24 F. 910 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1885
On the trial of a civil suit of Geo. H. Thomas v. The Respondent and others, had in this court at its October term, 1884, the following extraordinary testimony was elicited: The plaintiff, Thomas, was an educated weakling. He had lived for a- while just prior to his arrest, as hereinafter shown, in southeastern Missouri, where he was involved in a good deal of troublesome civil litigation, and to escape therefrom he fled to and took refuge with a friend at Bartow, Florida. From this place he wandered aimlessly to Chattanooga. Here he took lodging under an assumed name with an obscure family in the suburbs of the city. lie was guilty of no criminal offense against the law's of Missouri, or any other sovereignty, but he was controlled by an unfounded and vague apprehension that his adversaries in Missouri would combine and charge him with some crime as a pretext for his arrest and extradition to enable them to bring other suits against him in that jurisdiction. Under this hallucination he contemplated flight to South America. While impelled by these fears, he wrote letters and tore them into pieces and scattered the fragments around his room. This singular and suspicious conduct attracted the attention of the city police, who gathered up the scattered fragments of his writings, and from them concluded that he had committed some grave criminal offense in Missouri from which he was endeavoring to escape. The policemen took Snyder, who is an attorney at law, into their confidence. After consultation they not unnaturally reached the conclusion that he was a fugitive from justice, for whom there was probably a reward offered. In this belief, which I have no doubt they honestly entertained, they determined to arrest him. A warrant was then obtained charging him with being “a fugitive from justice.” It did not impute the commission of any specific crime, or allege any venue, and was consequently without authority of law. Nevertheless Thomas was arrested under it, and taken to the county jail for incarceration; but the sheriff, who is ex officio jailer of the county, declined to receive and detain him as a prisoner without a formal mittimus. Thereupon Sloop, a policeman who had been an active participant in making the arrest, and who then had him in custody, acting under Snyder’s advice, applied to the justice who had issued the warrant for his arrest, told him in Thomas’ absence that Thomas waived an examination, and upon this false representation, and without further inquiry, the justice issued a paper in these words:
“State of Tennessee v. Geo. II. Thomas, alias Park,hurst. Judgment that the defendant in this case waived examination through EL L. Sloop, oflicer, and was committed to wait further action of the court.
“Gr. M. SHERWOOD, J. P.”
This paper, vicious upon its face, quieted the sheriff’s scruples, and he consented to receive and hold Thomas as a prisoner. After taking the usual precautionary measures for his safe detention, including the taking of $200 in money, which Thomas had on his
“Having been arrested in this city upon the charge of being a fugitive from justice, and being held under bond until a requisition can be obtained, I hereby agree to waive the procurement of a requisition, and freely and voluntarily consent to be removed from the state of Tennessee by O. E. Stanley, or any one else designated by him, upon said charge at any time, ”—
—which Thomas signed. Upon the faith of this paper Sherwood, the justice who had committed him to the jail, ordered that Thomas “be consigned to the custody of C. E. Stanley, deputy-sheriff, or any person to be designated by him, for the purpose of removal from the state of Tennessee.” Stanley made the following indorsement thereon: “In pursuance of the above order of the court, I have this day consigned the defendant in said ease to H. L. Sloop,” — and supplemented his indorsement by a letter of instruction addressed to his friends and the general public, in which he certified—
“That Geo. H. Thomas has freely and voluntarily waived, in writing, requisition and all formalities; and Geo. M. Sherwood, justice of the peace, having directed me to convey the said Thomas to Missouri, or to designate some one to convey him there, I have transferred to Henry Sloop, policeman, all authority vested in me to so convey him. I hope my friends will assist Mr. Sloop to land him safely in Missouri.
