90 P. 163 | Mont. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the court.
On October 8, 1906, W. H. Smead, of Missoula, filed in this court a petition for the disbarment of the above-named respondents, who are attorneys at law practicing in this state. The petition recites that the accused have been guilty of subornation of perjury, attempted subornation of perjury, and conspiracy. The substance of the allegations is as follows: That on or about the first day of May, 1905, the W. H. Smead Company, for a valuable consideration, purchased of one Jeanette M. Yandervoort a certain promissory note for $1,000, secured by a mortgage on real property in the city of Missoula. The note and mortgage were made and executed by one Ada H. Jones, who afterward married E. H. Payne. That there was no written assignment of the mortgage securing said note, and thereafter, for the purpose of defrauding the Smead Company, the accused attorneys induced Mrs. Yandervoort, who at that time had no interest in either, to go to the county recorder’s
After issue joined this court made an order appointing Josiah Shull, Esq., a.member of the bar residing at Missoula, to hear the evidence and report the same to the court, together with findings of fact thereon and conclusions of law. On the ninth day of May, 1907, Mr. Shull filed his report, in which he finds the accused not guilty of the charges contained in said petition
In the disbarment case of State ex rel. Stapleton v. Wines et al., 21 Mont. 464, 54 Pac. 562, the referee reported to this court recommending a dismissal of the charges preferred, with the following statement: “The effect of the disbarment of attorneys practically means their complete ruin, and, before they should be disbarred, the evidence to sustain the charges should be of such, a character that it satisfies the court to a reasonable certainty that the charges are true.” The court approved the sentiments expressed by the referee, with the added statement: “We feel no other disposition than to adopt the findings and recommendations of the-ref eree. ”
In this matter we have laboriously gone through the eight hundred and eighty-three typewritten pages of testimony, because we have felt it our duty to give the case a thorough examination. The principal witness for the relator was a so-called detective, who went into Parsons’ law office, in the guise of a student, for the confessed purpose of spying upon his movements and becoming acquainted with his affairs. The acts of this witness, as narrated by himself, are so devoid of decency, so utterly repugnant to all notions of how an honorable man should conduct himself; his confessions and admissions while on the witness-stand disclosed a conspiracy to get these attorneys disbarred, so premeditated and definite in its scope and purpose, that we have entirely discarded his testimony.
There is but one allegation of the petition that is substantiated, and that is that some person or persons attempted to defraud the W. H. Smead Company of its money by inducing Mrs. Vandervoort to compel the mortgage of record. There is no evidence whatsoever that the accused had any knowledge of the transaction until after this act was done. Thereafter they appeared as counsel for the Paynes and Kennedy, but there is no proof that any guilty knowledge these persons may have had
Eliminating from the record the testimony of the witness we have referred to, there is nothing to show professional misconduct on the part of the accused, and Ave therefore adopt the report of the referee. He satv the witnesses and was enabled to judge from their appearance and demeanor AA’hat credit should be given to their testimony.
The proceedings are dismissed.
Dismissed.