OPINION
This cause arises under our rules for disciplinary proceedings (§ 21-2-1(3), N.M.S.A. 1953). Respondent having filed his exceptions to the report of the hearing commissioners together with a designation of the entire record of proceedings before the commissioners, upon being advised of the estimated cost of the transcript which the respondent must deposit as provided in § 1.12 of the rules, in exceptions and by motion attacks as unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and Art. II, § 18, of the New Mexico Constitution, that portion of the rule which reads:
“The commissioners shall furnish the respondent with an estimate of the cost of an original and two [2] copies of the part of the record so designated, and within ten [10] days after the giving of such estimate, the respondent shall deposit the amount thereof with the commissioners.”
Consideration has been given to briefs filed by respondent and by amicus curiae representing the Board of Bar Commissioners, and we have concluded that respondent’s position is meritorious and the part of the sentence quoted above requiring deposit by a respondent was incorporated in the rule without sufficient consideration having been given to the implications incident to it.
When respondent asserts that the entire record is required in order for him to present his defenses before the court, he is asking for nothing beyond his day in court. It is for us to pass upon the question of whether discipline shall be imposed. Preamble to Rules for Disciplinary Proceedings, quoted in In re Morris,
Two issues are presented here. First, in a disbarment proceeding, is respondent entitled to procedural due process guaranteed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution? That the answer must be in the affirmative has been held in a multitude of cases marshalled in the note in
Second, would the requirements of procedural due process be met if respondent is denied the benefits of the record upon which the referees’ recommendation is based, unless he pays for it in advance? We are forced to conclude that they would not. As we understand the term “procedural due process,” there is embodied in it reasonable notice and opportunity to be heard and present any claim or defense. See Carter v. Kubler,
However, as of this time, no determination has been made in this case by the court on the question of the alleged misconduct of respondent, or whether any discipline is to be imposed. It is accordingly premature to compel repayment of transcript costs required to be paid in the first instance by the state bar association (§ 1.07). The issue here is not the same as that presented when an appeal is being taken from a judicial determination after notice and full hearing. Right to appeal generally is not guaranteed by the Constitution. It arises from statute. State ex rel. State Highway Comm. v. Quesenberry,
It follows that respondent’s motion that the record of proceedings before the referees be furnished and filed without the requirement of payment in advance is sustained, except for copies desired by respondent exclusively for his own use, for which a charge to cover actual cost may be made and collected in advance.
It is so ordered.
