Washington-Greene Legal Aid Society Application

45 Pa. D. & C.2d 563, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 243
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedFebruary 6, 1968
Docketno. 6401 in equity
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Pa. D. & C.2d 563 (Washington-Greene Legal Aid Society Application) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington-Greene Legal Aid Society Application, 45 Pa. D. & C.2d 563, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 243 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

Sweet, P. J.,

This matter comes before the court on the application of the O. E. O. Legal Services for a nonprofit corporation charter. The Washington-Greene Legal Aid Society has asked us, pursuant to the Act of May 5, 1933, P. L. 289, 15 PS §7201 et seq., to grant them powers of a nonprofit corporation “ ... to make available legal aid to all residents in the Counties of Washington and Greene, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, who, because of their financial inability are unable to procure such legal aid, and to undertake educational programs in which indigent residents may be instructed in and advised of their fundamental private legal rights and obligations, to the end that their performance, motivation and [564]*564productivity as citizens may be improved and their respect for the law increased”.

Because of the controversial nature of this application, the amount of money involved and the relatively novel nature of the proposal, we ordered a hearing, “as to the necessity, the legality, the propriety and the wisdom of the activities of the proposed corporation”.1

The Act of 1933, supra, as amended, 15 PS §7207, says, “The court shall consider the application. It may hear evidence, if any there be, on behalf of the applicants and against the application, ... If the court shall find the articles to be in proper form and within the provisions of this Act, and the purpose or purposes given in the articles to be lawful and not injurious to the community, ... a charter shall issue”. Hence, in compliance with the statutory mandate, we consider if the purposes are lawful and not injurious to the community.

All the learning in this field is new. Judge Raymond Pace Alexander in Community Legal Services, Inc., 43 D. & C. 2d 51 (1967), certiorari refused, has written a 41-page opinion on this subject for Philadelphia C. P. No. 4. He has held “The formation of a nonprofit corporation to provide legal services to persons living in poverty, or low income, does not violate the Act of April 28, 1899, P. L. 117, . . . prohibiting the practice of law by corporations”, and that such corporation does not violate Canon XXXV of the A.B.A. Canons of Legal Ethics.

Judge Alexander stated this, “Essentially, in considering the Community Legal Service application four major points require consideration. First, the need for legal services to the poor. Second, whether that need is already being filled. Third, whether it is in the public interest that the need be filled. Finally, we shall discuss the specific objections which have been [565]*565raised to the proposed plan and which in the Court’s view are without merit”.

It appears that there are already ll2 oí these O.E.O. legal aid societies federally funded in Pennsylvania.

We should make clear at the start that this concerns civil not criminal representation. This is not a public defender — there are no constitutional imperatives via Gideon3 here.

Applications similar to this came before the Appellate Division in New York State, three being consolidated for a proceeding.4 The New York courts, speaking through Botein, P. J., said a number of things of interest to us here. For instance, the proposed board of Washington-Greene Legal Aid Society will be 8 members of the bar association, 5 representatives of the poor and 2 appointed by the courts. Botein said corporations licensed to practice law must have directorates of sufficiently small size, palpable groups amenable to discipline and sanction by the court. Directorates of 32 members or more, he says, are too large. Needs for diverse representation and community involvement should be met at a council or other policy group and not in the board of directors or managers of law offices of corporations licensed to practice law, he declared. Although it was based on the New York statute, these cases held that in any legal assistance corporations supported by Federal anti-poverty funds the executive staff, those with responsibility to hire and fire, must [566]*566be lawyers. The New York court seems to think that it should not be involved through appointment or conferences in management of legal assistance corporations.

This adjudication is not controlling upon us, but it points to a critical problem in the instant case. The poverty program requires that community action programs be “. . . developed, conducted and administered with the maximum feasible participation of residents of the areas and members of the groups served”.5 The poverty area representation on the board will ordinarily be expected to fairly reflect the racial composition and geographic distribution of the poverty population: Guidelines for Legal Services.6 The program before us, in a sense, stands intellectually on two legs. First, it is a program of the national government. 81 Stat. 698, Public Law 90-222 “legal services” squarely provides for it. Second, the organized bar favors it. The House of Delegates of the American Bar Association on February 8, 1965, fully supported this type of program,7 but there is an area of conflict [567]*567between the two. The bar association participation is squarely predicated on the proposition of lawyer control of such offices. The text of the act and the N.Y.S. case, supra, both recognize such bar support, but on the other hand, the anti-poverty program, both in its basic law and in its directives, indicates that there must be maximum feasible participation of the poor.

The application before us reflects this national dilemma and seeks to reconcile it. It has some nonlawyers representative of the poor in a position of control of policy, but it provides for a director of legal service employees who will exercise executive authority in the office. Probably this is the best compromise that could be planned.

It seems fairly clear that the Canon of Ethics does not prohibit such an organization as this.8 Canon 35 says that while a lawyer should not be controlled by any corporate lay agency which comes between him and his client that “charitable societies rendering aid to the indigent are not deemed such intermediaries”.

Liberals favoring these offices may find some delicious irony in the fact that the American Bar Association once approved a plan by which attorneys associated with the Liberty League publicly advertised free legal services to those challenging the constitutionality of New Deal Legislation. A.B.A. Opinions of the Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances #148 (1935)9 said in part the canon “. . . certainly was never aimed at a situation such as this, in which a group of lawyers announced that they are willing to devote some of their time and energy to the interests of indigent citizens whose constitutional rights are believed to be infringed”: page 311.

[568]*568In Gunnels v. Atlanta Bar Association, 191 Ga. 366, 12 S.E. 2d 602 (1940), it seems the Supreme Court of Georgia approved representation by the Atlanta Bar Association, as such, in resisting the overreaching practices of loan sharks in that community and representing poor persons who had fallen into their clutches. A good deal of the steam against group practice of law, qua group practice, has been lost following NAACP v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Engelhardt v. United States Civil Service Commission
197 F. Supp. 806 (M.D. Alabama, 1961)
Gunnels v. Atlanta Bar Association
12 S.E.2d 602 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1940)
In re Community Action for Legal Services, Inc.
26 A.D.2d 354 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1966)
In re Pinkard
28 A.D.2d 34 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1967)
In re Higginbotham
221 F. Supp. 839 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1963)
Troutman v. Shriver
273 F. Supp. 415 (M.D. Florida, 1967)
Gideon v. Wainwright
372 U.S. 335 (Supreme Court, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Pa. D. & C.2d 563, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-greene-legal-aid-society-application-pactcomplwashin-1968.