Filed Date: 4/6/1945
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/28/2024
The respondent is charged with professional misconduct because of an arrangement making “ solicitation inevitable ”, which he made with Local 333 of the International Longshoremen’s Association, a labor union. *.
In July, 1934, the respondent was retained by Local 333 as its attorney. The constitution of Local 333 provided that the secretary shall “ advise and counsel members * * * in cases of injury that may occur while employed in the marine industry ”. It is admitted that for a number of years the secretary of the Union, one Louis Ziegler, was accompanied by a representative of the respondent when he called upon injured Union members at their homes or at hospitals. It is not disputed that on many occasions the respondent’s representative was an aitorney named Sidney Schiffman, whose
The Official Referee has reported:
“ The only question to be decided upon the undisputed facts is, was the manner in which the respondent became attorney for * * * injured members of Local 333 the result of solicitations made inevitable by his arrangement with the local in accompanying or having Schiffman accompany Ziegler to visit an injured member. There cannot be the least doubt that the question must be answered in the affirmative. * * *.
“ By this arrangement Fisch, through Schiffman, was able to approach an injured member first, and while informing him of his legal rights, easily induce him as a part of his legal rights, to consent to commence an action to recover damages and place himself in the hands of the accredited attorney of the union to enforce those legal rights, and when the testimony * * * is considered, it appears that the charge made has been fully established; namely, that Schiffman was placed in a peculiarly advantageous position for the solicitation of cases from injured members who,, under the influence of pain or opiates might be susceptible to the slightest suggestion made to them by persons on whom they felt they had a right to rely.
“ Informing a seriously injured person in a hospital of his legal rights, which would necessarily include his right to maintain an action to recover damages, if one exists, awakens him to action, and suggesting to him to take the step — all coinciding with his informant’s hint that he is the attorney for the union and is the attorney best qualified to be employed — requires very little effort. The particularly favorable position of the respondent as attorney for the union, and the opportunity given him of being persona grata to the injured person, makes solicitation in the manner above indicated inevitable.”
In view of the fact that the respondent has discontinued the improper practices engaged in by him, this court is of the opinion ■ that a censure is sufficient punishment.
The' respondent should he censured.
Martin, P. J., ToWnley, Glennon, Cohn and Callahan, JJ., concur.
Respondent censured.