95 N.Y.S. 388 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
In entering upon a discussion of the facts disclosed by the evidence and the conclusions to be drawn therefrom, we fully realize the responsibility and the importance of the investigation. The heretofore good standing of the defendant, the vital interest which
Our labor is much lessened, however, because practically the facts are not in dispute, and because the referee in his exhaustive report has presented them 'fairly and concisely and has with much care fortified his conclusions by a reference to and an analysis of the important features of the evidence.
The first two charges relate to the same transactions and may properly be considered together. Charge Bo. 1 is1 in effect that the. defendant, as executor of the last will and testament of one Elias Pettibone, deceased, duly verified and presented to the surrogate of Genesee county a false account, in that he credited himself with having on March 21, 1892, paid in full two judgments recovered against said Pettibone by one Strable, which amounted on that day, principal and interest, to $196.61 and $109.25, respectively, when in truth and in fact he had not paid to exceed $65 on account of the same.
Charge Bo. 2 is in substance that the defendant about the 1st day of May, 1903, procured Strable to satisfy said two judgments by falsely representing that the Pettibone estate was practically insolvent • and to enable him, the defendant, to present vouchers to the Surrogate’s Court upon the settlement of the estate, showing their payment in full, when in truth and in fact such estate was solvent and such payments had not been made.
The facts in regard to .these two transactions and alleged charges of misconduct are as follows:
In the year 1890 one Elias Pettibone died in the county of Genesee, B. Y., leaving a last will and testament appointing the defendant sole executor, which was duly admitted to probate on February 8, 1890, letters issued to him, and he immediately entered upon the discharge of the duties of. his office. About March 23, 1903, thirteen years after his - appointment, proceedings were commenced to compel the defendant, to. account as such executor, he not having during that time taken any steps to that end, There
Admittedly the account and verification of the' same were false. It is urged, however, that any error or discrepancy in that regard was. the result of personal! inattention or carelessness, caused by the pressure of more important business in which the defendant was a,t that time engaged. Such suggestion makes it necessary to consider the proof given in support of the second charge. From it, it appears that within a few months after the defendant was appointed executor he received, as the proceeds of lands belonging to the estate in Pennsylvania sold by him, the sum of $800, and that such estate was at all times thereafter perfectly solvent. In fact, the only claims against it were the two Strable judgments, another judgment in favor of one Morris for about $180 and other small claims amounting in the aggregate to not more than $125. There was, therefore, no valid reason why all claims against said estate should not have been paid at once and in full, and so notwithstanding the will provided that the estate should not be distributed until certain of the beneficiaries reached the age of twenty-one years. In 1892,' and about the time of the alleged payment of the Strable judgments by the defendant, Strable learned of the sale of the Pennsylvania property and called upon the defendant at his office for the purpose of obtaining payment of his judgments. He saw the defendant with his clerk, a Mr. Long, and was informed by them that the Pettibone estate was practically insolvent and that he could not expect to realize anything. There was then more than sufficient funds in'defendant’s hands to pay the same in full and all other claims against the estate. Strable was induced by such false and fraudulent statements to assign to Long, defendant’s, clerk, his judg
The evidence relating to the two charges referred to conclusively shows that while the defendant, as executor of the Pettibone estate, < had iii his possession money more than sufficient to discharge every1 obligation against it, he procured or permitted; two. valid claims amounting to $305.8.6 to be assigned to. his clerk for $18 and $15 . respectively, and that a day or two before he presented lfis verified account to the surrogate, in which he stated that he had paid said judgments in full, principal and interest, he told and represented to the 'judgment creditor that there were no. assets of the estate with which to pay any part of the same, and upon such representation, which Was false and untrue, obtained satisfactions of the ' same. Ignorance on the part of the defendant as to the true state
If only the form of verification were to be considered we might accept the plea of ignorance of the contents of the account and of the facts respecting the. same, but when we are informed that the account, which credited the defendant with having paid the Strable judgments in full, was verified only a day or two after he had rep-' resented that there were no funds with which to pay the same, and when we remember that said judgments were not in fact paid, notwithstanding there were ample funds for that purpose but which were omitted from the account, wé are compelled to the conclusion, as was the learned referee, that the defendant willfully and knowingly falsely verified his account as executor as charged. We are also constrained to hold that the defendant procured Strable to satisfy and discharge said judgments by means of false and fraudulent representations and which the defendant well knew to be false and fraudulent.
