Whitsitt v. Bar Rules Committee

269 S.W.2d 699, 223 Ark. 860, 1954 Ark. LEXIS 766
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 21, 1954
Docket5-317
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 269 S.W.2d 699 (Whitsitt v. Bar Rules Committee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitsitt v. Bar Rules Committee, 269 S.W.2d 699, 223 Ark. 860, 1954 Ark. LEXIS 766 (Ark. 1954).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This is an appeal by Horace W. Whitsitt from a Circuit Court judgment permanently disbarring him as an attorney.

After investigation and hearing — at which Mr. Whitsitt appeared — the Bar Rules Committee,1 filed complaint against Mr. Whitsitt, charging him with four specific acts of professional misconduct, being designated as (1) the Jackson case in 1951; (2) the Scott case in 1951; (3) the Wilson case in 1950, and (4) the Horn case in 1948. Circuit Judge Guy Amsler tried the case on exchange of circuits. The hearing began on November 7, 1952, and continued for two days. Then Mr. Whitsitt is rebuttal witnesses were heard on February 14, 1953; and the Circuit Court’s opinion and judgment were delivered on June 13, 1953. The record is voluminous, consisting of more than 568 pages. We copy and adopt as our own the opinion of the Circuit Judge.

Judge Guy Amsler’s Findings, Conclusions and Judgment

STATEMENT

On the 5th day of April, 1952, the Bar Rules Committee of the State of Arkansas filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Greene County, Arkansas, charging Horace W. Whitsitt with gross unprofessional conduct in the practice of law as follows:

“On September 8, 1951, C. A. Jackson, aged 73, of Greene County, Arkansas, was arrested and charged with the crime of rape of a 5-year-old girl, and shortly thereafter his son-in-law, Rev. Glen Thompson of Paragould, employed Defendant Horace W. Whitsitt to represent him. A fee of $150 was paid Defendant Whitsitt by C. A. Jackson’s son, Rev. Gayle Jackson of Sikeston, Missouri, to cover services of the preliminary hearing, which was waived on September 14, 1951. On September 25, Rev. Gayle Jackson discussed his father’s case at Paragould with Defendant Whitsitt, who told him that there was grave danger of his father being sent to the electric chair but that for a fee of $2,500 or $3,000 he thought he could save him. Defendant Whitsitt demanded $1,000 cash which Rev. Jackson paid in cash, with the amount of the balance of the fee to be determined later. At the request ■of Defendant Whitsitt, Rev. Jackson met him in Hayti, Missouri, on September 30, 1951, to discuss the balance of the fee, and was told to bring $1,000 cash and a check for $1,000. Defendant "Whitsitt again emphasized the seriousness of the case, the danger of the electric chair, and attempted to minimize the fee with suggestions of unethical expenses on his part of at least $1,500 in making-contacts through high officials to bring influence on the outcome of the case, to bribe jurors, paying off the proper persons, and in having the child’s mother as prosecuting witness leave the State. Rev. Jackson was told to come alone to the office of Defendant Whitsitt with the money the following day. On October 1,1951, Rev. Jackson paid $1,000 in cash and also a check for $1,000 to Defendant Whitsitt at the latter’s office, and signed a contract reciting a consideration of only ‘$1,000’ as full payment of all attorney's fees for the complete representation of C. A. Jackson, with no additional fees except in the event of a mistrial and retrial of the charges.
“Having obtained the consent of Rev. Jackson for his father to plead guilty to the lesser charge of assault with intent to rape and to accept a penitentiary sentence, Defendant WThitsitt entered into an agreement on November 16, 1951, with the Prosecuting Attorney to so plead, which was recommended by the Prosecuting Attorney to the Circuit Judge on November 19, 1951, and accepted by the Circuit Judge, all these facts being well known by Defendant Whitsitt. On November 24,1951, Rev. Jackson was called to Defendant Whitsitt’s office where Defendant Whitsitt wrongfully withheld the concurrence of the Prosecuting Attorney and Circuit Judge in the proposed plea, and falsely represented to him that the Judge and Prosecuting Attorney were demanding a bribe of $2,750 of which the Defendant would pay $1,500 if Rev. Jackson would advance an additional $1,250 to cover the alleged demands. Defendant Whitsitt again magnified the seriousness of the case, and later confirmed his fraudulent demand by offering to escrow $1,000 of his own money with $1,250 from Rev. Jackson to guarantee the acceptance by the Court of a plea of guilty of C. A. Jackson to the lesser offense with a penitentiary sentence. Rev. Jackson declined the offers of Defendant Whitsitt, and after consulting others he reported the matter to the proper authorities and made affidavit before the Greene County Bar Association, which in turn referred the complaint to Plaintiff Bar Rules Committee.
‘ ‘ In addition to the foregoing acts of withholding the true facts from his clients, of extracting an excessive fee from his clients on exaggerated and fraudulent representations, and in attempting to extort a further undeserved fee by means of false and slanderous statements defaming the administration of justice and reflecting on the integrity of the court and its officers, Defendant Whitsitt has shown a pattern and course of conduct in the past in the following instances of unprofessional dealings between lawyer and client:
“In 1948, Defendant Whitsitt filed two damage suits in the Greene Circuit Court under the style of (1) Thelmá Howard, Admx. v. Gulf Refining Co., J. S. Horne and B. C. Lloyd, and (2) Clifford Howard, Sr., Gd. v. Gulf Refining Co., J. S. Horne and B. C. Lloyd. During settlement negotiations between Defendant Whitsitt and counsel for Gulf Refining Company, Defendant Whitsitt called the local Gulf dealer, J. S. Horne, into his office for conference. Defendant Whitsitt expressed dissatisfaction over the amount of fee he would get from the proposed settlement, and suggested to J. S. Horne that if he would secretly pay him $1,000 or $2,000 the settlement with the Gulf Company could be consummated and Horne would benefit by being relieved of his part in the litigation. According to the terms of this unethical proposal, Defendant Whitsitt’s clients were not to know of or share in the payment he suggested Horne make to him in confidence. J. S. Horne declined the unethical offer made to him by Defendant Whitsitt.
“Early in 1951, Defendant Whitsitt was employed by Gertrude Scott and paid $575 on his representation that he could secure for her the release from the penitentiary of her husband, Daniel Monroe Scott, who had been convicted of Second Degree Murder and sentenced to imprisonment for seven years, beginning December 12, 1950. Pursuant to this employment Defendant Whitsitt secured a 6-day furlough for Scott in the Spring of 1951, and upon representations of being able to get Scott a furlough of indefinite duration, so as to amount to virtual freedom, Gertrude Scott and her husband made further payments to Defendant Whitsitt of about $175.00. The only other service rendered for these fees was the securing of another furlough totaling 50 days. Defendant Whitsitt did not act with candor and fairness in his assertions and representations to these clients and was guilty of gross over-reaching in his dealings with them.
“Cosmo Wilson of Greene County, Arkansas, was charged with the crimes of rape and incest, and inasmuch as he was without funds to employ counsel, the Court appointed Defendant Whitsitt as a member of the bar without fee, to represent the indigent defendant Wilson. A special setting of the case was made for February 13, 1950.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W.2d 699, 223 Ark. 860, 1954 Ark. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitsitt-v-bar-rules-committee-ark-1954.