On December 13, 1957, Harry R. Warren filed an application with the clerk of the Superior Court in New Haven County for admission to the bar on motion and without examination. It was accompanied by his sworn statement on the form furnished him and by supporting affidavits. Practice Book § 8. 1 The application was referred to the standing committee on recommendatiоns for admission to the bar, under the rule. The committee was composed of five members, one of whom did not participate in its deliberations and. report because of a disqualification due to a possible personal interest. The committee requested and received, pursuant to its practice, a report on the applicant from The National Conference of Bar Ex *269 aminers and conducted two interviews with the applicant.
On January 8, 1960, the committee’s report was submitted to a duly called meeting of the members of the bar of New Haven County. The committee reported that it could not find that the applicant had met all of the requirements of § 8 of the rules of the Superior Court and recommended that the appliсant not be admitted. Members of the bar at the meeting requested that the chairman of the committee state the reasons for its recommendation, but he said that its information was of a confidential nature which it could not furnish without an order of court. The meeting was adjourned to January 22, 1960, without any action being taken upon the *270 recommendation or the application but with the instruction that the committee obtain a ruling from the judges as to whether it should disclose the reasons for its recommendation. Thereafter, the committee conferred with the presiding judge of the Superior Court sitting at New Haven. He declined to act on the ground that he did not have authority to intervene at that point in the рroceedings. On January 22, a duly warned meeting of the bar was held, the chairman of the committee reported that he was unable to procure an order of the judges authorizing him to disclose the committee’s reasons for its recommendation, and, after discussion, a motion that the meeting accept the committee’s recommendation was declared lost and the meeting was adjourned. The committee then filed its report with the clerk of court, together with a transcript of the proceedings at the meetings of the bar on January 8 and 22, 1960. See Practice Book § 8.
On February 19, 1960, the applicant, by his counsel, claimed his application for a hearing at short calendar. See Practice Book § 8. At a hearing on March 11, 1960, the court ordered the committee to present information as to its proceedings and its reasons for its recommendation and continued the hearing until March 25, 1960. Thereafter, the committee filed with the court a statement Setting forth the reasons for its recommendation. This statement recited instances of alleged inconsistencies and mis- ■ representations contained in the documents submitted by the applicant. It expressed the committee’s belief, on the basis of information secured by it from others, that, despite the applicant’s explanation, there was a deliberate attempt to mislead and that in his personal interviews he wаs “evasive and lacking in candor and frankness.” For these *271 reasons, the committee reported that it was not satisfied that he was of good moral character as required by the rule. In a concluding paragraph, the committee stated that “upon the application being referred to it, in accordance with its practice, it requested a character report from The National Conference of Bar Examiners, which is issued only on the understanding that it will be regarded as a confidential document. The contents of such report were studied by the Committee. The Committee also interviewed the applicant personally on two occasions. Consideration was also given by the Committee to the verified application of the applicant and to a letter and other documents he submitted under date of June 15,1959.”
Notice of the hearing on March 25,1960, was duly given to all the members of the bar in New Haven County. See Practice Book § 8. No further meeting of the bar was held to consider the statement furnished by the committee undеr order of the court, but it was available to all in the clerk’s office. At the hearing on March 25,1960, the applicant claimed that the statement should be referred to a meeting of the bar, but the court denied this claim. At the hearing, the applicant made what he describes as an offer of proof concerning the committee’s statement. This, in substаnce, was designed to explain in written form, with supporting documents, the alleged inconsistencies and misrepresentations recited in the committee’s statement. The chairman of the committee personally advised the court at the hearing that a report on Warren’s application had been requested from The National Conferеnce of Bar Examiners, that the report was received, examined and discussed by the members of the committee and that the committee’s report was based *272 on this report and its contents and two interviews with the applicant as well as on papers submitted by him. The court excluded the applicant’s offer of proof. It concluded that “thе report of the Committee was based on its examination of the application submitted by the applicant, evidence and documents offered by him, the confidential report from The National Conference of Bar Examiners and two interviews with said applicant”; that the committee gave full, complete and thorough consideration to the application and all the material available to it; that it acted fairly, reasonably and without prejudice after a fair investigation of the facts; and that its conclusion that the applicant failed to satisfy it that he was of good moral character could not be disturbed. The court denied the application, and the аpplicant has appealed.
“Fixing the qualifications for, as well as admitting persons to, the practice of law in this state has ever been an exercise of judicial power.”
