21 Tex. 668 | Tex. | 1858
The Statute (Act of 1854, p. 118, Sec. 1,) provides that any prosecution under the 5th or 8th Sections of the Act to which this is an amendment, (Hart. Dig., Art. 56, 59,) “ may be instituted by motion or information of two or more practicing attornies ; ” and it is objected that the motion in this case is signed by but one. It is to be observed, however, that the defendant appeared and answered to the motion without objection to the form of the proceeding. This must be deemed a waiver of the objection, unless it be a matter so vital to the proceeding that it could not be waived: and that, it is conceived, is a proposition which cannot be
It will not be contended that the Court before whom the conviction took place might not thereupon cause his name to be stricken from the roll of its attornies, without further proof or proceedings to ascertain the fact of the conviction. It has been truly said that, as a class, attornies are and have always been the intrepid vindicators of individual rights, and the fearless asserters- of the principles of civil liberty, existing where alone they can exist, in a government not of parties or men, but of laws. As a class they well deserve the appellation of an enlightened, chivalrous and honorable profession. Individuals of the class may, and sometimes do forfeit their professional franchise by abusing it; and a power to- enforce
In the absence of special provision to the contrary, the power of removal is, from its nature, commensurate with the power of appointment; and it has accordingly been every where held to be the province of the Judges to withdraw the privileges of attorneys where they abuse those privileges. (Austin’s case, 5 Rawle. 191, 203-4; Dillon v. The State, 6 Tex. R. 55 ; Bac. Ab. Tit. “ Attomey ; ” Smith v. The State, 5 Yerger, 228.)
The end to be attained by removal, it is said, is not punishment, but protection. (5 Rawle. 204.) The power rests upon grounds distinct from that of punishment for contempt. It may be properly exercised where there has been no contempt, as in the cases mentioned in the 5th Section of the Statute before referred to. It is one thing to remove from office for unfitness, and another to punish for contempt. (Id.) The Act of 1854 embraces both classes of cases; and doubtless both may be proceeded upon together, and may indeed be inseparable in many cases. But there is no necessary connection between a contempt of Court and malpractice. The present appears to have been intended as a proceeding under the Statute; and had it been objected that it did not conform to its requirements, it might have been a question whether it could be maintained. In the case of Dillon v. The State, (6 Tex. R. 55,) the proceeding was instituted by two attornies; but the Court, having had its attention called to the accusation, appears to have proceeded upon its own information derived from an examination of the records before the Court; and no question was made of the regularity of the proceeding. But it will suffice to dispose of the objection, that as the defendant answered without making it, we think it must be considered as waived.
The defendant was proceeded against upon several grounds, but the finding of the jury is responsive to but two, and it is
But if we were at liberty to look to matters outside of the verdict, there being no statement of facts, there is nothing outside of the verdict to support the judgment.
If, however, the finding of the jury upon the several grounds embraced in it were less defective, we might well hesitate to affirm the judgment upon that finding alone, when it is mani
In the view we have taken of the case, it does not become necessary to enter upon an examination of the doctrine of con-tempts, We are of opinion that the judgment was not warranted by the verdict; and that it be therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.