108 So. 107 | La. | 1926
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *13 On May 8, 1924, Mrs. Marion Beattie (now deceased) through her attorneys, Joseph H. Levy and Clifton F. Davis (who are the defendants here), filed her certain petition in the district court of Caddo parish, in the matter entitled "Mrs. Marion Beattie v. M.D. Dimitry et al.," No. 37509 of the docket of said court; and out of the filing of that petition comes this action for libel.
Thus: She (Mrs. Beattie) charges that this plaintiff, who is a member of the bar, practicing at Shreveport, entered into a conspiracy with two other members of the bar, and with certain parties "pretending" to be the collateral relations and heirs at law of one Mrs. Florence A. Toombs, then lately deceased at Shreveport, to defraud her (the said Mrs. Beattie) out of the estate of the said Mrs. Toombs, to wit, by pretending that the last will and testament of the said Mrs. Toombs, by which she (Mrs. Beattie) was given the whole estate of some $80,000 (less a legacy of $5,000 to another) was a forgery, and that *14 she (Mrs. Beattie) had forged it; and that, by means of threats of both civil and criminal proceedings against her, they succeeded in forcing her to compromise with said pretended heirs by giving them her notes for $60,000, secured by mortgage on the property belonging to the estate. Wherefore she prays that the compromise be annulled and the said notes be declared void.
Which petition was duly "verified" by the petitioner in person.
"The charges in article 13 of said petition were and are altogether immaterial, irrelevant, and not pertinent to the issues presented in said petition; and are false, slanderous, libelous, and malicious; and were known by the said defendants [Levy and Davis] to be irrelevant, false, and slanderous; and were made by them maliciously for the purpose of embarrassing and prejudicing petitioner in the defense of the other serious charges therein made against him, which he will prove to be false on the trial of that suit."
Which article 13 of said petition is as follows, to wit:
"That although the said E. Barnett, Esq. [one of the other two attorneys], was appointed attorney for absent heirs [in the matter of the succession of Mrs. Toombs], as heretofore stated, he did not himself attempt to locate or trace any of the said heirs as required by law, but on the contrary associated himself in anunlawful private venture with one M.D. Dimitry, an attorney at this bar, for the purpose of locating the pretended heirs of the said Mrs. Toombs, urging them to litigate with your petitioner, and for the purpose of entering into a *15 contract of employment with them to annul and set aside the will of the said Mrs. Toombs; all inviolation of R.S. [1870] 118, which prohibits thefomenting of lawsuits, and also in violation of thecode of ethics of the bar of the state of Louisiana,which prohibits the soliciting of business by membersof the bar of this state." (Italics ours.)
"That said charges in article of said petition [although duly "verified" as aforesaid] were conceived by, and written into said petition by, the said Joseph H. Levy and Clifton F. Davis, acting jointly and in concert, as their own charges against petitioner, and for the purpose above mentioned [see paragraph III above] without any suggestion to that effect bytheir clients." (Italics ours.)
The petition further sets forth:
That said charges were widely circulated in the newspapers, and that "petitioner believes, and therefore alleges, that said newspaper articles were inspired, and caused to be printed, by said Levy and Davis for the purpose of injuring petitioner's professional standing and prejudicing his defense of the other serious charges," etc.
Wherefore petitioner prays for judgment in damages against said Levy and said Davis.
The trial judge overruled the plea of prematurity, but sustained the exception of no cause of action and dismissed the suit.
Plaintiff appealed; and defendants have answered the appeal, praying that the plea of prematurity be sustained, and in the alternative that the judgment be affirmed.
But we think the exception of no cause of action well founded.
At the same time, it is as well not to pass over, as if approving, the use of strong language and extravagant terms by one member of the bar towards another. An attorney should never himself indulge, nor permit his clients to indulge, in charges against a fellow member of the bar, unless upon strong proof of misconduct. For members of all the learned professions should take heed, not only to drive out of their ranks the unworthy, but with equal zeal to guard as jealously as their own the good name of their fellow practitioners, to the end that the honor *18 and dignity and usefulness of the profession be preserved.