Charges Hos. 3 and 4 are alike in character, alleging the improper retention and failure to pay over moneys collected for clients. Charge Ho. 3 is that on the 7th day of January, 1903, there was placed in defendant’s hands for collection by attorneys in Bradford, Penn., a claim of $26.35 against one Ide of Bergen, H. Y.; that in March following said claim was paid in full to the defendant and that he failed to account for or pay over the same. In charge Ho. 4 it is alleged that in the year 1902 the estate of. one Jane E. Russell, deceased, was being settled in the Surrogate’s Court of Gene-see county; that the defendant was retained as attorney for and represented upon such settlement one Harriet J. Crandall, now deceased, of Auburn, Cal.; that the surrogate determined that the
As to the first of these charges it appears'that the attorneys in' Bradford who placed the claim in defendant’s hands for collection wrote to him ait least five times between April second, the date when the amount Was received by the defendant, and the twenty-eighth day of September following, asking for a statement-of what he had done in the premises. They then wrote the debtor, and being informed by him that he had paid the claim, they again wrote to the defendant urging him to remit the amount of the claim. The defendant did not reply to any of such letters or pay any attention to the same. Thereafter, and some time in December following, the Bradfoi’d attorneys placed the claim against the defendant in the hands of one Squires, of Batavia, 1ST. Y. He saw. the defendant about it and was informed that he had remitted for the Ide claim by check some time previous, and that if the Bradford attorneys had not received the same' he would send another, which he did under date of March 10, 1904, after this proceeding was instituted. The amount involved in this transaction is comparatively small, and we would not have stated the facts with so much detail had it not béen for the suggestion that the failure to remit for so long a time was solely due to carelessness and neglect, and that in fact the remittance had been made by check which was lost, and because the same defense, carelessness and lost check, is offered as a defense tó the 4th charge. In respect to that charge it appears that on the 8th day of October, 1902, the defendant received $266.15, the distributive share of his client, Mrs. Crandall, in the Russell estate. It then became his duty to pay over the same, but instead, on the twenty-seventh .of April following, he wrote to the local attorneys for Mrs. Crandall in California, through whom he had been retained,, that he expected the matter would be settled up shortly. He wrote: “ I beg to say that I expect the matter will be settled up very shortly. I beg your pardon for not having answered your letters before, but have been away and
On July 27, 1903, the. California attorneys again wrote to the defendant, and on August fifteenth he answered by stating that he had paid the claim by check oil June sixth, but on August 26, 1903, in answer to a very pointed and urgent letter from them,, he sent a New York draft for the amount, again stating that he had sent them a check for the same oil June 6, 1903, which had been lost. There is no proof that such check was sent except the statement in the letter referred to and x some other memoranda, all made by the defendant. As stated by. the referee : “ No proof of the- check of June 6th, or of the return of the letter enclosing it either upon return card or through dead letter office, or any evidence whatever of the fact that such check ivas sent, was produced on the hearing. Like the third charge, where the miscarriage of a check is alleged, the charge is permitted to rest without any attempt to prove the explanatory matter. And in this case the proof affirmatively shows the false statement of an expectation that the matter will be settled and that he may be able to get the money, some six months after the money had 'been actually paid over and was in his hands.”
- We are forced to the conclusion reached by the referee that the 3d and 4th charges have, been fully established by the evidence, and that the offenses committed were not merely the result of carelessness and mistake, but show a deliberate purpose to withhold and • use moneys belonging to his clients, and that he knowingly misrepresented in respect to the collection of the same, to the end that he might avoid or delay payment. The defendant has himself given no testimony in. excuse of the acts referred to, and we have searched the record in vain for facts which would justify the conclusion that such conduct on his part was the result of ■ mistake or because of ignorance of the facts. The improper retention of a client’s money by an attorney, however small the amount, constitutes a breach of duty, and if intentional, demonstrates unfitness' to be trusted with the discharge of the duties and. responsibilities resting upon an attorney and counselor at law. It should be understood once for all — wé believe it is understood — that a client’s money or its use does not belong to an attorney, but that in his hands it is a trust fund -to be kept sacredly and absolutely inviolate.
The 5th charge is in effect that the defendant was guilty of a violation- of sections 73 and 74 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and incurred the penalty prescribed by section 75 of said Code. The sections are as follow's: . ■
“ § 73. An attorney or counsellor shall not, directly or indirectly, buy, or be in any manner interested in buying, a bond, promissory note, bill of exchange, book-debt, or other thing in action, -with the intent and for the purpose of bringing an action thereon.
