Judges: Clarke
Filed Date: 5/5/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is.the usual proceeding instituted by the Association of the Bar of the City of New York charging the respondent with misconduct in his office as an attorney at law, the specification being as follows:
On December 15, 1914, Jason Neilson recovered a verdict of $500 against Joseph Freedman and Max Freedman for damages for personal injuries received by being struck by an automobile, and judgment on the verdict was entered the same day. The respondent, as attorney for the Freedmans, moved to set aside the verdict and for a new trial andón January 18,1915, that motion was denied. On that day Philip V. Manning, an attorney associated with the attorneys for Neilson, notified the respondent of the decision and the respondent asked Manning to withhold the issuance of execution until the
The learned official referee states in his report as follows: “The respondent testified, and I believe truthfully, that upon learning of the denial of the motion for a new trial on January 18,1915, he telephoned to his client advising him of the decision and instructing him to prepare to pay the judgment; that Mr. Freedman’s reply was that he had no money with which to pay the judgment, that the only property he possessed was the
“ Respondent urges that the acts and omissions with which he is charged in this affair fail to show the slightest infraction of professional propriety; that he acted throughout in good faith and in the discharge of his duties as a lawyer as he understood them, with no thought or expectation of personal benefit or profit whatsoever, "and solely with the purpose of getting together as much money as possible in order to settle the judgment, and that at no time was he a party to any scheme to change the status quo or financial condition of his clients except for the better and for the ultimate benefit of the judgment creditor.”
The learned referee has found: “In response to this claim it
It seems to be quite clear from the evidence that the value of this second-hand automobile was only about $200, and that the $300 which was obtained upon the security of the chattel mortgage thereon from Freedman’s brother-in-law was obtained for the purpose of being applied to the settlement of the judgment which had been obtained by Neilson against the Freedmans. But it seems equally clear that the preparation of the petition in bankruptcy prior to the time of the failure of the negotiations for a settlement and while the attorney for the plaintiff upon the request of the respondent was withholding the issuance of an execution on the judgment was a step taken in anticipation of the failure to obtain a settlement at the amount authorized by the Freedmans.
We agree with the learned official referee that it is not in accord with the standard of the fair dealing and straightforward conduct required of members of the profession in their professional relations with each other to take advantage of a favor extended by way of withholding process during negotiations for a settlement to actively aid in changing the financial status or condition of the client so as to make process ineffectual upon the breaking off of the negotiations. We do not think in the matter at bar, however, that respondent was actuated by an evil design or for his own personal gain or profit, but rather that he acted upon a mistaken notion of his duty to his clients. His previous character and standing are such that we are of the opinion that the ends of justice will be entirely satisfied by the administration of a censure for his abuse of the professional courtesy of withholding of process pending negotiations by active participation in changing the existing financial conditions of his clients.
McLaughlin, Laughlin, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.
Respondent censured. Order to be settled on notice.