13 P.2d 509 | Cal. | 1932
THE COURT.
Petitioner seeks by this application to be reinstated to practice as an attorney at law, notwithstanding the denial to him of the favorable recommendation of the Board of Bar Governors of the state of California. On February 24, 1925, petitioner was disbarred from the further practice of law by a judgment of the Superior Court of the County of San Joaquin. Said judgment was based upon three counts: "That the defendant, Leland S. Kepler, has committed acts involving moral turpitude and dishonesty, (1) In assuming a position adverse to the interest of his client, C.E. Jubb, (2) In claiming a transfer in good faith of a promissory note to R.H. Kepler, knowing the same to be not in good faith, and that the said R.H. Kepler was not the owner and holder thereof in due course, and (3) By deceiving an attorney and officer of the court and thereby *54
depriving the said attorney and his clients of a proper and legal defense to the note above set forth." No appeal was taken from said judgment. Thereafter, petitioner removed to Orange County, and in the next year filed a petition for reinstatement with the District Court of Appeal for the Second District, Division Two, which was denied by said court for the reason stated in the opinion that said application contained a statement which was not true. (In re Kepler,
After a careful consideration of the record presented, we are of the opinion that this finding of the Board of Bar Governors is correct, and we, therefore, concur in the conclusion of the said Board of Bar Governors, based upon this finding, that the application for reinstatement should be denied. [1] The sole object of the court, upon an application by an attorney previously disbarred for reinstatement to practice, is to determine whether or not the character of the applicant is such that he should be admitted to an office of trust, and recommended to the public as a trustworthy person, fit to be consulted by others in matters of confidence. (In re Mash,
[4] There is another feature of this matter which we think had a material bearing upon the decision of the Board of Bar Governors denying to petitioner its approval of his petition for reinstatement. Petitioner's first application for reinstatement was denied by the District Court of Appeal for the reason that in his said application he had stated that a judgment for $650, which judgment was secured by the judgment creditor as a result of the acts of petitioner which subsequently led to his disbarment, had been fully paid and satisfied, whereas in fact said judgment had been compromised for $500, which compromise had been induced by the threats of petitioner to go into bankruptcy. It was the conclusion of the District Court of Appeal that by virtue of the incorporation of this false statement in the said application, petitioner had demonstrated that he had not the moral qualifications entitling him to reinstatement. In this connection it appears in the present proceeding that the District Court of Appeal stated at the time said hearing was before it that an offer on the part of petitioner to pay the balance due on said judgment, after applying thereto said sum of $500, would place petitioner in a much more favorable position before the court than he then was with this amount still unpaid. Petitioner very properly drew *57 from this remark of the court the deduction that there was, at least in the opinion of that court, justly due from him the balance unpaid on said judgment. The opinion of the District Court of Appeal was rendered in November, 1926. Petitioner made no effort to pay this debt justly due from him, although the evidence shows that he has at all times had ample funds with which he could conveniently discharge it, until November 12, 1930, immediately prior to the commencement of this proceeding. He then, instead of paying the same to the parties entitled thereto, sent a check, covering the amount due, to the Board of Bar Governors of The State Bar, with the request that said board determine the person or persons entitled to the money represented by said check and for said board to then pay the same to said person or persons. The Board of Bar Governors very properly returned the check, stating that said board had no jurisdiction to act as an arbiter in such matters. No effort so far as the record shows has since been made by petitioner to pay the balance on said judgment and the same still remains unpaid. The conduct of petitioner in respect to this matter fails to show that he has yet manifested any correct appreciation of his obligations to those whom he has wronged in the past. If he were ever in doubt as to whether he should make this restitution, the warning of the District Court of Appeal should have been sufficient to dispel such doubt. Yet he waited over four years before acting in the matter, and then just before he planned to file a second application for reinstatement forwarded his check for the unpaid balance of said judgment to the Board of Bar Governors. This may have shown some slight intention of righting the wrong he had committed, but it was of short duration and entirely ineffective, for when informed by the Board of Bar Governors that he had not pursued the right course he evidently dropped the matter, with the result that the obligation incurred by him in a transaction which loomed large in his disbarment proceeding still remains unpaid. The delay of petitioner in the first place, followed by his failure to carry into final effect his attempt to make restitution, no doubt created a poor impression of petitioner's sincerity in the minds of the Board of Bar Governors. With this impression we agree. *58
In this state of the record we cannot say that we are fully persuaded and thoroughly convinced that petitioner is entitled to reinstatement. We do not wish to be understood as saying that there has not been a marked improvement in petitioner's conduct and in his conception of the duties and obligations of a member of the legal profession since his disbarment. We do say, however, that the showing made by petitioner fails to convince us that he is qualified at this time to be reinstated as a member of the bar of this state, and that the proof proffered falls short of conveying that certainty to our minds which we deem necessary in applications of this character.
The application for admission to practice law is denied.