“ § 74. An attorney or counsellor shall not by himself, or" by or in the name of- another person, either before or. after action brought, promise or give, or procure to be promised or given, a valuable consideration to any person, as an inducement to placing, or in consideration of having placed, in his hands, or in the hands of another person, a demand of any ..kind, for the purpose of bringing an action thereon. But this section does not apply to an agreement between attorneys and counsellors, or either, to divide between themselves the compensation to be received.
“ § 75. An attorney or counsellor, who violates either of the last two sections, is guilty of a misdemeanor; and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished accordingly, and must be removed' from office by the Supreme Court.”
The facts are: About the year 1896 the defendant entered into a verbal contract with one Challes A. Snell of Syracuse, IST. Y., by which he employed Snell to solicit pérsons to retain the defendant as their attorney to begin actions against telephone and telegraph -companies for maintaining poles in the highways passing over premises owned by them, the defendant agreeing to pay Snell three dollars for each claim or case "which he might obtain. Snell was to obtain from the landowner a written statement of his claim, a formal writing retaining the defendant as his attorney and "authorization "to
“ It is agreed by and between Arthur E. Clark and C. A. Snell, both of Batavia, Genesee County, H. Y., that the said Snell shall work for the said Clark in getting telephone and telegraph contracts in the same manner as he has done heretofore, and that said Clark agrees to pay him one-half of the proceeds realized by said Clark on account of said claims. Said Snell is to pay his own expenses while he is out soliciting the said claims; said Clark is to pay his own expenses while he is out settling; and in case said Snell goes out and settles them, said Clark is either to pay Snell’s expenses while he is out, or said Clark is to see that said Snell’s expenses are paid by the company or companies. Said Clark to have the right to hire other men to do the same work provided he cares to. Said Snell to have the right to employ men to work under him, but said Clark is to have the same share in the proceeds of their work.
“ Dated 22 February, 1897. ARTHUR E. CLARK.
“G. A. SHELL.”
Formal blanks were prepared for the carrying out and consummation of this traffic in actions or litigation, of which the following are samples: ' *
“ My claim for damages against Company is as follows:
For poles at $ each..........$
For mutilating shade trees at $ each...,...... $
For mutilating fruit trees at $ each..........$
“Total.......................................$
*160 “ And I hereby certify that I have received nothing from said company on account of said damages, and that I have never consented to its occupancy of my land.
. “ I hereby retain Arthur E. Clark of Batavia, Genesee County, New York, as my attorney, and authorize him to commence or cause to be commenced an action in my name against the for the recovery of the possession of my real estate described as follows: '
“ All that portion of my land situate in the town of - County of and State of New York, lying and being within the boundaries of what is known as the road, and being a portion of my said lands which are subject to use for highway purposes.
“ Dated at this day of 1897.
“ (Signature of landowner.)
“ To (Land owner) :
“ I hereby accept your retainer in your case against the and I agree to accept from you ten per cent of the damages recovered by you from said company in full compensation from you for my services.
“ (Signature of Mr. Clark.)
“ I hereby agree to the terms of the foregoing contract. And I further agree not^to settle the above claim without first obtaining said Clark’s written consent. (
“ (Signature of landowner.) ”
Under his written contract with the defendant, Snell and agents whom he employed obtained and turned over to the defendant about 2,000 claims in favor of persons living in all parts of the State. Upon several of these claims suits were begun and many of them were settled without suit. As compensation to Snell for the services so rendered the defendant claims to have paid him $3,500 or more. The defendant has received a very large sum of money because of such retainers and because of his employment as attorney at the solicitation of Snell under the contract or agreement referred to.
It would seem clear that the contracts in question, when their real meaning and purport is ascertained, and the connection of the defendant therewith, fall squarely within the condemnation of the sections of the Code of Civil Procedure quoted. That such conduct
In that case the plaintiff, who was not an attorney, procured a contract from a firm of importers, by which they employed the defendant, who was an attorney and counselor at law, to' prosecute certain claims which they had against the United States, and agreed that such attorney should retain one-half of the amount recovered as. compensation for his services. The defendant agreed to divide the amount so to be retained by him with the plaintiff for having obtained such contract from the firm of importers. In an action brought by the plaintiff, the person who obtained the contract from the importers, against the defendant,' to recover one-half of the amount which he retained under said contract, it was held that the agreement by which the defendant was to divide his compensation with the plaintiff was champertous, fell squarely within the cori1derrínation of section 74 of the,Code of Civil Procedure, and was null and void, and,' therefore, could not be enforced. The decision in that case was approved and followed in Irwin v. Curie (56 App. Div. 514), where the facts were practically the game as in the Hirshbach case (supra). 'The Irwin Case (supra) was reversed' by the Court of Appeals (171 N. Y. 409) solely upon the ground that the section of the Code of Civil Procedure did not apply to a pei’son not an attorney and counselor at law. But it was expressly stated in the opinion of the court that “ this statute (§ 74 of the Code) was leveled against attorneys and counselors to the ranks of which this defendant belonged, and, therefore, it operated directly upon him.” Again; the court said: “ Its (the statute’s) prohibition is directed against the attorney and counselor, who is -an. officer of the court, and the very next section (75) provides that1 an attorney and counselor who violates either of the last two sections is guilty of a misdemeanor.’ Here again we noté that the penalty inflicted is upon the 'attorney and counselor alone and not upon his accomplice of possibly intended victim.”
