The proceeding is one to review the recommendation of the Board of Bar Governors of the statе of California to the effect that petitioner be suspended from the practice of law for the рeriod of three months. The local administrative committee No. 9 made its recommendation that petitiоner be given a private reprimand, which conclusion was arrived at after the committee had made its finding that the accused attorney, while representing the Pacific Investment Trust and gaining information of a confidentiаl character, had solicited employment from two women investors therein, without revealing to them his professional association with the trust, and had secured them to sign contracts with him by which he would and actually did exact an exorbitant and unconscionable fee for demanding and receiving from the trust the amount of their investment; and hаd falsely represented to them, for the purpose of securing them to sign the agreements, that he had beеn investigating the trust and had tied up the money; and that he and no other attorney could make the recovery for them, although he knew at the time that the Pacific Investment Trust intended to turn the money back to them and that such conduct on the part of petitioner was dishonest and oppressive.
The petitioner claims that these findings are unsupported by the evidence and in his petition recites his version of the affair.
We cannot but conclude, in view of the rule which requires a petitioner for a writ of review to “fairly state all the material evidenсe relative to the point”, when his claim is founded upon the ground that the testimony is insufficient (
Should we approve the recommendation of the Board of Governors? Considerable emрhasis has been laid upon the fact that petitioner had only been practicing four years and was only twenty-seven years of age. This, however, is - not a case of the mere violation of the rule against the solicitation of business, nor is it so much an infringement *355 of the canon against representing conflicting interest as it is a violation of-the very fundamentals of common honesty and fair dealing. The license to practice is not a liсense to mulct the unfortunate, hut to assist in righting their wrongs, so far as humanly possible. It is doubtful, in view of the record in this case, if petitioner can thoroughly appreciate the full significance of the foregoing statement in a pеriod of three months. If he were older in the profession we should have no doubt concerning his disbarment. As it is, the leаst disciplinary punishment, under the circumstances, was recommended by the Board of Bar Governors.
It is, thereforе, ordered that petitioner he suspended from the practice of law in all the courts of this state for a period of three months, said suspension to begin with the date of the filing of this order.
Langdon, J., Curtis, J., Waste, C. J., Seawell, J., Freston. J„ and Shenk, J., concurred.
