154 A.2d 878 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1959
This is a presentment by the grievance committee charging the respondent with violation of canon 10 of the canons of professional ethics, which prohibits the purchase by an attorney of any interest in the subject matter of the litigation which he is conducting. Practice Book, p. 4. The respondent pleads in abatement because on or about September 11, 1958, he was reprimanded by the grievance committee in the exercise of its duties and powers under §
The demurrer admits any facts provable under the plea in abatement. Stamford Dock RealtyCorporation v. Stamford,
"An attorney at law is an officer of court exercising a privilege or franchise to the enjoyment of which he has been admitted, not as a matter of right, but upon proof of fitness through evidence of his possession of satisfactory legal attainments and fair private character. Fairfield County Bar v.Taylor,
"Presentment for misconduct . . . shall be made by written complaint of the grievance committee or of the state's attorney or of any member of the bar by direction of the court." Practice Book § 12. Thus, the Superior Court can take cognizance of the conduct of an attorney in any one of several ways.
"There is no plaintiff. The State is not a party . . . to these proceedings. No person is a plaintiff. There may be, indeed . . . one who has called the court's attention to alleged misconduct, but he is in no sense a party, and has no interest in the outcome save as all good citizens or worthy members of the bar may have. The complaint made, the court controls the situation and procedure, in its discretion, as the interests of justice may seem to it to require. It may even act upon its own motion without complaint and thus be the initiator of proceedings."In re Peck,
I do not believe that it was the legislative intention in adopting §
While counsel for the grievance committee has not raised the question, I am obliged to point out that the plea of the respondent is wholly outside the scope of the grounds of abatement. It is really a plea in bar. Matter in bar of an action may not be entertained in a dilatory plea. Guglielmino v.Guglielmino,
The demurrer to the plea in abatement is sustained.