On November 22, 1939, a certified copy of the record of the conviction of Donald A. Bothrock, an attorney at law, on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, sec. 245) was filed in this court. It was filed pursuant to sections 6101 and 6102 of the Business and Professions Code (added by Stats. 1939, p. 357, formerly section 288, Code Civ. Proc.). The record shows that on October 30, 1939, in the action of the People of the State of California v. Donald A. Bothrock, No. 61939, pending in the superior court, in and for the county of Los Angeles, the defendant therein pleaded “guilty” to count three of an information filed October 7, 1935, charging assault with a deadly weapon, committed in the county of Los Angeles on September 12, 1935. The court sentenced the defendant to serve two months in the county jail. The judgment of conviction has become final and the sentence imposed upon the defendant has been served.
Section 6101 of the Business and Professions Code provides:
“Conviction of a felony or misdemeanor, involving moral turpitude, constitutes a cause for disbarment or suspension as provided in section 6102.
“The record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence and the clerk of the court in which the conviction is had shall, within thirty days thereafter, transmit a certified copy of the record of conviction to the Supreme Court. The proceedings to disbar or suspend an attorney shall be undertaken by the court upon the receipt of the certified copy of the record of conviction.
“A plea or verdict of guilty is deemed to be a conviction within the meaning of this section.”
Section 6102 provides:
“Upon the receipt of the certified copy of the record of conviction of an attorney of a crime involving moral turpitude, the court shall suspend the attorney until judgment in the case becomes final. When a judgment of conviction becomes final, the court shall order the attorney disbarred.
“The other provisions of this article providing a procedure for the disbarment and suspension of an attorney do not apply to an attorney convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude, unless expressly made applicable.”
On January 5, 1940, the attorney, referred to herein as the “petitioner”, or as the “defendant”, moved to dismiss *452 the proceeding herein on the ground that the crime of which he was convicted did not involve moral turpitude. After several postponements of the hearing granted at the request of the petitioner, the matter was submitted on the argument of counsel for the petitioner and counsel for The State Bar and on the briefs filed by the petitioner.
A short résumé of the proceedings which took place before the entry of the judgment of conviction will serve to indicate the reason for the lapse of time between the filing of the information and the entry of the plea of guilty to the third count thereof.
Count 1 of the information charged that on September 12, 1935, the defendant attempted to murder one Golda Draper, and that at the time of the commission of the offense he was armed with a revolver. Count 2 charged a similar attack upon one John H. Ganzenbuher. Count 3 charged assault with a deadly weapon, a revolver, upon George Zaris. On October 16, 1935, the defendant entered a plea of “not guilty”. On January 22, 1936, after trial by the court sitting without a jury, the defendant was adjudged guilty on all counts and was found to have been armed as charged in the information. On the same day the defendant made an oral motion for a new trial, which was continued to January 31, 1936, for argument.
The proceedings from this point are reflected in the decisions in
People
v.
Rothrock,
8 Cal. (2d) 21 [
The decision by the District Court of Appeal (21 Cal. App. (2d) 116 [
On August 12, 1939, pursuant to order of this court, the
remittitur
theretofore issued on the determination of the appeal (8 Cal. (2d) 21 [
On August 23, 1939, this court set aside its former order of disbarment and declared the status of Rothrock to have been unaffected by said order of disbarment.
The further proceedings in the trial court, as hereinabove noted, resulted in the judgment of conviction entered on the plea of guilty to the third count of the information, charging assault with a deadly weapon upon George Zaris.
The petitioner contends that the offense of assault with a deadly weapon does not involve moral turpitude within the meaning of the foregoing sections of the Business and Professions Code.
This court has heretofore adopted definitions of moral turpitude as applied to an attorney’s conduct. Those definitions have been held applicable either in relation to professional misconduct or the commission by an attorney of a crime.
(Matter of Humphrey,
It has been stated that the commission of an intentional and wilful criminal act is indicative of an unfitness to be *454 intrusted with the administration of the law, and that generally the conviction of a felony or other infamous crime is cause for disbarment. ' It is also stated, however, that where the courts have the power to investigate into the nature of the act, the attorney’s name will not be stricken from the rolls where the nature of the particular crime does not reflect a bad moral character with respect to the duties of the attorney’s profession. (See notes, 45 Am. St. Rep., pp. 76-77, and cases cited; 5 Am. Jur., pp. 428-429, and cases cited.)
The legislature of this state by the adoption of the foregoing code sections has recognized that a violation of the law, without more, does not necessarily brand the attorney committing the same as a person unfit to practice law." It has thus added the further requirement that in the commission of the crime moral turpitude must be involved. The legislature has made the record of conviction conclusive, but it has left to the courts the duty of deciding whether the particular crime involves moral turpitude. In cases such as those involving convictions of murder, forgery, extortion, bribery, perjury, robbery, embezzlement and other forms of theft, no difficulty would attend the determination of the question of moral turpitude from a consideration of the record of conviction alone.
The courts do not appear to have decided the question whether the conviction of an attorney on the charge of assault with a deadly weapon will require his disbarment on the ground that the offense involves moral turpitude. In
In re Hatch, supra,
this court stated that a conviction of simple assault and battery might indicate that moral turpitude was not involved. In the final analysis the purpose of any disbarment proceeding is not to punish the attorney— in the ease of a criminal act he is amenable to punishment under the penal statutes—but is to afford protection to the public and to the profession by an investigation respecting the moral fitness of the attorney to continue in the practice of the law.
