DocketNumber: Appeal, 69
Judges: Maxey, Linn, Steen, Patteeson, Steaene, Jones
Filed Date: 5/23/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In the court below, this proceeding was treated as an appeal from the refusal of the board of law examiners of Montgomery County to approve the appellant's application for admission to the bar of the county. The court agreed with the board. From the order dismissing the appeal from the board, dated November 23, 1948, the applicant appealed to this court. We all agree that the order must be affirmed.
It is unnecessary to detail the steps averred by appellant to have been taken unsuccessfully, prior to the filing of his petition of April 27, 1948, now before us. It is sufficient to say that at various times beginning with September, 1935, appellant applied to the board of law examiners for the required certificate of compliance with the local rules for admission to the bar and that some of those local rules were no longer in force when appellant filed the petition now under review.
The appellant was admitted to the bar of this Court and to the courts of Philadelphia County in 1934. He acquired a home in Montgomery County in 1935 and established a law office in his home, thereafter practicing his profession in his Philadelphia office as well as in his Montgomery County office, except when in the Navy. He is at a disadvantage in Montgomery County because, not being a member of the bar of that county, he cannot conduct litigation in its courts without associating local counsel with him. Desiring to avoid this disadvantage he instituted this proceeding. His petition was dismissed for want of compliance with rule 7, paragraph 9, subsection 5, of the requirements for admission adopted by the Montgomery County courts. It provides: "(5) Such applicant *Page 349 shall also deliver to the said Board a declaration signed by him, setting out that he intends permanently to practice in this county, and that he will, within three weeks of his admission, open and maintain his principal office therein, and that failure to do so, or removal of his principal office to another county shall be construed as a request by him to have his name stricken from the Roll of the Bar of this county. If the said Board shall approve the applicant this declaration shall be attached by the Board to their certificate recommending his admission, which shall be produced in open court when his motion for admission is made, and shall be filed thereafter with the Prothonotary."
Appellant declined to sign such a declaration1 as part of the application made in October, 1947. The court relied onOlmsted's Case,
A lawyer ought to have no difficulty in deciding which, of more than one office maintained by him, is in fact his principal office. The record does not require us to attempt to frame a definition that would be all inclusive; cases will be decided as they arise. The object of the rule was stated by Chief Justice MOSCHZISKER *Page 350 in Olmsted's Case; with that object in mind, "good fidelity to the court" should point the way in any case in which an applicant is in doubt.
In a deposition taken March 4, 1948, the appellant testified, "Q. What do you consider to be your principal office? A. Well, from a point of view of seeing clients I would say it would be Philadelphia. From the point of view of getting work done, I would say it is Montgomery County — that is, office work, desk work and records. Q. If you should be admitted to the Montgomery County Bar, what is your intention with respect to offices in the future? A. To continue them the same as I am at the present time. That is, I would say, I would have the office in Philadelphia and also the office in Montgomery County. Q. Now, at the present time where are your files and records kept? A. Most of them are kept in Montgomery County. Some of them are kept in the Philadelphia office. Q. What are your intentions as to the future with respect to the continuance of the present office in Montgomery County? A. My intention is to continue it the same as at the present time."
The principal office requirement means what it says, and the evidence of the appellant establishes that he declines to say in which county he maintains or will maintain his principal office. So long as the rule exists, it must be complied with. Since the institution of this proceeding in April, 1948, this Court has amended2 the *Page 351 rules of admission to the courts of counties other than the county in which admission was first made.
Under the fifth heading of appellant's brief it is contended that "The principal office rule violates the due process clause of the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution." We must reject the contention. ". . . due process of law and the equal protection of the laws are secured if the laws operate on all alike and do not subject the individual to an arbitrary exercise of the powers of government . . ." Duncan v. Missouri,
The fact that in other states lawyers are licensed to practice in all the courts of the state and in this Commonwealth are not so admitted, is no legal argument against the validity of the local procedure. The requirement of county licensing to practice in the county is probably traceable to early3 custom in Pennsylvania.
Order affirmed, costs to be paid by appellant.
"Failure on my part so to do or removal of my principal office to another county shall be construed as a request by me to have my name stricken from the roll of the Bar of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.
"WITNESS my hand and seal, this _____ day of April, A.D. 1948."
"In case an otherwise qualified applicant is denied admission to the bar of the county on the ground of a lack of the requisite moral qualifications, he or she shall have a right to a hearing on that issue before the county examining board, and if the decision is adverse to the applicant, the latter shall have a right of appeal to the State Board of Law Examiners, and if the decision there should also be adverse, the applicant shall have a right of appeal to this Court. Should the decision of the State Board of Law Examiners be a reversal of the decision of the county board of law examiners, the latter shall likewise have a right of appeal to this Court. The county board of law examiners shall have a stenographic record made of the hearing on the issue as to the applicant's moral qualifications, and every appeal herein provided for shall be accompanied by a transcript of that record.
"Any and all local rules for admission to the respective bars of the courts of the several counties of this Commonwealth, which prescribe length of residence in that county as a prerequisite to admission to the local bar or limit the number of admissions upon a quota basis, are hereby superseded."