The plaintiff in error was prosecuted in the district court for Lancaster county by means of an information presented by the county attorney, in which he is by the first count charged with a constructive contempt of court, in the willful attempt to hinder the due administration of justice in a proceeding pending before said court, and by a second count thereof with malfeasance as an at
In this proceeding to review the judgment thus rendered we will, for convenience, first notice the assignments which present the refusal to dismiss the information upon the filing of the answer to which reference has been made. It has been held that in all prosecutions for contempt arising out of proceedings in common law actions, or which are cognizable by courts of law as distinguished from courts of equity, the answer of the accused unequivocally denying the alleged contemptuous act, unless committed in facia curia, is conclusive in his favor. (4 Ency. of Pl. & Pr., p. 795, and cases cited.) But the applicability of that rule to our practice is a question not presented by this record, since the motion was directed to the information as a whole and not merely to the charge of contempt. The argument of the plaintiff in error, so far as it relates to this branch of the case, appears to rest upon the assumption that a proceeding for the disbarment of an attorney is in effect a prosecution for contempt of court, and governed by the. rules of practice incident thereto. The fact that a contempt may and in practice frequently has been held to be sufficient ground for disbarment has no doubt led to some confusion upon the subject, although the source of jurisdiction in the two classes of cases, as well as the end to be subserved by the respective proceedings, is essentially different. A contempt by a licensed attorney may, and indeed frequently does, constitute grounds for disbarment, but it by no means follows that cause for disbarment, of necessity, amounts to a contempt. The distinction between the two proceedings is thus correctly
Much has been said in argument respecting the joinder of the proceeding for disbarment with the prosecution for contempt. We are, however, unable to perceive any substantial objection to the practice complained of. There was, it should be observed, no motion or request for an order requiring the county attorney to elect between the two counts of the information. Where two or more distinct felonies, arising out of different transactions, are charged in the same indictment or information, the prosecutor will, on motion of the accused, be required to elect
The remaining questions relate to the refusal of the dis
The attorney general has, it should be stated, expressed a doubt’of the jurisdiction of the district court to commit plaintiff in error for non-p.uyrn.ent of costs. The theory upon which the court acted in the imposition of that part of the penalty is not apparent from the record or briefs of counsel. We are satisfied, therefore, without pursuing the subject, to so modify the judgment as to award execution for taxable costs, in accordance with the statute above cited. The judgment as thus modified will be affirmed.
Judgment accordingly.