(In re Vaughan,
The question whether under particular statutes the crime of assault with a deadly weapon involves moral turpitude does not appear to have been decided in this state, but has had some consideration in other jurisdictions.
*456
In
Ex parte George,
In Weedin v. Yamada, 4 Fed. (2d) 455 (Wash.), the court upheld an order of deportation in a case where a Japanese subject had pleaded guilty to a charge of “assault with a deadly weapon, instrument or other thing, with an intent to inflict upon the person of another a bodily injury, where ,no considerable provocation appears, or where the circumstances of the assault show a wilful, malignant, and abandoned heart”, under a statute which so defined the crime. The court said: “Such a crime, in our opinion, involves moral turpitude beyond any question.”
In
United States
ex rel.
Morlacci
v.
Smith,
8 Fed. (2d) 663 (New York) the court, in deciding that the crime of “second degree assault” involved moral turpitude, observed that mere assault and battery concededly did not involve such a degree of depravity (see, also to the same effect
Gillman
v.
State,
In United States ex rel. Ciccerelli v. Curran, 12 Fed. (2d) 394, a subject of Italy was ordered deported on the ground of conviction of a “criminal assault with a gun”. The court merely observed: “It seems to be admitted that the crime of assault in the second degree in one involving moral turpitude.”
In Ciambelli ex rel. Maranci v. Johnson, 12 Fed. (2d) 465, also a deportation ease, the question was whether a convie *457 tion of assault and battery upon a police officer involved moral turpitude. The court observed that the indictment charged that Maranci was armed with a dangerous weapon, a razor, but that it was not charged nor claimed “that the-assault was made with the weapon”. The court said: “It has been held that simple assault and battery is not a crime involving moral turpitude . . . (citing cases) . . . But an assault is one of those offenses which may, or may not, involve moral turpitude, depending upon the circumstances of the particular case. If one ordinarily law-abiding, in the heat of anger, strikes another, that act would not reveal such inherent baseness or depravity as to suggest the idea of moral turpitude. If, on the other hand, one deliberately assaulted an officer of the law with a dangerous weapon and with felonious intent, or for the purpose of interfering with the officer in the performance of his duty, the attendant circumstances showing an inclination toward lawlessness, the act might well be considered as one involving moral turpitude. Between the two lies the line of demarcation which I do not undertake to define accurately. I only determine which side of the line the facts of this case fall.” On the facts in that ease the court concluded that the assault did not involve moral turpitude.
In a similar case, United States ex rel. Mazzillo v. Day, 95 Fed. (2d) 391 (New York), involving a conviction of “assault in the second degree”, the court also looked into the circumstances of the offense and concluded that an assault on the driver of a cab, inflicting on him a cut on the neck and forcing him to abandon his vehicle, was an offense involving moral turpitude. However, in United States ex rel. Griff o v. McCandless, 28 Fed. (2d) 287 (Penn.), where the alien had been convicted and sentenced for the offense of “aggravated assault and battery”, the court concluded that moral turpitude must be inherent in the charge, that it could not go beyond the record, which was conclusive, and that it was not conclusively implied in the charge of aggravated assault and battery. Likewise in United States ex rel. Magiovi v. Karnuth, 30 Fed. (2d) 825 (New York), (conviction of an alien on a plea of guilty to a charge of manslaughter in the second degree), it was held that where the offense as defined by statute did not include an evil intent, or commission of the act wilfully or designedly, the court would not look béyond the charge and statutory definition of the crime for the pur *458 pose of deciding whether the offense involved moral turpitude. The court distinguished Weedin v. Yamada and United States ex rel. Morlacci v. Smith, supra, wherein assault with a deadly weapon was held to involve moral turpitude, on the ground that in those cases the crime of assault with a deadly weapon, as defined in the respective state statutes, was committed with an intent to do bodily harm.
The ease of
State
v.
Metcalfe,
From the foregoing discussion and review of cases dealing with the question whether the offense of assault with a deadly weapon involves moral turpitude, we arrive at the following conclusions:
In the absence of a statutory definition indicating that evil intent is inherent in the commission of the crime, the courts generally are reluctant to classify the crime of assault with a deadly weapon as one involving moral turpitude as a matter of law. Where, the question has arisen in disbarment proceedings, such conduct has been deemed not to call for disbarment as a matter of course. A high degree *459 of moral standards is required of an attorney, but the courts have not been inclined to impute moral turpitude in the commission of the lesser infractions of the penal laws which carry no reflection upon the attorney's moral fitness to practice law. The commission of such lesser offenses by an attorney in the heat of anger or as the result of physical or mental infirmities does not, without more, cast discredit upon the prestige of the legal profession or interfere with the efficient administration of the law and should not be deemed to involve moral turpitude. Our statute (sec. 245, Pen. Code), does not define assault with a deadly weapon so as to indicate that it is an offense which by these tests involves moral turpitude as a matter of law. That it did not involve moral turpitude in the particular case may be reflected by the record of conviction, which is all that is before the court in this proceeding. That record consists of the charge of the offense to which the defendant pleaded guilty; the plea; and the judgment of conviction. (See sec. 1207, Pen. Code; 8 Cal. Jur., p. 474.) The light sentence imposed on the attorney indicates that the trial court was of the opinion that the offense to which a plea of guilty was entered did not involve moral turpitude. Our consideration of the record leads us to the same conclusion.
The motion is granted and the proceeding is dismissed.
Rehearing denied. Gibson, C. J., and Houser, J., voted for a rehearing.
