This is a disbarment proceeding commenced by the Bar Commission based upon charges filed against H.W. Sitton by D.A. Bridges, both members of the bar of Duncan, Okla.
Sitton, who will be referred to as respondent, while county attorney of Stephens county, collected something near $1,000 on criminal bonds or recognizances, which were forfeited during his tenure of office, and, instead of deducting the 25 per cent. allowed him for collecting these bonds and turning the remainder into the county treasury of Stephens county, he held the whole amount, claiming that the county was indebted to him an amount in excess of the sums retained by him by reason of the fact that the county had never paid him certain commissions that were due him on ecrtain civil bonds which he had collected.
The evidence showed that 25 per cent. commission on the civil bonds collected by him, and which he claimed that the county owed him amounted to $1,171.57.
Sitton, the respondent, had served two terms as county attorney and was then elected to the Legislature, being succeeded as county attorney by D.A. Bridges, who will be referred to as relator.
Bridges, the relator, asked for a second term as county attorney, and the respondent entered the race as a candidate against him. During the campaign the relator sprung the fact that Sitton, his opponent, while county attorney, had collected and held the money on the bonds as above stated and prosecuted him for embezzlement. Sitton defended himself against the charge of embezzlement, and the referee finds "that upon a trial he was acquitted," but states:
"I am unable to determine from the evidence whether this trial was before a jury or whether it was a preliminary examination."
And, although the withholding of this money was made an issue in the campaign for *Page 14 county attorney, the respondent also defeated the relator at the polls.
The relator then filed these charges with the Bar Commission and asked that the respondent be disbarred.
The statute, under which the disbarment proceeding is brought, is subdivision 3 of section 252, Revised Laws of 1910, which provides for the disbarment of an attorney "for the willful violation of any of the duties of an attorney or counsellor." And it is insisted by the relator that the conduct of the respondent in withholding this money collected on these bonds brings him squarely within the provision of the statute, while it is urged with equal earnestness by the respondent that he withheld the money in good faith and with no corrupt motive or intention.
This is not a criminal action, and this court is not the tribunal designated by our statute to try criminal cases, and the respondent is not on trial here for embezzlement; but the direct question is whether or not the character and conduct of the respondent is such that this court should protect the public and the courts of justice against him. The respondent has had his day in the criminal courts. The relator prosecuted and tried him in the courts designated by statute to hear and determine criminal actions, and, so far as the criminality of his conduct is concerned, we shall presume that the court intrusted to hear and determine that question discharged its duty, and we shall not attempt to invade its province, or question its integrity. Had he been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, under the statutory directions, we would have accepted the record of conviction as conclusive, and, since that same tribunal has acquitted him, we shall accredit the same verity to its decision.
The statute is intended to protect the public and courts of justice from an attorney who willfully, perversely, with an evil intent, and without jutifiable excuse, violates the high and confidential relations of attorney and counselor — to maintain the exalted position to which the pioneers through sacrifice and toil have lead the bar — for the lawyer occupies a most delicate and confidential position, and there is no room at the bar for the unscrupulous. But the lawyer's life must be one of fidelity and stern integrity, for his client's all is placed in his hands; his life, his property, and his honor are intrusted to his attorney, and he must guard all this well. For his fidelity to this trust means more than the mere plaudits of the curious. It may mean a life saved, a son given back to the bosom of the family; that the tottering form of the old man of the home may be handed to the grave in peace; that the daily bread may not be taken from the widow's table; and that the orphan's cheek may not grow pallid with hunger. It often means all this and more, to be a conscientious, skillful lawyer; and the cheeks of him, who besmirches this high and virtuous calling, should be made to burn with shame.
But disbarment means professional excommunication and death. It means to loose the moorings and turn a life adrift, 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 And neither of these conditions prevail in the instant case. The judges of both the county and district courts, under oath, testify as to the good character and professional integrity of the respondent in their courts. Private citizens, under oath, and the electorate at the polls, have spoken as to his good character and integrity in the community; and, in the face of these tokens of confidence, we shall not say that he deserves, or that the interest of the community or integrity of the courts demand his professional execution.
But he did wrong in holding this money as he did. The Legislature of 1910 (section 24, c. 69, Session Laws 1910) passed an act forbidding county attorneys to engage in civil practice, but provided that —
"In addition to his annual salary, he [the county attorney] shall receive twenty-five per cent. of all forfeited bonds and recognizances by him collected."
And when the respondent collected the civil bonds heretofore referred to, he turned the money in to the county treasurer, and filed a claim with the county commissioners for 25 per cent. of the amount as his commission. The county commissioners did not question his right to the commission, or refuse to pay it on the ground that he was not entitled to it, but stated that there was no fund upon which they could draw a warrant to pay it. The respondent asked certain deputy state auditors if they knew of any procedure by which he could get his money; and they stated to him that he could either sue the county and reduce his claim to a judgment, or hold the amount out of any bonds collected by him in the future; that this latter procedure was a little irregular, but that this was being done by county attorneys all over the state *Page 15 The respondent acted upon the latter suggestion, and held out this $1,000 collected by him on criminal recognizances, until his attention was called to a decision of this court (Pope v. Board of Commissioners, 45 Okla. 521, 146 P. 222) to the effect that, under the act of 1910, county attorneys were not entitled to a commission on civil bonds collected by them. He then refunded this $1,000 less his commission.
We do not, in the light of this record, question the motives of the respondent, but he should not have held one penny of the county's money that had come into his hands, even in satisfaction of a claim against the county that he believed to be justly due him, without the knowledge and express consent of those authorized and empowered to act for the county that this might be done. Before he applied one cent of the county's money, which had come into his hands, to the payment of a debt due him by the county, no matter how just it might have been, he should have taken the matter up with the county commissioners and had them to direct him to satisfy his claim against the county in this way. This would have relieved the respondent from any imputation of fraud; for it would have then become the act of the county commissioners, and been the method selected by them of satisfying a debt against the county. For one has no right to divert a fund intrusted to him, except by the direction and upon the authority of the one who intrusted it.
We therefore severely reprimand the respondent for thus diverting this fund, and laying himself liable, as a member of the bar, to the charge of professional misconduct and fraud, but, in the light of the record, refuse to disbar or suspend him.
All the Justices concur, except SHARP, C. J., not participating, and HARDY and MILey, JJ., dissenting.