210 P. 89 | Mont. | 1922
Opinion
On May 15, 1922, Honorable Wellington D. Rankin, Attorney General of Montana, filed in this court an accusation under oath, reciting that one J. A. Phillips, a resident of the town of Yalier, Pondera county, Montana, is holding himself out as an attorney at law, by advertisement and otherwise, and practicing the profession of an attorney and counselor at law in said town of Yalier, without first having been admitted to do so by this court, and that the practice and representations of the said J. A. Phillips are unlawful and in contempt of the authority, jurisdiction and dignity of this court. A citation was thereupon issued by the court directed
On October 16, 1922, the last day set for hearing, evidence and proof was submitted by the Attorney General in support of the allegations of the petition, from which it conclusively appears: That the said J. A. Phillips has for many years held himself out and conducted himself as an attorney and counselor at law, by acting for and by the warrant of others in legal formalities, negotiations, and proceedings, by appearing in justice courts for litigants, by taking and perfecting appeals from justice courts to the district court, and by at least on one occasion appearing in the district court in connection with one appeal so taken; by letters written to persons relating to legal matters, using a letter-head with the name of “J. A. Phillips, Attorney at Law,” and signing himself thereto, “J. A. Phillips, Attorney at Law, Yalier, Montana”; by using a professional card advertising himself as an attorney in the newspapers, by signs on his office building, and by the designation after his n'ame in the telephone directory as “attorney.” This evidence is convincing —in fact, discloses a most aggravated violation of section 8943 of the Revised Codes of 1921, continuing over a period of years. His attitude as to this proceeding since being served with process has not been such as to commend itself to the court, but, on the other hand, serves to prove that his conduct was deliberate and premeditated.