In Re Disbarment of Burns

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
In Re Disbarment of Burns, 215 P. 193 (Okla. 1923)
90 Okla. 1; 1923 OK 230; 1923 Okla. LEXIS 1080
Cochran, Johnson, McNeill, Nicholson, Branson, Mason

In Re Disbarment of Burns

Opinion of the Court

COCHRAN, J.

This proceeding was instituted for the disbarment of J. W. Rums, and Hon. R. J. Ray wa-s appointed referee with authority to compel the attendance of witnesses, to take testimony, and report the testimony, together with findings of fact and conclusions of law, to the .Supreme Court.

The matter is now before .the court upon motion to confirm report of the referee and exceptions of the said J. W. Burns thereto. The referee reported on 14 specific charges, and as to seven of the charges found that the same -were not sustained by the proof, and, in view of our holding as to -the other charges, we shall not examine the charges which were not sustained by the referee.

The findings of the referee on the other charges are reported under the following heads: The Meisberger Case, the Gingrich Case, the Garrett Case, the Obverbay Case, the McCarthy Case, the Weeks Case, and (.he Nutty Case. In each of them the referee found that the. said J. W. Burns had wrongfully appropriated money belonging to his client to his own use, and concluded that there was a willful violation of his dfuties as -an attorney at law. The findings of the referee are so lengthy that we shall not attempt to incorporate the same in this opinion. In the Meisberger Case, the Garrett Case, the Obverbay Case, and the Weeks Case the testimony shows beyond any question a -wrongful appropriation of the funds of' the clients. In these cases, statements of the attorney himself are sufficient to justify, the findings of the referee without considering the testimony of any of the other witnesses. As. to each of the other cases, there is sufficient testimony upoq which the findings of the referee can be sustained, but in those cases the respondent has furnished somewhat satisfactory explanations, which would be given a great deal more weight were it not for the fact that in the other, cases which we have mentioned no excuse whatever for the misconduct has been offered.

This court in the case of In re Sitton, 72 Oklahoma, 177 Pac. 555, said:

“Disbarment means professional excommunication and death, and should be resorted to only when it is apparent that the interest of the community, the integrity of the courts, or the honor of the profession imperatively demands it.”

In the same case, the court also said:

• “The lawyer's life must be one of fidelity and .■'tern integrity. There is no -place at the ba-r for the unscrupulous, and the cheeks of the lawyer, who besmirches his profession, should be made to -burn with shame?’ ,

In the instant case, the findings of the referee show a willful violation of the.-du *2 ties of an attorney, not in one case but in any instances, ancl we have concluded that these findings in selvieral instances are supported even toy the testimony of the respondent himself, and under such circumstances it is our opinion that the report of the referee should toe adopted and approved, and it is so ordered, and the license to practice law1 heretofore issued to J. W. Burns toe and the same is hereby revoked, and the said J. W. Burns shall be hereby disbarred and prevented from practicing law in the state of Oklahoma.

JOHNSON, C. X, and McNEILL, NICHOLSON, BRANSON, and MASON, JJ„ concur.

Reference

Cited By
1 case
Status
Published