295 Mass. 374 | Mass. | 1936
This is a, petition by the Attorney General informing the court as to certain alleged improper practices of the respondent, who is a duly enrolled attorney at law, and praying for an inquiry with respect thereto and for such orders of discipline and restraint as the court shall deem proper. Disbarment is not sought.
The case was tried before a single justice of this court, who found all the material facts and reported the case with the statement that unless the facts found required the con
The respondent is a member of a law firm practising in Boston. He also owns, controls and conducts a business under the name of the Automobile Legal Association, commonly known as the “A. L. A.,” in connection with which he engages to render certain services to subscribers in return for annual fees of $12 for the first year and $10 thereafter. There is in truth no real association. The subscribers or “members” hold no meetings, have no organization, have no voice by vote or otherwise in the conduct of the business and do not share in the profits. The Automobile Legal Association is simply a name under which the respondent renders services to so called “members” who have subscribed for the service. In selling his service and in procuring “members” the respondent uses commercial methods. He employs a “sales manager” and' at times from twenty to twenty-five “salesmen” who solicit subscriptions. He advertises for “salesmen.” He supplies them with printed and typewritten material in the nature of advertising matter to aid them in getting subscriptions.
It is the contention of the petitioner that the respondent is practising law in the name of the “association” and that he is using the “association” as a mere cloak or cover for the use of improper and unprofessional methods of solici
It cannot be doubted that the solicitation by a lawyer of employment in legal matters by means of “salesmen” and advertising as here disclosed would be a gross impropriety which would at once subject him to discipline. Matter of Cohen, 261 Mass. 484. Matter of Maclub of America, Inc., ante, 45, 48. On the other hand commonly a member of the bar is free to engage in commercial pursuits of an honorable character and to advertise and to extend his purely mercantile business honestly and .fairly by ordinary commercial methods. With these principles in mind we turn to the specific findings of the single justice.
The respondent has made some recent changes in the methods of conducting the “association” business. These changes were made voluntarily before the petition was filed and apparently in good faith for the purpose of avoiding reasonable cause for criticism. The case involves only questions of professional propriety. There is no suggestion of fraud or dishonesty on the part of the respondent at any time. Under these circumstances we do not feel called upon to pass upon practices or methods which have been abandoned. We shall consider the case upon the findings as to the nature of the business as conducted at the time of the trial. Presumably this continues unaltered.
The “association” has grown to large proportions. It employs fifty to sixty persons on salary in addition to the salesmen. It has about thirty-five thousand subscribers, principally in New England, New York and New Jersey. Its chief office is at Boston, but it has other offices at important cities. In addition to what for convenience may be called its legal service, it supplies to subscribers at its expense an emergency road, garage and medical service,
In our opinion the business conducted by the respondent under the name of the “association” is not the practice of law. The respondent himself performs none of the legal work for which the '' association ’ ’ pays. He does not employ the lawyers who do the work. He does not direct or control them. They are not his agents. He does not “split fees” with them. So far as appears he does not fix their charges. The subscribers who apply to them are their clients and not the respondent’s clients. The respondent does not interfere with the confidential relations between these attorneys and their clients. He does not interpose himself between them. All the respondent does is to furnish a list
In many respects the business of the association is similar to that which was under examination in Matter of Maclub of America, Inc., ante, 45. But the cases are different in the fundamental respect that in the Maclub case the respondent bound itself by contract to furnish legal defence to its members. It sold legal services. Under its contract with its members it had control over the attorneys who did the work. Members were its agents in employing attorneys. It was the principal in the transaction. It intervened between the attorney and the client. These were the grounds of the decision of this court in that case. None of them is present in this case. Here the client engages his attorney on his own account. The attorney is free to act for the client, to whom he remains directly and solely responsible, with no right to interfere on the part of the respondent. In that case this court said (at page 49), “The contract of the respondent is to furnish its members ‘legal defence’ in the classes of cases specified, not to pay for ‘legal defence’ undertaken by the member.” In this case the contract of the respondent is to pay for legal defence undertaken by the “member,” not to furnish its “members” legal defence. This case is also distinguishable for similar reasons from Matter of Shoe Manufacturers Protective Association, Inc., ante, 369. We have seen no case in which an enterprise conducted as is the “A. L. A.” has been held to be the practice of law. All of the cases cited in behalf of the petitioner either belong to the class represented by the Maclub case and by the Shoe Manufacturers Protective Association, Inc., case or are otherwise distinguishable. Many of the more important decisions are cited in the two cases last mentioned. We do not repeat them here.
As the respondent’s business conducted under the name of the “association” is not the practice of law, it follows that the solicitation of subscribers and the presentation to the public of the advantages of the “association” are not in themselves improper.
Petition dismissed.