Argued January 9, 1928. Allen S. Olmsted, 2d, a member of the Philadelphia Bar and a resident of Delaware County, desiring to become enrolled as a member of the Delaware County Bar, applied to the board of law examiners of that county for a certificate of approval. The board, after expressing itself as satisfied with the applicant's general qualifications, refused the certificate on the sole ground that he had not stated an intention to open and maintain his principal office in Delaware County as required by the rules of the court of common pleas of that district. Subsequently, Mr. Olmsted's admission was moved in open court; the petition in support of this motion recited all the other essential facts, and also that the applicant would have an office at his residence in Delaware County, designating that place and a post office box as addresses in the county where papers might be served on him. The court below granted a rule on its board of law examiners to show cause why that body should not approve the application; the rule was discharged after a hearing, an exception was allowed, and this appeal followed.
While the opinion in support of the order appealed from suggests that "it may well be doubted whether the procedure __________ should not have been by petition for a writ of alternative mandamus [against the local examining board], instead of by an application for a rule to show cause," yet the case was there disposed of in the form in which it was brought before the court; and no procedural question of any kind is raised by either side on this appeal.
The court rule here involved was adopted March 7, 1904; it provides that an applicant for admission to the bar of Delaware County shall make a "formal declaration in writing that he intends permanently to practice in that county, and within three months to open his principal office there, which certificate shall be filed *Page 102 by the board [of law examiners] with its report." The validity of this rule of court is the real question before us for decision. In its opinion sustaining the action of the board and construing the rule, the court below said, inter alia: "The board of law examiners has neither power nor authority to disregard [our] rule of court, nor of its own motion to modify it, and, as long as the rule stands unchanged, the board __________ must observe it; the action of the board in declining to accept the papers of the applicant, without such formal declarations in writing [as required by the rule], was the only action that [it] could properly take." This raises the main point in the present case: Is the rule of the court below, under which appellant was refused admission as a regularly enrolled member of the bar of that tribunal, a valid regulation which he had to meet, or was he legally entitled to be so enrolled notwithstanding his noncompliance with that rule?
The court below did not question the qualifications of the applicant from the standpoint of legal education and character; on the contrary, its opinion states: "It cannot be held that the local examining board is to review the action of the Supreme Court in determining the qualifications of the applicant for admission to that court, nor to suggest that while he may be __________ qualified to practice before that tribunal, he has not sufficient knowledge of the law to practice in [a lower] court. The mere statement of any such proposition is sufficient, we think, to show its absurdity __________. The certificate from the Supreme Court establishing that the applicant is __________ learned in the law, __________ as we understand it, prevents the other courts from examining as to his qualifications in this one respect. In all other respects, however, it is for the [lower] courts alone to determine what else they will require from the applicant before admitting him to practice as a member of the bar of such courts." These views are not at variance with the existing system controlling admissions to the bar in Pennsylvania, *Page 103 except that, since the rules adopted by us on September 30, 1927, setting up machinery to inquire into the personal character of candidates for admission to the bar of the Supreme Court, membership at the bar of this court is sufficient in itself to show good character up to the date of such admission, though, as said by us in Hoopes v. Bradshaw, 231 Pa. 485, 491, "any [other] court may refuse to permit [a member of the bar of the Supreme Court] to practice before it upon being duly informed that he no longer possesses an 'honest disposition,' " or, in other words, a good moral character. To which we now add: or if such other court certifies of record either a reason to believe that the Supreme Court was misled as to the candidate's real character, or other good and sufficient reasons why he should not be enrolled as a member of the local bar to which he seeks admission.
