Court Opinion

ID: 7362952
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:48:50.642748+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:41.213302
License: Public Domain

DENSON, J.
This is a disbarment proceeding, prosecuted in the name of the state of Alabama against Wiley T. Johnson. The proceeding was instituted by the solicitor of the Seventh judicial circuit, on a written statement signed by the .chairman of the Central Council of the Alabama State Bar Association, attested by the secretary of the Association, and accompanied by the written affidavit of W. B. Browne, making charges for the suspension or removal of said Wiley T. Johnson, as *96an attorney at law, and setting ¡forth facts upon which such suspension'or removal should be based. This is in accordance with the provisions of the act, amendatory of certain sections of the Code, relating to disbarment proceedings, approved October 3,1903. — Gen. Acts 1903, p. 346. Under the act the duty devolves on the solicitor to prosecute all disbarment proceedings, and in the seventh section of the act it is provided that “the court may, upon the motion of said solicitor, and upon good cause shown, at any time require the said Alabama State Bar Association to give security for the costs of such proceedings to'be approved by the court within ten days from notice to the secretary of said Association, by -said solicitor,” etc. Obviously, from the very language of this section, it is only on motion of the solicitor that security for costs may be required, and the court properly overruled the motion made by the defendant to require security for costs to be given.
After the motion to require security for costs to be given, and the motion to dismiss the cause because no security for costs was filed at‘the time the accusation was filed, were overruled, a plea pendente lite was filed, and a demurrer thereto was sustained. The action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the plea constitutes a ground in the assignment of errors. Unless an assignment of error is insisted upon in the brief of the appellant’s counsel, no duty devolves on this court to consider the assignment, and it will be treated as waived-In respect to the assignment of error presenting the ruling of the court on the demurrer to the plea pendente lite, appellant’s counsel in his brief simply recites the facts that the plea was filed, the substance of the plea, that there was. a demurrer, and that the demurrer was sustained. No argument is presented nor authority cited in support of the assignment of error. Mere recital *97of what is shown by the record cannot be considered as an insistence on the assignment, and we shall, in keeping with our decisions in respect to failure to insist on an assignment of error, pretermit consideration of the merits of the assignment in question. — Western Railway of Ala. v. Russell, 144 Ala. 143, 39 South. 311, and authorities there cited; Sacrbrough v. Borders, 115 Ala. 436, 22 South. 180. The same is true in respect to all the other grounds of error presenting for review rulings of the court on the pleadings.
The appellant suffers no injury from the foregoing conclusion, because the merits of the case are clearly presented by the record, and the point most insisted upon in the argument at the bar, and on which the guilt or innocence of the defendant must be determined, remained in the case after the several rulings were made, and would have remained if the several rulings (except that on the plea pendente lite) had been in defendant’s favor, instead of against him. That point or question is: Does the writing and mailing of the letter by the defendant, an attorney at law, to Hon. John Pelham, then judge of the Seventh judicial circuit, and which was received by the judge in the due course of mail, at his home in Anniston, Ala., while he was not engaged in •holding court, constitute sufficient ground for the suspension or removal of the defendant as an attorney at law? And it may be added that no proof was offered on any of the grounds of the accusation ,other than those which relate to the letter. Section 596 of the Code of 1896 provides that an attorney at law may be removed or suspended “for a willful violation of any of the provisions of section 590” of the Code. Section 590 provides that: “It is the duty of attorneys: * * * (2) To maintain the respect due to courts of justice and *98judicial officers.” Again, tbe oatb of every attorney requires that be shall not violate any of tbe duties enjoined on bim by law. — Code 1896, § 587. Tbe statute does not prescribe or define wbat acts or wbat conduct on tbe part of an attorney shall constitute disrespect to judicial officers; but it is clear to our minds, from tbe words of tbe statute, that neither tbe obligations of an attorney nor tbe terms of tbe statute are complied with by tbe mere observance of tbe rule of courteous demeanor in open court — that they certainly include abstaining while out of court from tbe use of insulting language, written or spoken, and from offensive conduct toward^ judges personally for their judicial acts.