Heiberger
v.
Clark, 148
Conn. 177, 185,
In this case, the committee’s report recommended
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that the application be denied. At the hearing on March 25, 1960, the court had before it the application for admission, with suppоrting documents, as well as the report of the committee and the statement filed by it pursuant to the court’s order of March 11, 1960. The applicant’s offer of proof, made at the hearing on March 25, was excluded by the court on the ground that it “would not go behind the report if the Committee had acted fairly, reasonably and without prejudice.” In
O’Brien’s Petition,
Good moral character is a necessary and proper qualification for admission to the bar. See
Fairfield County Bar
v.
Taylor,
The court found that the committee’s recommendation was based in part on the report of The National Conference of Bar Examiners. This report was not before the court, nor does it appear from the committee’s record or the court’s finding that the applicant was examined by the committee on the matters contained in the report. We are not able to determine whether, apart from the confidential report, the committee’s recommendation, based on other evidence before it, would have been the same. If the report, because оf its confidential nature, could not have been placed in the applicant’s hands, the matters contained in it dealing with his moral qualifications could have been made known to him sufficiently to enable him to explain or refute them. The court should have taken evidence, in the absence of a transcript of the committee’s proceedings, to determine the procedure followed and, if that procedure did not allow the applicant a fair opportunity to rebut or explain the adverse evidence as to his moral character contained in the confidential report, as he claims, the court should have recommitted the report to the committee for further proceedings in conformity with the principles herein set forth.
Application of Burke,
The applicant alleges error in the denial of his claim that the report of the committee containing the additional information which the court on March 11, 1960, ordered it to submit should аlso have been submitted to a meeting of the bar. When
O’Brien’s Petition,
The applicant assigns error in the failure of the court to find that he had met the qualifications relating to education and to the practice of his profession for the requisite length of time in Florida and Illinois. In the instant case those qualifications were
*277
not in issue. The committee based its recommendation solely on lack of moral character, and the correction sought is not material in this case. See
Birdsey
v.
Kosienski,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and thе case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“[Practice Book] Sec. 8. admission of attorneys of other states. Any member of the bar of another state, who, after satisfying the state bar examining committee that his educational qualifications are such as would entitle him to take the examination in this state оr would have entitled him to take the examination in this state at the time of his admission to the state bar of which he is a member, shall satisfy the appropriate standing committee on recommendations for admission that (1) he is of good moral character; (2) he has actually practiced law for at least five years in the highest court of original jurisdiсtion in one or more states, or in one or more district courts of the United States, and is in good standing, provided if he has taken the bar examinations of this state and failed to pass them, he has actually practiced law at least ten years in such court or courts, and is in good standing; (3) is a citizen of the United States; (A) for not less than six months immediately preceding the application has been an actual resident of this state; and (5) intends to devote the major portion of his practice of the law to the state of Connecticut, may be admitted by the court as an attorney without examination upon written application and the payment to the clerk of a fee of $100, upon comрliance with the following requirements: Such application, duly verified, shall be filed in duplicate with the clerk of the superior court in the county in which the applicant resides and shall set forth his qualifications as hereinbefore provided. There shall be filed with such application the following certificates or affidavits, with one copy of each: Affidavits signed by two attorneys who personally know the *269 applicant certifying to his good moral character and supporting, to the satisfaction of the standing committee on recommendations for admission to the bar, his actual practice of law as defined under (2) of this section; an affidavit signed by two members of the bar of this state of at least five years’ standing that the applicant is of good moral character and has actually resided in this state for not less than six months immediately preceding the date of the filing of his application; and a certificate from the state bar examining committee that his educational qualifications are such as would entitle him to take the еxamination in this state or would have entitled him to take the examination in this state at the time of his admission to the state bar of which he is a member. Upon the filing of such application, certificates and affidavits, said clerk shall send a copy thereof to the chairman of the standing committee on recommendations for admission to the bar. Whеn said committee shall have aeted upon the application it shall notify said clerk and he shall give notice to every member of the bar of the county of a meeting of the bar of the county at which the report of the standing committee on recommendations upon the application will be presented. After said appliсation is aeted upon at such bar meeting, the standing committee on recommendations for admission shall file with the clerk a copy of its report, with the action of the meeting indorsed thereon. The application for admission may then be claimed for the short calendar, of which claim the clerk shall give notice to every member of the bar of the county. . . .” (Section as effective May 15, 1957.)