Of course, one admitted to the bar has a public office conferred on him (Austin's Case, 5 Rawle 191, 202), and the people as a whole are interested in all who shall occupy such offices, but the power to regulate that matter, for their benefit, belongs in Pennsylvania to the judicial department of government (Hoopes v. Bradshaw, 231 Pa. 485, 487), not to the legislative; and the various statutes dealing with admissions to the bar which have been passed from time to time (as shown by the Reporter's notes published in connection herewith), involve a judicial, rather than a legislative, subject-matter. In Splane's Petition, 123 Pa. 527, 540, we said that the Act of May 19, 1887, P. L. 131, was an unconstitutional interference with a judicial prerogative; in Hoopes v. Bradshaw, however, this assertion was held to be obiter dictum, since it was unnecessary to go that far in order to decide the Splane Case. The true rule is as follows: Statutes dealing with admissions to the bar will be judicially recognized as valid, so far as, but no further than, the legislation involved does not encroach on the right of the courts to say who shall be *Page 104 priviliged to practice before them, and under what circumstances persons shall be admitted to that privilege. Acts of this kind have been construed in the past in such a way as to bring them within this rule, rather than as being unconstitutional. We shall not discuss in detail the various statutes referred to above; for none of them can control the courts in performing the purely judicial act of deciding who shall enjoy the privilege of practicing before them, though, so far as such statutes do not encroach on the prerogative of the judicial department of the government to regulate admissions to the bar, the courts have heretofore properly heeded them. For instance, in the Hoopes Case (pp. 490-491) we said of the Act of May 8, 1909, P. L. 475, that it "merely declared what effect shall be given to the rules [and] orders of this court," as to admissions to the bar, which rules and orders we had "the inherent power to make, independently of the legislative branch of the government," adding that the act in question, when thus construed, "neither encroaches upon nor interferes with [powers] exercisable by the judiciary alone," and, therefore, we did not regard it as "an unconstitutional interference with the exercise of a judicial function." To this extent we sustained the statute then before us, because, as there explained, instead of being an encroachment on the judiciary, it aided the highest court of the State to enforce its rules and orders. But, while thus upholding the statute, we said, in no uncertain terms, that there are "certain functions of the lower courts" with which the legislature cannot interfere, one of them being the power to adopt rules to facilitate the proper dispatch of the business of such tribunals, instancing regulations relating to "the service of notices and papers." In this connection, we particularly said that, when one who does not intend to establish an office in a county to whose courts he would be admitted applies for such admission, "he is not to expect practitioners having established offices within [the county] to be subjected *Page 105 to annoyance and inconvenience in the service of [papers] upon him." Then we said, in effect, that the adoption of a rule to minimize such annoyance and inconvenience was "within the power of the court" even if the rule in question affected the right to be admitted to the bar of such court, and this notwithstanding we were then considering a statute which, if literally construed (assuming no limitation on the power of the legislature over the subject matter involved), apparently provided to the contrary.
The rule here under attack is consistent with and does not unduly extend the principle of the Hoopes Case. As said in the opinion disposing of appellant's application, the court below was "justified in taking such reasonable steps as suggest themselves to expedite properly its business and to prevent undue congestion of its calendars." To show that the rule under discussion was "calculated" to advance the ends just mentioned, the opinion states a view which conceivably may be taken, that an attorney will naturally give preference to business which originates in the county where his principal office is located and the bulk of his business is conducted, "rather than to business originating in [some other county] and conducted in [its] courts, where a conflict between the two arises, as, for instance, where his attendance may be required in different cases in the different counties at the same time." The court further says that it has had frequent illustration of such results, and reasonably adds that, while "conditions of this sort may at times arise, __________ no matter what rules are adopted," yet, if it has to admit to its bar "as regular practitioners" all members of the bars of adjoining counties who have been admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court, and who may choose to present themselves for such admission, it might expect a condition of congestion of its calendars, and of inability to proceed rapidly with the trial of cases, to become permanent instead of occasional. *Page 106
After considering the various statutes on the subject in hand, the cases thereunder mentioned in the notes of the Reporter, also the fact of separate county bars long existing in Pennsylvania, and the prevailing plan of judicially regulated state examination of candidates for admission to the bar, we find the rule of the court below, as construed by it, to be neither invalid nor out of harmony with our present system; finally, we find no error in the disposition made by that tribunal of appellant's petition for enrollment as a member of the Delaware County Bar.
While we shall not attempt to discuss all the cases above referred to, it may be well to state that, in our opinion, none of them contains any ruling which at this day requires a decision different from the conclusion just stated. Interesting notes on the point of admission to the bar being a judicial rather than a legislative act will be found in 10 L.R.A. (N.S.) 289, and in 17 W. N.C. 563; the latter contains several additional Pennsylvania cases on the general subject here involved.
The order appealed from is affirmed.