This is a proceeding instituted by the grievance committee of the State Bar Association to disbar the defendant from further practicing as'an attorney before the courts of this state, for willful misconduct in his profession. After the issues were made up, the cause was referred to Hon. Robert Eakin, who took and reported the testimony, together with his findings of fact and conclusions of law. The nature of the charges preferred sufficiently appears from the findings of fact, which are full, clear and accurate deductions from the testimony submitted. Said findings, including a necessary modification of the seventh, are as follows: “(1) That on or about the tenth day of October, 1896, there was pending in the said supreme court, on appeal, a suit in which Homer Nessley and others were plaintiffs and appellants, and Freeman S. Ladd was respondent, and that the said C. H. Finn was one of the attorneys of record for the said Freeman S. Ladd; that after the affirmance of the decree therein the said suit was pending upon a motion by the appellants to have the said cause reopened and referred back to the trial court to take further testimony on behalf of the said appellants, which motion was supported by the affidavits of E. S. McComas and R. W. Deal; and that on said tenth day of October, 1896, for the purpose of impeaching the said affidavits, and the character of the said E. S. McComas *521and R. "W. Deal for truth and veracity, said O. H. Finn furnished to his client, the said Freeman S. Ladd, a form for several affidavits, substantially to the effect that the subscribers, after being first duly sworn, each for himself, and not one for the other, solemnly swore that he was acquainted with the general reputation of E. S. McComas and R. W. Deal for truth and veracity in the community in which they lived, and that such reputation was bad. (2) That said Freeman S. Ladd secured the following named persons to sign the said affidavits, viz: F. Ousley, W. Berkely, A. Ferguson, C. McClure, Peter Kuhn, E. O. Crandall, G. W. Bartmess, F. M. Bartmess and William Martin. (3) That none of the said parties who signed the said pretended affidavits signed the same in the presence of O. H. Finn, nor ever went before him to swear to said affidavits, and none of them were sworn to said affidavits by said C. H. Finn, but that the said C. H-Finn on the tenth day of October, 1896, affixed his official jurat to the said affidavits in the following words and figures, viz: * Subscribed and sworn to before me this tenth day of October, 1896. C. H. Finn, notary public for Oregon,’ — and in attestation thereof affixed thereto his notarial seal as notary public for the State of Oregon. (4) That thereafter the said C. H. Finn, as one of the attorneys for the said Freeman S. Ladd in said suit, caused said pretended affidavits to be filed in the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon in the said suit. (5) That the said E. O. Crandall, whose name appears on two of said affidavits, signed the said two affidavits at the request of Freeman S. Ladd at the office of said C. H. Finn, but in the ab*522sence of said Finn; that he read the said affidavits before signing them, but did not know when they were-so signed where they were to be used; that about an hour thereafter C. H. Finn saw the said Crandall, and. asked him if he had seen Freeman S. Ladd, and he-replied that he had, and had signed the papers; but. that the said Crandall did not swear to the said affidavits, or either of them. (6) That said Charles McClure signed one of said affidavits, relating to the impeachment of the character of R. W. Deal for truth and veracity, on the said tenth day of October, 1896,. on a street of La Grande, at the request of said Ladd;, that he told said Ladd that he would not make oath to it; that he did not swear to it, and that he did not see-C. H. Finn in relation thereto either before or after he signed the same. (7) That said F. M. Bartmess signed one of said affidavits, relating to the impeachment of the character of the said R. W. Deal for truth, and veracity, on a street of La Grande, at the request-of Freeman S. Ladd, on about October 10, 1896; that-he heard it read before he signed it; that he did not swear to it before the said C. H. Finn, but that Finn asked him within a few days whether he had signed it. (8) That said Peter Kuhn signed one of said affidavits, relating to the impeachment of the character of said R..W. Deal for truth and veracity; that he did not know when he signed the same that it was to be used in the supreme court; that C. H. Finn was not present when he signed the same, and he did not swear to it; that he did not see C. H. Finn in relation to the same at' any time; that he would have sworn to it if he had been called on for that purpose, but that *523he did not know that it was to be an affidavit, or sworn to. (9) That said William Martin signed both of said affidavits, relating to the impeachment of the character of B>. W. Deal and of E. S. McComas for truth and veracity, on about the tenth day of October, 1896, at the request of Henry Dray, and delivered them to Freeman S. Ladd; that he did not swear to them, nor at any time talk with Mr. Finn in relation thereto until two months after the signing thereof; that he would have sworn to them if he had been asked to. (10) That said W. S. Berkely signed the said affidavit relating to the impeachment of the character of B. W Deal for truth and veracity, at the request of Freeman S. Ladd; that he did not know it related to the Hilts case in the supreme court; that he did not swear to it, and Mr. Finn was not present, and that he did not see Mr. Finn in relation thereto at any time. (11) That the other signers of the said affidavits were not brought before the referee. (12) That each of said signers of said affidavits, viz., Crandall, McClure, Bart-mess, Kuhn and Berkely, understood what was contained in the statement he signed, and believed it to be true. (13) That the said C. H. Finn, in preparing said affidavits and sending them to the supreme court as he did, did not intend to get a false statement of fact before the supreme court; nor did he intend by false testimony to induce the court to discredit the statements of Deal and McComas. (14) But that he did know that said pretended affidavits were not affidavits, but intended that the court should receive and act on them as such.”
