26 Minn. 25 | Minn. | 1879
In 1874, the respondent was admitted by the .•district court in and for the county of Carver to practise as
We shall not stop to determine whether, after having neglected to qualify until the 11th day of August, it was competent for Iverson to enter upon the duties of a justice of the peace, upon qualifying on that day. For the purposes of this ease, and in favor of the respondent, it may be admitted that this was competent. Even if it were not, the respondent might honestly have believed it to be so, and therefore have been guilty of no intentional wrong in advising Iverson that it was competent. But on what ground can the respondent’s conduct, in ante-dating the jurats and the acimowledgmenfc of the bond, be justified or excused? The respondent, whose testimony was taken in the present proceeding, though explicitly interrogated on this point, neither offers nor attempts to offer any justification, excuse or explanation whatever. He does not claim that he believed that he was doing right. We cannot suppose that a man possessing so much intelligence, ability and learning as he manifests, coaid have imagined that he was justified by any legitimate or proper consideration in thus falsely dating the jurats and acknowledgment. He must be taken to have known that this was wrong, for no good purpose could be subserved by it. It is quite apparent that the respondent’s object in affixing the false dates was to make it appear that the justice had qualified before he in fact had; that he had qualified before the ease was transferred to him, so that the transfer was properly made to a justice legally competent to take the case. A justice elect who has not taken his oath of office has no authority to act as justice. He is liable to a penalty if he does so act. Gen. St. c. 10, § 43. He is not a justice to whom a case can properly be transferred.
The false appearance in this case was produced by what was, in its essential nature, a falsification of a record. No argument can be required to show that the act done was
We are of opinion that the act of the respondent in affixing ihe false dates to the jurats and acknowledgment were acts of .“wilful misconduct in his profession.” For such misconduct, Gen. St. c. 88, § 18, authorizes an attorney to be removed or suspended. The respondent is suspended from practising in any of the courts of this state for the period of six month's from the filing of this decision; and it is further ordered that he pay the costs and disbursements of this proceeding.
Gilfillan, O. J., because of illness, did not sit in this case.