State ex. rel. Wolfe v. Kirke

12 Fla. 278
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 12 Fla. 278 (State ex. rel. Wolfe v. Kirke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex. rel. Wolfe v. Kirke, 12 Fla. 278 (Fla. 1868).

Opinion

WESTCOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case arises out of an order of the county court of Escambia county, striking the name of J. Dennis Wolfe, an attorney of that court, from its roll of attorneys, and depriving him of the rights and privileges of an attorney of that court.

Upon the filing of a transcript of the record of the judgment of the county court containing the evidence there introduced, and a petition praying an alternative writ of mandamus, this court, after inspection, granted the prayer of the petition, and awarded an alternative writ of mandamus directed to the judge of the county court. The judge of the county court has made his return to the alternative writ in the words following :

“ That he claims the right, as judge of the county court of Escambia county, upon the facts apparent upon the record accompanying the petition in this ease, to disbarr the said J. Dennis Wolfe from practicing as an attorney-at-law in his court, and he admits that he has caused the name of the said Wolfe as attorney as aforesaid to be stricken from the roll of attorneys of Ms said court, as stated in said petition.”

To this return a demurrer is filed, and joinder in demurrer.

The grounds of the demurrer are two :

First. “ That the respondent, as judge of the county court of Escambia county, had not the power or authority by law to disbarr the relator, or to strike his name from the roll of attorneys of Ms court, or to refuse him the rights and privileges of an attorney therein.”

The right of the petitioner to practice as an attorney in the [280]*280county court is not derived from any order or' proceeding in that court. The law regulating the subject (Thompson’s Dig., 822, 388,) provides: “ It shall be the duty of any person wishing to obtain a license to practice law in the courts of this State,, to present to one of the judges of the circuit courts satisfactory evidence of good moral character, and that he is twenty-one years of age, whereupon the judge shall examine into the qualifications of the applicant, and if found qualified he shall grant him a license to practice in the several courts of this State.” i}i i\i * * * * * ❖ £

“No person shall be permitted to appear as an attorney and counsellor-at-law in any cause in the courts of this State, until he shall have produced to the court in which he proposes to practice, a license signed by one of the circuit courts, or a certificate under the hand and seal of a clerk of some one of the circuit courts of the United States, of his having been admitted to practice in said circuit court, which license or certificate shall be entered upon the minutes of the court in which the said attorney wishes to practice, and the original returned by the clerk to said attorney.”

It will be thus seen that the right to practice in the county court results from the grant of a license to practice in the several courts of this State by a judge of one of the circuit courts of this State, and that upon the production of a license so signed it is required that he shall bo permitted to appear as an attorney and counsellor-at-law in any of the courts of this State. The petitioner having been so admitted by a judge of the circuit court, and having taken the necessary steps to -become entitled to practice in the county court, contends that there is no power in the county court to prohibit him from practicing in that court. That the right to practico in the county court does not emanate from any power which it has over the admission of attorneys is plain; that the judge of the county court has no authority to deny admission as an attorney of that court to one who exhibits “ a license to practice in tbe several courts of [281]*281this State granted in conformity to law,” is clear, but does it follow that because the admission of tlie party to practice does not result from any exercise of power by tlie county court, that after such admission -the county court cannot, after due process of law, deny the party so admitted the rights of an attorney of that court for good cause ? Does not the grant of the license to practice in the several courts by the circuit court, operate simply to entitle him to the privilege of an attorney in the several courts without further examination, and does he not, after such admission, become subject to bo denied the right to practice before that court ? These cpiestions involve an inquiry into the effect of tho statute.

What was the law independent (if the statute ? At common law tlio courts had no power to admit attorneys or counsellors, and it has been held that for this reason this is a power not inherent in a court, and in the absence of constitutional provisions a matter for regulation by the Legislative Department of tho Government. It cannot be claimed as a part of tho inherent power of courts, or as resulting necessarily from any power which they have. Indeed, barristers or counsellors-at-law in England wore never even appointed by tho courts, but were called to tho bar by the Inns of Court, which were associations not vested with even corporate powers, nor could the courts control the discretion of tho Inns of Court as to whom they would call. In England the power of the courts to appoint attorneys has been from time to timo regulated by statute. There were some acts anterior to that date, but the act which gave shape, to the matter, and became a model, was the act of 4 Hen. IV., chapter 18, which, among other things, provided “that all attorneys should be examined by the justices, and by their discretion their names shall be put upon tho roll,” and the matter has been further controlled and regulated by subsequent statutes. 3 Jas. I., ch. 7; 6 and 7 Vict., ch. 73; 20 and 21 Vict., chap. 77. In some of tlie American colonies the power of appointing attorneys was exercised by the Governor of the colony, who [282]*282usually took advice from the Chief-Justice of the Supreme Court.

Before the statutes above-mentioned, which regulated the subject and gave the courts the power to examine and admit attorneys, the courts would not suffer suitors to have an attorney, because the words of the writ were to command the defendant to appear, and that was always taken to be in proper person. At common law all parties had to appear in person. Attorneys, anterior to the statutes, could only be had by those who had permission of the King, and such attorneys were simply attorneys in fact. It was the custom of the King to direct his writs to the judges, commanding them to receive such persons by their attorney, and the judges were bound soto do. Fitz Herbert’s Reports, 59.

In Now York, by statute, persons upon whom the degree of Bachelor of Laws has been conferred by the Law School of Columbia College, arc entitled, without any further examination, to be admitted to practice in the courts of that State, and the Court of Appeals has compelled the Supreme Court against its will to admit them. Selclen, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, in the matter of the application of Henry W. Cooper, (22 N. Yk. Rpts., 81, where this question arose,) says: “ So far as I can see, admission may as well have been by the Governor, the Attorney-General, or any other public functionary, as by the courts.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Fla. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wolfe-v-kirke-fla-1868.