125 N.Y.S. 193 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
Lead Opinion
The Association of the Bar of the City of Hew York presented to this court charges against the respondent asking for such action as justice.should require. The respondent answered such charges and the matter was referred to a referee, who has now reported, and upon the testimony taken before the referee and his report the proceeding is now before us for final disposition.
The petition presented alleged three charges against the respondent. The first charge was that the respondent had unlawfully and willfully obstructed, resisted and opposed, the United States deputy marshal in attempting to serve a subpoena upon one Buckingham, for which offense he was indicted by a grand jury in the United States Circuit Court under sections 5398 and 5399 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, was tried upon said indictment and convicted, and sentenced to pay a fine of §250. The second charge relates to the proceeding before Judge Lacombe of the United States Circuit Court in relation to • the examination by respondent before a^grand jury in that court, in which it is alleged that the respondent made certain statements to Judge Lacombe which were
An examination of the testimony before the referee justifies the court, I think, in.accepting his finding as to the facts, and in disposing of this proceeding the court will accept such findings as established. There are conclusions of the referee, however, which are based upon the facts as found by him which this court cannot accept. The respondent was a young gentleman born in Massachusetts, whose ancestors had borne a high reputation for generations. He was educated at Williams College, from which he was graduated, receiving his professional education at the Harvard Law School, from which he also was graduated with honor, was admitted to the bar of Massachusetts, and after practising there for sometime was admitted in Hew York. He is now thirty-six years of age and hitherto has borne an excellent reputation both in professional and private life. He was not a youth of inexperience and lacking in educational advantages, and, therefore, is without the excuse which is often pressed upon us, that in consequence he did not possess that appreciation of the ethics of the profession and the duties, which an attorney and counselor at law owes to his profession, to the courts of which he is an officer and to .the public. He would seem to have had important professional business which included a retainer by a Fritz Augustus Heinze, who appears to have been an ’officer and director in several large corporations, and whose acts
This offense being a misdemeanor, the conviction did not of itself disbar the respondent as it would have disbarred him had the offense been a felony.
The referee is satisfied that the respondent did not know at the time he advised Buckingham not to see the marshal that the marshal had in his possession a subpcena requiring Buckingham to appear before the grand jury ; that his advice to Buckingham not to receive the messenger from the United States district attorney was because he wished to obtain from Buckingham all the information possible as to the mutilation of these books, which subject he was then investigating; but just how that could interfere with his investigation is not very apparent. The respondent knew that the affairs of Ileinze and his associates were then under .investigation by the grand jury; that the United States attorney desired the production or inspection of these books of the copper company ; and it is difficult to imagine what the respondent could have thought that a messenger from the attorney of the United States could have wanted with an employee of this copper company whose books were required by the governmental officials except to procure the attendance of that person as a witness. It is significant to note that at or about this very time the respondent advised another employee of the company to accept service of a subpoena, making the significant remark concerning him that he knew nothing about the books, while he makes it quite clear that he was thus satisfied that Buckingham, whom he advised not to accept a subpcena, knew a very great deal about the books and their mutilation. That the object of the respondent was to prevent a communication between the representatives of the United States attorney and Buckingham is admitted and by his advice and interference he attained that object. This is not conduct consistent with the attitude an attorney should bear towards the courts when investigating, as he knew they were investigating, a criminal offense. We are, therefore, compelled to disagree with the conclusion of the learned referee that there was nothing in the respondent’s history during May and June, 1909, that can in fairness or justice be said to put a stain upon the good character he had theretofore maintained. In relation to this charge much stress is laid by the respondent upon the observation of the learned judge who tried the case in the United States Circuit Court
