The petitioner was admitted to the bar of this Commonwealth on February 23, 1906. He was removed from his office of attorney at law in the courts of this Commonwealth by a judgment of this court entered on November 24,1934. On April 6, 1942, he filed in the Superior Court for the county of Suffolk a petition for readmission to the bar. After the entry of that petition, it was referred to the board of bar examiners, who reported on January 27, 1943, that the petitioner possessed the necessary intellectual qualifications and legal attainments required to warrant his admission to the bar. An order of notice issued to the Bar Association of the City of Boston which filed a special answer on March 19, 1943. The Attorney General filed a petition for leave to intervene on April 22, 1943. The case was inactive until August 7, 1946. On that day the petitioner filed a motion that the answer of the Bar Association of the City of Boston be struck from the record. On October 21, 1947, the association filed a motion that the petition be referred to the board of bar examiners to inquire fully into the moral character of the petitioner and to report to the court its finding and recommendations with respect thereto as required by Rule 7 of the General Rules in Relation to Attorneys, adopted by this court on June 25,1945, to become effective on July 2, 1945.
The petitioner contends that the rules above set forth in their precise terms relate only to the filing of applications subsequent to the effective date of the rules (July 2, 1945), and that since his application for readmission to the bar was filed in the Superior Court on April 6, 1942, under the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 221, § 37, conferring concurrent jurisdiction upon the Supreme Judicial Court and the Superior Court of petitions for admission to the bar, the Superior Court had jurisdiction to hear and determine his petition, unaffected by the rules subsequently adopted by this court. In support of those contentions the petitioner cites decisions of this court to the effect that rules adopted within the rule making power of the judicial department have the force of statutes, are subject to the same rules of construction, and are not to be given retrospective operation in the absence of plain indication to the contrary.
The case of Keenan, petitioner,
After rescript in that case, Keenan was readmitted to the bar by an order or judgment entered in the Superior Court. Thereafter an order was entered by this court directing that informations by the Attorney General and certain bar associations seeking a review of the proceeding in which Keenan was readmitted to the bar be received and that notice issue thereon. These informations then came on for hearing before the full court, and after arguments and consideration it was held that this court had jurisdiction to review the proceeding in which Keenan had been readmitted to the bar, and it was ordered that the Chief Justice of the Superior Court send us the record of that proceeding. Matter of Keenan,
It is to be observed that the three cases just referred to were decided before the adoption of the General Rules in Relation to Attorneys by this court on June 25, 1945. The matter of formulating new rules in relation to attorneys was referred by the full court to a committee of the Justices for consideration not only of the necessity of changes suggested by the situation that developed in the Keenan cases but also of the necessity or advisability of changes in other respects not here material. Conferences were held by the committee of the Justices with the representatives of bar associations and of the board of bar examiners. After study the committee reported a draft of new rules in relation to attorneys, and after consideration the General Rules in Relation to
It is fully established that the control of membership in the bar is vested exclusively in the judicial department of our government. See Opinion of the Justices,
It is true, as urged by the petitioner, that statutes affecting substantive rights are interpreted as prospective only unless an intention that they shall operate retroactively clearly appears. The reason for this rule as stated in
The judgment or order entered in the court below dismissing the petition purports to reserve to the petitioner the right to “the transfer thereof” to the Supreme Judicial Court, as well as the right to bring a similar petition in the Supreme Judicial Court. Having no jurisdiction of the petition the court below was without authority to reserve a right of transfer thereof to the Supreme Judicial Court. The exceptions of the petitioner are overruled and judgment is to be entered dismissing the petition without preju
So ordered.
