Butler Circuit Court.

Relator’s first contention against the right of respondent taking further action in the disbarment proceeding against him, is based upon the proposition that as no affidavit of the existence of any fact contained in said charges against him was ever filed with respondent, or in the court of which he is the judge, and that as it is not claimed that respondeat judge had actual knowledge of the existence of said facts charged, or any of them, his order, made at the opening of the February term, 1901, of said Butler Circuit Court, directing that L. R. Thomasson, a member of the bar of. an adjoining county, file and prosecute charges against relator, were wholly without authority; and further, because respondent had no right to proceed with the hearing of the charges as filed by said Thomasson, until they had been duly verified by said Thomasson, or some one, as required by law.

For his second contention, relator says that if respondent, as judge of the Butler Circuit Court, ever had jurisdiction to hear and consider the disbarment proceedings begun against him in said court, that jurisdiction and authority was lost by an order of February 13, 1901, which respondent, as judge of said Butler Circuit Court, made and caused to be entered upon the records of said court, in which said order is recited respondent’s disqualification to sit at the hearing of said [520]*520proceeding, and that Judge James Fox of the Twenty-seventh Judicial Circuit is called in to hear and try said cause in his place and stead.

And as relator’s final protest against the right of respondent to further proceed with the hearing of the charges against him in the Butler Circuit Court, he says, that after respondent had caused the order of ° February 13th, aforesaid, to be set aside at the subsequent June term of said court, and was threatening to proceed with the hearing of said disbarment proceeding, relator then prepared and filed an application in due form in said court, praying that he be granted a change of venue in said cause, on account of the interest of the respondent judge in the result of said proceeding, and on account of respondent’s bias and prejudice against relator, and also because L. R. Thomasson, who had filed and was prosecuting the proceeding against him, has an undue influence over the mind of respondent, and that said application was denied and overruled.

On part of ■ respondent, the following contentions are made: first, that as this court has no appellate jurisdiction in disbarment proceedings it is powerless through the writ of prohibition to' review his action in the proceeding against relator in the Butler Circuit Court, or to direct or to stay the course of his conduct therein; and, second, that since under the statute, the defendant in a disbarment proceeding is not entitled to a change of venue, the order made by respondent as judge of the Butler Circuit Court on February 13th, disqualifying himself and calling in Judge Fox to preside at the trial of relator, was void, 'and being void, it is a matter of no concern that it was not set aside until after the adjournment of said February term of court; and further, respondent says, that the application filed by relator in his own behalf, that a change of venue be awarded to him, was denied, because under the statutes of this State, a change of venue is not allowable in a disbarment ‘proceeding.

[521]*521To the relator’s challenge of the authority of the respondent, as judge of the Butler Circuit Court, in proceeding with the hearing of the disbarment against him, for the reason set out in his first contention, all that need be said at this time is, that all courts of general jurisdiction in this State, possessed of the authority to admit to the bar of its own motion, a member of the profession, have the inherent power to cause to be instituted proceedings against that member, or any member of its bar, and to that end may designate any member of the' same bar or of any adjoining bar in the same circuit, or the prosecuting attorney of the county, for any professional misconduct, such as merits and deserves such a course of procedure, and it is not essential to the court’s authority, under such proceedings, that the facts of the charges made be within the actual knowledge of the judge of the court who may have directed that such proceedings be filed, or that the same be supported by the affidavit of any one, and further, that prohibition would not lie to stay the action of the court in such a proceeding, merely because of the absence of an affidavit supporting the charges made, even though the court might consider that the usual and better practice in- disbarment proceedings is to require that the charges against the delinquent be supported by the affidavit of some one.

So, to the challenge made by respondent of the authority of this court to issue its writ of prohibition herein, because, as he asserts, that having no appellate jurisdiction in disbarment proceedings, the court, therefore, is powerless through said writ to review his action as judge of the Butler Circuit Court, in the disbarment proceedings against relator, or to direct or stay the course of his conduct in such proceeding, it will be sufficient to say, this writ has not for its purpose the consideration or correction of any errors that may have been committed by respondent as judge of the Butler Circuit Court during the progress of the disbarment [522]*522proceeding against relator in that court. Confessedly, such matters would come under the exclusive jurisdiction of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, if the proceeding should ever, on appeal, be taken from relator’s court for review. But without regard to the appellate jurisdiction of this court, in any particular case, we have the amplest authority through and by aid of the writ of prohibition, to keep all courts of the State (whether from their orders, judgments or decrees, in any cause, appeals are or are not allowable to this or any other court), within the proper limit of their authority, or to prevent their continued assertion of authority over any cause or proceeding after its jurisdiction and authority therein has been lost or transferred to some other court, body or tribunal, by an order, by appeal or otherwise.

Under this writ, the inquiry is, not whether respondent as judge of the circuit court of Butler county committed error against the right of relator in the conduct of the disbarment proceedings. That must be determined on appeal, and not in prohibition. The inquiry here is, did any action taken by respondent in the disbarment proceeding, operate to defeat his further right to proceed with the trial of said cause, as he now asserts his right to do? The action of the respondent in the matter of the disbarment proceedings are only to be considered here, in so far and to the extent only as it may be necessary to- determine its effect-upon his present attitude to that cause.

This, then, brings us to the consideration of the question that must control our action in this proceeding, to-wit: the effect of the disqualifying order made by respondent judge at the February term, 1901, of the Butler Circuit Court, and the calling in of Judge Fox-to hear and try the proceeding for him.

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Bluebook (online)
178 Mo. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lentz-v-port-mo-1903.