The acts of the defendant in the-case at bar are the same in ¡principle as those complained of in the cases referred to, and, as we have seen, such acts, when done by an attorney and counselor, fall within the condemnation of the statute.
■ But. aside from the legal proposition we think the conduct of the defendant shows an utter failure to appreciate the duties, of an attorney ahd counselor at law and the relations which ought to exist between him and liis clients. It cannot be possible1 that it is permissible for an attorney to employ agents to canvass the citizens of a considerable portion of our State to.induce them to authorize the commencement of' actions in their name, under an agreement with them that the attorney for his compensation shall have a certain percentage of the recovery in case any is had, and With the agent that he shall share equally in any compensation which the attorney may receive. In the case of the defendant he practically through his agent or. agents purchased the claims of several thousand landowners for the purpose of bringing actions thereon, and his compensation therefor was fixed definitely and specifically. So many poles, so many-dollars damage ; a certain percentage, of the recovery, if had, was the measure of his compensation. And it'was certainly understood that he was to pay any. and all expenses of the litigation, and if so, then such agreement falls within the prohibition- of section 13 of .the-Code of Civil Procedure. We agree with the learned referee in the conclusion that because of the making of the contracts referred to and the defendant’s acts thereunder he was guilty of violation of the provisions of the sections of the Code of Civil. Procedure to which attention has been called.
The 7th charge is practically of the same character.
The 8th charge is that in a large number of claims secured by the defendant in the same manner as stated in the 5th charge, against the Empire State Telephone and Telegraph Company, the defendant settled such claims with the. company for twenty-five dollars per case and that he appropriated the whole of the amount so received to his own use and his clients received nothing. In other words, after his costs were paid he turned over his clients to the telephone company and agreed with such company to assist it in making" a fair settlement with his clients. He received by reason of such transaction with the telephone company at least $1,250, and so far as appears his clients were not benefited in the slightest degree by any services rendered by him for or on their behalf.
The 9th charge is in effect that he falsely represented to certain of his clients on account of whose claims against said company he had received the sum of twenty-five dollars that the Empire State Telephone and Telegraph Company was insolvent and was of doubt
The 10th charge is that the defendant procured tó be placed in his hands for collection in the manner before indicated, a large number of claims against the Central New York Telephone and Telegraph Company; that he presented said claims to the company and received in settlement thereof the sum of $3,000, all of which he appropriated to his own use, except such part as he turned over to his agent Snell for procuring him to be retained by the several claimants. The correspondence between the defendant and the manager of such company, which is annexed to and made a part of the referee’s report, conclusively (shows that the defendant abandoned his clients, turned them over to the company which he was employed to prosecute, and in addition agreed to aid such company in any effort, which it might make to secure a settlement from hi's clients, at the, least possible sum. Such letter and contract are as follows :
“ Batavia, N. Y., Mch. 9, 1898.-“Mr. C. A. Nicholson, Gen. Mgr. '
“ Central New York Telephone Co,,
“ Auburn, N. Y.:
“ Dear Sir.—As the result of our conversation in Rochester, .1 make you. the following formal proposition in regard to the cases I now have against your Company.
“First. You are to pay me twenty-five dollars for each case I now have against your Company and which you settle under the terms of our agreement.
“Second. You are to have the' privilege of settling them at your own terms and figures as far as possible.
Thi/rd. I am to write conciliatory letters to all who write asking about settlements and to aid in every way possible in making these settlements.' But I am to retain my hold over my clients as far as possible, so that they will not go to other attorneys.
“Fourth. The settlements to be made by your Company within one year from date if possible.
*165 “ Fifth. Payments to be made as follows to me: One thousand dollars within ten days from date. Five hundred dollars within three months. Five hundred dollars within six months. ,
“ Sixth. A settlement to be made at the end of the year in which your Company is to give me the name of each case arranged and yon are to pay me the balance due on the cases settled and we will then arrange a plan for settling the balance.