On tbe face of tbe letter here involved, it is perfectly clear that it relates to a judicial act of Judge Pelham. Tbe clause in tbe letter reading, “In future I want you to act tbe gentleman (in court) towards me, and on tbe outside of court you will have it to do, or I will know why,” manifestly refers to tbe demeanor of tbe judge while occupying tbe bench — while acting in bis judicial capacity — towards tbe defendant; and tbe only reasonable construction that can be placed on tbe clause is that tbe writer meant that tbe judge’s judicial conduct did not square with rightness of principle or practice. Furthermore, tbe following language in tbe letter:JuI can (have no patience nor respect for a circuit judge who will so far forget bis oatb of office as to meet (at night) and during the trial of E. S. Carey, with tbe solicitor and tbe county solicitor, and feast on partridges, and discuss bow and why a certain man should be triedT — can refer to nothing other than tbe conduct of Judge Pelham as a judicial officer. Certainly it shows that it was tbe conduct or reported conduct of tbe judge in respect to a cause that bad been tried in court which bad aroused tbe ire and indignation (?) of tbe defendant. Indeed, *99the whole tenor of the letter shows that the judge was being called to task by the defendant on account of the judge’s deportment in the courthouse in respect to a certain cause or causes he had tried wherein the defendant was one of the attorneys. This is further demonstrated, if more proof be necessary, by the reference in the letter to forgetfulness by the judge of his judicial oath; for as a man — as an individual — his conduct was not gauged or controlled by any oath. So, without further elaboration, we unhesitatingly announce the conclusion that, taking the letter as a whole, it refers to the judicial conduct of the judge.
The Constitution and the statute law of the state provide for the impeachment of a judge whose conduct has disqualified him from holding the office to which he has been elected, and it is the duty of every attorney or other citizen, who has knowledge of any act which would justify impeachment, to present the facts to the proper tribunal, in order that proper and orderly action may be taken, when the charges can be duly investigated and the officer afforded an opportunity to be heard in defense; and if defendant had any foundation (which it seems he had not) for the charges he made in the letter against Judge Pelham he should have resorted- to the mode pointed out by the law for making them. He did not do this, but unquestionably allowed his feelings — it may be his malicious feelings — to lead him into writing the letter here under consideration. The method adopted by the defendant — the sending of that letter — was eminently improper and inconsistent with the relation which should subsist between members of the bar and judicial officers charged with the duty of administering justice. Not only that, but who doubts the tendency of such a letter to injure the reputation of courts and of judges for probity and impartiality, and to destroy pub-*100lie confidence in the judiciary (than which nothing could be more deplorable) ? “A judge cannot, with propriety, defend himself against attacks made by members of the bar, made through the press or by letters, because to do so would be not only to bring the judge in public contempt and disrepute, but would be to depart from all the wise traditions of the bench.” Moreover, as suggested in the brief of appellee’s counsel, the writer of the letter here under consideration gives no opportunity to Judge Pelham to deny the imputation made against him. The writer assumes the truth of the statement of Carey in the outset, and denounces the judge in the most unqualified terms. If the judge had, in reply, written a denial of Carey’s statement, it would have placed him in the attitude of making such denial and explanation under fear of denunciation in the public press as a poltroon, liar, and cur. If members of the bar are to be permitted to impugn the integrity and impartiality of the bench without just cause, whether during court session or in vacation, it may be asked, how long will the laymen, who assume that attorneys are in position to know the facts in such cases, retain that confidence in the bench so essential to its usefulness?
It must be borne in mind that this is not a contempt proceeding, but a proceeding for the disbarment of an attorney; and the distinction between the two is well marked and defined. An attorney may be guilty of conduct which would warrant his disbarment, but which would not amount to a contempt of court. — Weeks on Attorneys, § 80. The cases cited and relied on by appellant’s counsel are, in the main, cases involving contempt proceedings. In the case of Jackson v. State, 21 Tex. 668, it is only held that applying opprobious and abusive epithets to the judge in vacation cannot be considered a contempt. In respect to this case, Judge Freeman, in *101his notes to the case of In re Philbrook, 45 Am. St. Rep. 59, 86, says: “This case is an extreme one, and, perhaps, cannot be approved, unless on the ground that the language complained of was used during an exciting political contest.” Having determined that the letter relates to judicial conduct or judicial acts of the judge we unhesitatingly conclude that in sending the letter to Judge Pelham the defendant willfully failed to maintain the respect due to him as a judicial officer, and thereby breached his oath as an attorney. Further, we are of opinion that the letter is of such a nature as to demand a disbarment of the defendant, and we therefore affirm the judgment of the court below.
Affirmed.
Tyson, C. J., and Haralson and Simpson, JJ., concur.