Webb v. State Bar

306 P.2d 458, 47 Cal. 2d 866, 1957 Cal. LEXIS 308
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1957
DocketL. A. 23814
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 306 P.2d 458 (Webb v. State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. State Bar, 306 P.2d 458, 47 Cal. 2d 866, 1957 Cal. LEXIS 308 (Cal. 1957).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is a proceeding to review a recommendation of the Board of Governors of The State Bar 1 that petitioner, James Charles Webb, be suspended from the practice of law for a period of six months. We have concluded that the evidence against petitioner is of such unsatisfactory char *868 acter that we cannot accept it as supporting the charges against him, and that the proceeding should be dismissed.

Following hearings before a local administrative committee, which found against petitioner and recommended a three months’ suspension, the board made independent findings as follows: As to count one, that petitioner “in collaboration with Leona Spagnol, participated in transactions lacking in good faith, wherein . . . Leona Spagnol, deeded her real property away and secreted certain personal property to hinder and delay a creditor.” As to count two, that petitioner “in collaboration with one Otiemae Kennedy, participated in transactions lacking in good faith, wherein . . . Otiemae Kennedy, deeded away her real property for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding her creditors.” As to count three, that a purported signature of petitioner as the notary public on a certificate of acknowledgment attached to a deed of trust is his true signature, that petitioner took the acknowledgment as notary public, and “that his participation in said transaction ties in with, and constitutes part of, a pattern or program to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of a client.” 2 It may be noted that the board did not expressly find that petitioner “knowingly” participated in the transaction which allegedly lacked “good faith,” although The State Bar urges that that is the fair meaning of the findings, in view of the board’s recommendation of discipline.

In reviewing a disciplinary proceeding this court passes upon the sufficiency and weight of the evidence and is not bound by the findings of fact of the local committee or the board, although the burden of showing that the board’s action was incorrect is upon petitioner. (Palmquist v. State Bar (1954), 43 Cal.2d 428, 435 [274 P.2d 640] ; Choate v. State Bar (1953), 41 Cal.2d 399, 405 [260 P.2d 609].)

Petitioner is now 55 years of age, was admitted to practice in this state in 1940, and has no prior disciplinary record. During the period here involved, commencing in 1949, petitioner was also commissioned as a notary public and maintained a law office in Long Beach, in which most of the acts forming the basis of the subject charges allegedly occurred.

Count One

The substance of the first charge against petitioner is *869 that in September, 1949, while acting as attorney for Mrs. Leona Spagnol in a divorce proceeding, petitioner advised the client to conceal household furniture upon which $1,500 was owing to a finance company, and to transfer her home, in which she had an equity of some $3,500, out of her name by means of a deed signed in blank, in order to avoid a levy thereon by the finance company, and that thereafter the name of petitioner’s secretary was inserted in the deed as grantee. Petitioner denies advising Mrs. Spagnol to take any steps for the purpose of hindering or delaying the finance company, and claims that the deed was completely filled out at the time Mrs. Spagnol signed it and that it was given for the purpose of securing sums owing petitioner by Mrs. Spagnol and for the further purpose of handling the property during her absence from Long Beach.

Upon extended analysis of the conflicting testimonies of the several witnesses we are impelled to accept petitioner’s testimony, much of which is corroborated by his secretary, in preference to that which opposes it. The finance company, asserted to have been the victim, or intended victim, of the alleged hindering activities, does not itself make any charge against petitioner. No representative of the company was even produced as a witness. The case against petitioner is based almost entirely upon the testimony of Mrs. Spagnol, whose story is not only uncorroborated as to the pertinent details, but is contradicted in some material respect by every other witness who testified as to count one and is also inconsistent within itself as to any alleged misconduct on the part of petitioner. For example, Mrs. Spagnol testified that on the date she claimed petitioner advised her to secrete her furniture from the finance company, she was then able to pay the finance company the amount owed them, thus showing she was not then insolvent and that it was not to keep that company from taking the furniture that she moved it. There is no showing that the company suffered any prejudice or loss from any act of petitioner. Both Mrs. Spagnol’s testimony and other evidence tends to show that she moved the furniture in order to secrete it from her husband, with whom she was having marital difficulties, and to induce him to make the payments on it. That she succeeded in this objective is established by Mr. Spagnol’s testimony. He testified that Mrs. Spagnol told him she was losing the home and had the furniture in Hollywood and asked if he wouldn’t try to help her pay for the furniture and reestablish the home; “She *870 went back to this man in Hollywood [not connected with this proceeding], staying in the home with him; and she had borrowed $150.00 from this man, . . . and she said this man wouldn’t give the furniture back unless she paid that $150.00 that she borrowed ... I paid the $150.00 and paid the $1,500.00 due on the furniture which she had agreed to assume when we separated [Mrs. Spagnol was not herself a signatory to the finance company paper]. . . . [S]he cried on my shoulder and I felt sorry for her. ’ ’ Mrs. Spagnol confirmed that Mr. Spagnol paid the finance company the $1,500 “after we reconciled.”

Further, Mrs. Spagnol admitted that she was indebted to petitioner at the time she executed the deed to her home to him and that she had requested petitioner to handle the renting of the house for her and the making of payments on it to the holder of an encumbrance. It also appears that the key was delivered to petitioner for the purposes stated. Moreover, the evidence indicates that Mrs. Spagnol thereafter attempted unsuccessfully to borrow additional money from petitioner, and that she subsequently admitted to a witness that she had transferred the home to petitioner because of attorney fees she owed him, but that she now had him “before the Bar Association and was going to put him and his secretary behind bars because he had tried to take the home away from her . . . She said, ‘Well, I am going to teach him a lesson, so he won’t do that to anyone else ... As soon as we win the case, me and Mr. Kennedy [involved in counts two and three of the charges against petitioner] are going to sue him for $10,000 damages and we are going to buy a Cadillac car. ... We know that we will get the $10,000 and besides, we are going to put him behind bars. ’ ’ ’ Actually, the home was reconveyed to Mrs.

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

Related

Hallinan v. Committee of Bar Examiners
421 P.2d 76 (California Supreme Court, 1966)
Rock v. State Bar
371 P.2d 308 (California Supreme Court, 1962)
Dreyfus v. State Bar
356 P.2d 213 (California Supreme Court, 1960)
Sullivan v. State Bar
326 P.2d 138 (California Supreme Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 P.2d 458, 47 Cal. 2d 866, 1957 Cal. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-state-bar-cal-1957.