“P. S. If Mr. Thoipas, or 0. 0. Snyder, his attorney, wishes a few days’ delay on the way to Missouri, I would advise Mr. Sloop to accede to their wishes, provided Mr. Snyder will agree not to obtain a writ of habeas corpus. ”
Snyder was present when Thomas was discharged from jail and. turned over to Sloop, and whispered to the prisoner privately, and said, “All that will be done this afternoon will be done in your interest.” Sloop then directed Thomas “to follow him.” The prisoner accordingly took his hand-bag, and went out, pursuant to respondent’s directions, by a side door, where he found a buggy in waiting, which he entered with Sloop. They then went a circuitous route into the country, and after driving around for some time came back towards the city, stopping in a thicket near a beer garden. While on this ride, Thomas asked if the cause of his being taken out of jail was to avoid Doty and the Cincinnati detective. Sloop laughed, and said it was. Sloop fired a pistol, and told Thomas “to listen for shots in return.” Sev(eral shots were heard a short distance away, and Sloop responded by another discharge of his pistol. In a short time Snyder came up in a buggy with James Turner. Thomas then wrote a letter under Snyder’s direction to Humphries, in which he informed Humphries that he had employed Snyder as his attorney and did not desire any other lawyer. Snyder inquired if Thomas had any letters or other writings about his person that might serve to identify him. He then intro
We need not recite all that occurred. It is sufficient to say that Turner, under Snyder’s directions, kept Thomas concealed — a part of the time in irons — until he was clandestinely removed, as hereinafter shown. During this detention he was frequently visited-by Snyder, who, by disingenuous and false representations, continued to play upon his excited imagination, and aggravate his unfounded apprehensions, until he consented to part with his beard and don female attire as the best means of escaping his imaginary pursuers. This policy was persisted in until the remittances requested from his uncle and aunt arrived and were satisfactorily divided. Turner then, with Snyder’s co-operation, took him to New York city, put him aboard a vessel, and shipped him to Liverpool, England. The job was so adroitly executed as to successfully evade the writ of ha-beas corpus, thwart the object contemplated by the counsel who procured its issuance, and leave Thomas’ friends in utter ignorance of his whereabouts, until, by subsequent inquiries, they traced him to his hiding place in England, and undeceived and persuaded him to return and place himself under their guidance and protection.
Upon these facts the rule under consideration requiring the respondent to appear and show cause why he should not bo disbarred and stricken from the roll of attorneys of this court was entered. To this rule the respondent has put in an answer. It is prolix and evasive. Instead of confessing or denying the charge that Thomas was manacled, in the manner hereinbefore stated, “with irons,” he avers that “Thomas never, at any time, stated to him that he had been placed in irons.” And in like manner, instead of confessing or denying the facts alleged, tending to establish collusion between Sloop and himself in the procuration of Thomas’ release from prison, and his subsequent forcible and clandestine removal to Georgia, ho contents himself with the averments that “when he (Thomas) was released from the jail he wont away with Sloop and was taken into Georgia,” and that “he (Snyder) met them on the way, when Thomas
It is easy to see that his answer in each of the particulars mentioned is and was intended to be evasive. The averment that “Thomas never stated to him that he had been placed in irons” is no denial of the charge that he had been so manacled, any more than his answer that.Turner and he did not arrange in Thomas’ presence to shave and dress him in female attire is a denial of the charge that he was so shaved and disguised.
These and other similar evasions, and respondent’s failure to deny other and material and damaging imputations contained in the evidence epitomized above, authorize the most unfavorable inferences fairly deducible therefrom. But the court is under no necessity of resorting to inferences in order to reach a just determination of the question involved.
It must be kept in mind that the motive prompting the arrest was the hope of a pecuniary reward, which, it was supposed, had been offered for Thomas’ apprehension, assumed by the parties to be $500. The respondent, on several occasions, in terms more or less explicit, suggested that a payment of this amount would conciliate the officers making the arrest, and relax their vigilance, and prepare the way to his discharge. To this suggestion Thomas replied that “he would rather pay the officers the amount of any reward that had been offered than to be compelled to go where he was wanted;” and that, “if possible, he would rather compromise with the officers and have the prosecution quietly withdrawn.” Thereupon the respondent proposed “if Thomas could get $500 and give it to him, he would arrange with the officers, and take him out of jail under the appearance of taking, him to Missouri, and would, as soon as .they got out of Tennessee, release himand, acting upon the suggestion, the respondent proceeded, as he admits in his answer, to see Doty; one of the officers, and “told him that he had been employed by Thomas; that he did not think that he (Doty) could recover any reward; and gave him to understand that he would not lose anything if he did not take too much interest in holding Thomas.”
A further illustration of his methods in the defense of criminals is found in his proposition to unite with Humphries to induce Blount, a stranger in Chattanooga, and a friend of Humphries,.“to personate an officer from Missouri, and pretend that he had come for Thomas,” and that he would, in aid of the fraudulent suggestion, “get a country justice of the peace to order Thomas turned over to Blount, who could take him away and turn him loose.”
These and other facts evince,, the respondent’s groveling conceptions of professional duty, and manifest his unfitness for honorable
This conduct cannot be adequately characterized. A man capable of such action is unworthy the confidence of the court, and ought not to have his opportunities for wrong-doing enlarged by being permitted to continue to practice as an attorney at law. The respondent will therefore be stricken from the roll of attorneys of this court, and henceforward debarred the right to practice herein.