Wright v. Roberts

573 S.W.2d 468, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 670
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 573 S.W.2d 468 (Wright v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Roberts, 573 S.W.2d 468, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 670 (Tenn. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

FONES, Justice.

Appellant, Charles G. Wright, Jr., a member of the Chattanooga bar, was charged with unprofessional conduct committed while representing the wife in a divorce action in the Circuit Court of Hamilton County, Tennessee, and during his representation of a party seeking appointment as conservator of her father in the Chancery Court.

In the divorce action he was charged, (1) with advising his client to violate a restraining order; (2) surreptitiously taking a default judgment and final decree of divorce without notice to opposing counsel who had appeared in the case and without notice to the judge who awarded the decree that the husband had a divorce action pending in another division of the court that had been filed prior to the wife’s action; and (3) filing a contempt citation against another lawyer and failing to present any evidence in support thereof.

[470]*470In the conservatorship proceeding, appellant was charged with (1) failing to appear for scheduled motions; (2) failing to respond to the orders of the chancellor; (3) failing to divulge to one chancellor prior proceedings before another chancellor; and (4) failing to divulge the dismissed status of the conservatorship.

A hearing committee consisting of Frank N. Bratton, J. D. Culvahouse, and Robert Kirk Walker, found that appellant was guilty of unprofessional conduct in violation of T.C.A. § 29-308(5), disciplinary rule 1— 102(4), (5), and (6) and disciplinary rule 7— 102(A)(7) and (8) and suspended him from the practice of law for a period of six months. Appellant petitioned to chancery court for a review of the judgment of the hearing committee and Chancellor Len Broughton, sitting by special designation, affirmed their action in suspending appellant for six months.

Appellant has brought a direct appeal to this Court from the action of the chancellor and the case has been orally argued.

I.

Appellant represented the wife, Kathline Ann Wallace and Robert H. Crawford, an attorney at the Chattanooga Bar, represented the husband, Ronald Neal Wallace. The husband’s complaint for divorce was filed on January 27, 1976, at 11:44 a. m., and assigned docket number N-35381. Judge Walker, Judge of Division IV of the Circuit Court of Hamilton County had signed a restraining order at 11:35 a. m. restraining the wife from removing the minor child of the parties from the State of Tennessee.

At 1:26 p. m., on January 27, 1976, appellant filed, on behalf of the wife, a complaint for divorce which was assigned docket number N-35387. Appellant obtained a restraining order from Judge Summitt, Judge of Division I at 1:28 p. m. on that date restraining the defendant from coming about the plaintiff or her residence or threatening her or the child or interfering with the custody of the child in plaintiff, wife.

Appellant testified that he received a call later in the afternoon of January 27, advising him of the filing of the husband’s suit and asking if he would accept service of process. He responded that he would do so if Mr. Crawford would accept service of process in the suit he had filed on behalf of the wife. Later that same day appellant accepted service of process for his client and Mr. Crawford accepted service of process for his client.

During the thirty day period immediately following the filing of these suits, appellant and Mr. Crawford had a number of communications involving the restraining orders, the appropriate amount of temporary child support and the father’s visitation privileges with the minor child.

They worked out an agreement for $20 per week temporary child support which was paid to appellant for his client. Husband learned that the wife had taken their ten month old child from the state. Mr. Crawford called appellant and confronted him with the fact that the restraining order had been violated. Appellant insisted and continues to insist that he did not read the restraining order when the bill was served upon him or at anytime prior to Mr. Crawford’s call. Appellant advised Mr. Crawford that the wife was in Atlanta but that satisfactory visitation privileges would be worked out.

On Thursday, February 26, 1976, the thirtieth day following the filing of the suits, appellant and Mr. Crawford worked out an arrangement for the wife to bring the child to Chattanooga for visitation with the father. On that same day, appellant filed an answer in the husband’s lawsuit and took a default judgment against the husband in the wife’s lawsuit, without notice to opposing counsel. Appellant testified that he called his client in Atlanta at about 2:00 p. m. on Thursday, February 26, 1976, and advised her that if no answer was filed by the time the courthouse closed at 4:00 p. m. he would take a default judgment and that unless she heard from him later she was to be present in Chattanooga on Friday for [471]*471the purpose of getting the divorce. Appellant testified that, in fact, wife’s aunt drove her to Chattanooga on the 26th and when he saw her on the morning of the 27th he learned that she had not brought the child, and would not bring the child to Chattanooga for the visitation which had been arranged. Appellant called Mr. Crawford’s office on Friday, February 27, 1976, and left word that the child would not be available in accordance with the agreement. On that same day appellant took his client and her witnesses to the courthouse where they learned that Judge Summitt, to whose division the wife’s case had been assigned, was out of town. Arrangements were made for Judge Payne to hear the wife’s case by interchange and a final decree of divorce was entered in Judge Payne’s court. Judge Payne did not know that the husband had filed a divorce complaint against the wife and did not know that the husband was represented by Mr. Crawford. Appellant did not disclose those facts to Judge Payne.

Appellant had mailed a copy of his answer in husband’s suit to Mr. Crawford which Mr. Crawford received on Saturday. Mr. Crawford prepared an answer for filing in the wife’s suit on Friday, February 17, mailed a copy to appellant, but did not file it in the clerk’s office that day.

On March 8, 1976, Judge Payne, the presiding Judge of Part II of the Circuit Court of Hamilton County heard the husband’s motion and set aside the default judgment and the final decree of divorce and transferred the case to Division III for consolidation with the husband’s case which had been assigned the lowest docket number. Later the same day Judge Milburn, Presiding Judge of Division III, held a hearing on Mr. Crawford’s petition to hold appellant in contempt for his complicity in violating the restraining order against removing the child from the state and taking a default judgment and final decree of divorce without notice to Mr. Crawford and without advising Judge Payne that the husband had a lawsuit pending in Division III of the Circuit Court seeking a divorce from his wife on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment and permanent custody of the minor child, and that the husband was represented in the wife’s suit by counsel.

Judge Milburn found appellant in contempt of court and imposed a fine of $50 and a ten day jail sentence, but suspended the jail sentence.

Appellant insisted that he was unaware of the local rule requiring consolidation of the two cases; that he entertained the good faith opinion that he was entitled to treat them as separate cases and in that posture Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
573 S.W.2d 468, 1978 Tenn. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-roberts-tenn-1978.