The second and third charges are connected with the acts of the respondent in appearing before the grand jury and insisting upon his privilege, when interrogated about the books of this copper company and his further statement to Judge Lacombe, when he was before the court upon an application to commit him for contempt in refusing to answer. The respondent was the director of a corporation as to the whereabouts of whose books the grand jury was investigating; his knowledge as to the affairs of the corporation of which he was a director was clearly knowledge that he was bound to disclose. It seems grotesque to say that he could claim to be privileged from answering in relation to corporate acts of a corporation of which he was a director because he had professional relations with its president or other directors. When the corporation made him a director, and he accepted that office, such acceptance necessarily removed him from the relation of attorney or counsel to its officers so far as the corporate affairs were concerned, and the claim of an attorney and counselor at law of the professional acquirements and standing of the respondent that he was entitled to claim such a privilege, and insist upon a refusal to answer on that ground, can hardly be believed to have been made in good faith and with the honest conviction that the objection was available. He had been investigating the mutilation of these books; he had been informed by the officers of the company that the books had been removed; and whether those officers were his clients or not he was certainly bound to disclose to the grand jury the-knowledge that he had on the subject. It is also a little difficult to accept the explanation of his conduct before Judge Lacombe when he was asked by Judge Lacombe if he knew anything about 'these books. The referee, however, has accepted, and we accept, the statement of Judge Lacombe as to his conviction that there was no intent to deceive the court in the statement that the respondent made to him. That seems to have been based upon what appeared to be the mental
The respondent in this case was in the employ of clients who were supposed to have great wealth, and who were at the head of important corporations. The impression that they are immune from civil or criminal prosecution for their acts seems to have pervaded the community of late years, and with it has grown up a sentiment among many members of the profession that, in "carrying out their behest, a lawyer is performing'his duty to the profession, to the public and to the courts. It is the importance or assumed importance of the client which is sought to justify acts which would be at once condemned in connection with a client who did not have great wealth or great prominence. If the profession is to have the respect of the community ; if it is to be trusted by courts and by others who have to do with the administration of justice, its members must realize that a crime is a crime whosoever commits it, and while the highest as well as the lowest criminal is entitled to the protection that the law gives, is entitled to have counsel of his selection, and is entitled to all the safeguards that have been devised for his protection, neither his wealth nor prominence will protect a lawyer in going outside of his professional obligations to shield him from the consequences of.liis acts.
I have thus indicated the considerations which have constrained me to radically differ from the learned referee as to the nature of the offense committed by the respondent and from "his statement that there was “nothing in Robinson’s eventful history during May and June, 1909, that can in fairness or justice be said to put a stain upon the good character he had theretofore maintained,” or accepting his further recommendation that “justice does not require that the respondent be subjected to punishment or discipline by reason of any of the matters referred to in the petition herein.” The respondent appeared before the referee and made a full disclosure, and the referee has acquitted him of any knowledge of the books and of any connection with their mutilation or removal. The excellent character that the respondent has received from many important gentlemen who have known him is entitled to consideration and the expressions from the judges of the United States Cir
Clarke, Scott and Miller, JJ., concurred; Latjghlin, J., dissented in respect to the punishment and voted for disbarment.
See Code Civ. Proc. § 67; Judiciary Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 30; Laws of 1909, chap. 35), §§ 88, 477.—[Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
On reading the evidence, I became convinced that the respondent is guilty of the crime of having willfully impeded the administration of justice, for which ho was duly indicted, convicted and sentenced in the Federal court, and also of the charge of having willfully deceived the Federal court and grand jury. Moreover, in his "testimony before the grand jury, on his own trial, on the trial of Arthur P. Heinze and on this hearing, I think that he has shown a reckless disregard of the truth.
As I view the- evidence, he has clearly forfeited liis right to the office of attorney and counselor, and the nature of the charges, satisfactorily established, and his recklessness in testifying, merit extreme punishment and, in my opinion, the dignity of the court and the good of the profession require that he should he disbarred.
However, since my associates do not view the evidence as I do, and since I cannot yield my convictions, for they have been confirmed by reflection, I have determined in deference to their views and to the decision about to be made, to withdraw my formal opinion setting forth and discussing the evidence upon which my convictions are founded, and to record my dissent with respect to the punishment and my vote for disbarment on this memorandum.
Respondent suspended from practice for one year. Settle order on notice.