“ This is about the way I think the matter had better be adjusted.
“ I may tell you that the Empire State people have arranged their , cases on this basis, and that they have been settling them so that neither they nor I have had any trouble.
“ I have written and do write to my clients every few days telling them they had better settle if the Company is disposed to do what is fair. And either I hear nothing from them or sometimes my clients write that they have settled.
“ Believe me,
“Yours very truly,
“ARTHUR E. CLARK.
“ Of course you understand the necessity of not showing this letter or letting the contents be known.”
“ Law Offices of Arthur E. Clark,
“ Cor. Main and Bank Streets,
“ Batavia, H. Y.
“Batavia, H. Y., Aug. 29, 1898.
“ Mr. C. A. Hioholson, Gen. Mgr.,
“ Central Hew York Tel. & Tel. Co.
“Utica, H.Y.:
“ Dear Sir.— Mr. Snell and myself make you the following offer in regard to the settlement of the claims we have against your Company.
“You are to pay me in all three thousand dollars. Fifteen hundred dollars at the time this agreement is made and one-half the balance when fifty per cent of the claims are settled and within one year from date.
“ The balance of the money to be paid within two years from date and when seventy-five per cent of the claims are settled.
“ The payment of fifteen hundred dollars to be made on or before September first, 1898,
*166 “ I am td help you in the settlement of these cases as far as I am able and yét keep my clients with me. That is, it will not do for me to do or say anything that will drive them away. And neither Snell or myself are to take any more claims against your Company of to foster any litigation against it.
“ Tours very truly,-
“ AETHER E. CLARK.
“0. A, SNELL.”
The 11th-charge is in many respects -similar. ,to those referred td in this connection; but the charge is not found by the réferee to have been sustained, and a discussion of the facts pertaining to it is unnecessary. •
Substantially all the. charges-presented against the defendant have been established, and practically by. uncontradicted and undisputed evidence, and in-our opinion, the acts and omissions complained-of indicate a total lack of a proper appreciation of the duties and responsibilities of an attorney and counselor of the Supreme .Court/ .and in several instances point to acts of actual'criminality. The acts disclosed by the evidence; and to which we have already alluded, are hot the'act or acts of a day or a month, but they extend over a period of thirteen years, commencing in 1890 with the failure to charge himself with $800 received by him as executor. Two years later, apparently to-cover such failure, he represented to a creditor of the estate that it Was insolvent, and induced such creditor to . assign to his clerk two valid judgments, amounting in the aggregate to $305.86,. for $18 and, $15 respectively. -Ten years later, in an attempt " to conceal such transaction, ■ he procured such judgment creditor, by false and fraudulent representations, to satisfy and discharge such judgments. In 1903, after receiving $266,15 as his client’s distributive share of an estate, and while the same was in his possession, he wrote in substance that the claim had not been paid, but after repeated demands upon him paid such claim, with the statement, however, that a check had previously been sent by him, which had -been lost or miscarried. The same is true of the -other claim placed in the defendant’s hands for collection a short time, before, to which attention has been Called. Then, in 1896, the defendant practically opens a litigation hunting agency, hires agents to induce people throughdut the State to place in his hands claims
Without deciding or intending to foreclose the defendant on any questions of law which may be presented in any action or proceeding involving the facts adverted to, we are forced to the conclusion that the conduct of the defendant as disclosedLy the whole evidence, which is uncontradicted, is such as that he ought not to be retained . upon the roll of attorneys and counselors of the Supreme Court of this State.
We are not unmindful of the fact that many of the leading and most reputable attorneys and counselors of this court in the fourth judicial department have testified to the good standing, reputation, ability and faithfulness of the accused as attorney and counselor at law, and . that such standing and reputation ought to be considered and given full weight when an attorney is accused of wrongdoing. If the evidence against the defendant showed only a single ofEense or lapse of duty, or if we were satisfied that the offenses charged were the result of mistake or inattention or even carelessness, while we would be disposed to condemn, we might hesitate to punish, but in the case before us we are compelled to the conclusion that the conduct of the accused during the period covered by our investigation is such as to make him unfit to longer remain an accredited attorney and counselor of the Supreme Court of this State.
The conclusion is that the referee’s report should be confirmed and that an order should be made striking the name of Arthur E. Clark, of Batavia, IST. Y., from the roll of attorneys and counselor’s of the Supreme Court and forbidding his practicing in any of the courts of this Státe.
Spring, Williams and Hiscook, J J.s concurredHash, J., not. voting.