The defendant testifies: That he saw Crandall, and *524asked him whether he had signed the affidavit, to which he answered that he had, and that he assented to it. That he also saw Martin and F. M. Bartmess, and perhaps G. W. Bartmess, and asked them about their signatures — whether they had signed — and that it was his recollection he said to some of them: “You swear to this, do you?” to which they gave their assent (he does not remember to have seen Kuhn, McClure or Berkely at all); that after appending his jurat to the affidavits he took them from La Grande over to Union, and laid them upon Mr. Crawford’s desk (his co-counsel in the case of NessleyY. Ladd), not intending that they should be used until he had seen all the affiants, so that no advantage could be taken of him, and that they were sent off without his knowledge; that, when he became aware of what had been done with them, he undertook to call the attention of the supreme court to the matter by letter directed to the chief justice, for the purpose of preventing any action being taken upon the strength thereof.
The findings of fact are scarcely controverted, but it is contended: First, that the statements contained in the affidavits were all true, as a matter of fact; and, second, that they were wholly immaterial and irrelevant, and could not be considered upon the question of a rehearing then pending before this court, and, consequently, that the court could not have been misled thereby. Both these propositions may be conceded, as the motion in the Nessley-Ladd case, 30 Or. 564 (48 Pac. 420), was disposed of upon a question of law. There was a question of fact presented, however, and the affidavits were intended to countervail, *525in part, at least, the appellant’s showing of newly-discovered evidence upon which the motion was based, and a real contention existed, to which the supposed affidavits were pertinent. There was also an ultimate purpose to be subserved in filing them, and it cannot avail the defendant that the matters of fact sought to be controverted thereby proved to be immaterial to an adjudication upon such motion: In re Houghton, 67 Cal. 511, 516 (8 Pac. 52).
That the pretended affidavits filed for the consideration of the court were not such in fact will hardly admit of argument. “ An affidavit is a written declaration under oath, made without notice to the adverse party”: Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 803. And the oath is administered by addressing to the affiant a prescribed formula, which may be varied to suit the occasion, whereby he is called upon to attest with uplifted hand the truth of what he is about to assert, under an immediate sense of his responsibility to God: Hill’s Ann. Laws, §§ 867, 868. To make such a document legal and authoritative in a court of justice, it takes both the affiant and officer authorized to administer the oath, acting together; and the oath must be either administered by the officer to the affiant, or asseveration must be made to the truth of the matters contained in the affidavit, by the party making it, to the officer, with his sanction: Matthews v. Reid, 94 Ga. 461 (19 S. E. 247); Carlisle v. Gunn, 68 Miss. 243 (8 South. 743). Without a direct administration of the oath, there can be no affidavit, under the statute. And, while a nonobservance of the exact formula in its administration may not relieve the affiant of legal responsibility un*526der it (Dunlap v. Clay, 65 Miss. 454, 4 South. 118), yet it is plain that there must be some actual and bonafide attempt at a due observance of the law’s requirements, to give validity to the document as an'affidavit. In the present case there is no pretense that any such attempt was made as to ■ several of the parties signing the purported affidavits. The defendant says that it was his remembrance that he said to some of them (he could not recall to whom), “You swear to this, do you?” and was answered in the affirmative. Butin this he is flatly contradicted by the parties themselves, and it is probable that he made no attempt in either case at the- administration of an oath. Crandall, and perhaps one or two others, who were asked if they had signed these papers, indicated that they had, and this is the nearest any of them came to making oath to their contents; but, notwithstanding, the defendant .appended his jurat thereto, and signed and sealed the same as a notary public, so that upon their face the documents have the appearance of genuine affidavits, when in fact they are not.
With full knowledge of their true condition, the defendant caused them to be filed for the purpose of influencing the court in favor of his client upon the pending motion. Does what is related constitute willful misconduct on the part of the accused in his profession? If it does, he is amenable to the court under the charges preferred against him; otherwise not. The documents are not false in substance, but they are not genuine in so far as they purport to he the sworn statements of the individuals subscribing them. If they had been filed in the form of mere *527statements or representations, there could haye been no possible culpability ascribed to the defendant, but in that condition they would not haye been effective for any purpose; and this the counsel knew as well as anyone, for he is by no means ignorant of the practice. The very obvious purpose, however, in presenting the statements in the form of affidavits and under the apparent sanction of an oath was to give them the weight of testimony taken ex parte, and entitle them to the consideration of the court. The condition is similar to that of an officer certifying that he .had taken the deposition of a party, and that, before proceeding to take the same, the witness had been by him duly sworn, when in truth and in fact the officer had not ■seen the witness, nor at any time attempted to administer an oath to him touching the- statements made; the only distinction being that the deposition is a higher grade of testimony, in that an opportunity is given for cross-examination. To present such a deposition would be a representation to the court that it was the genuine testimony of the witness, regularly taken under the sanction of an oath, when in truth .and in fact it was not at all entitled to consideration ..as testimony in the case, and could not, under the rules of practice, affect in any manner the matters in •dispute. Such is the effect of the presentation of the pretended affidavits as genuine, while lacking the sanction of an oath. There is a twofold falsity in the proceeding. It comprises a false certificate of the administration of an oath, and a false representation that the statements produced are the.sworn testimony -of witnesses or supposed affiants, entitling them to the *528consideration of the court. That an attorney is culpable who seeks thus to maintain his cause, there can be no contention. Such practice is not consistent with truth, nor does it conform to right principles of fair dealing, and is well calculated to impose upon, overreach and mislead the court into a perversion of justice. Conduct in an officer which may lead to such an end cannot receive the sanction of the court as correct.
The defendant seeks to excuse or palliate his conduct, as it respects his certification of the alleged affidavits, by asserting that the manner in which he obtained the assent of the affiants thereto was the usual manner of administering oaths in such cases. If this is true, there is a signal vice in the practice; and as was said by Finch, J., in Re Eldridge, 82 N. Y. 161 (37 Am. Rep. 558), "it would only make our duty all the more imperative” that the vice may be eradicated. It is due to the profession, however, to say that no such practice has been established. But in any event it could afford but slight excuse for its adoption by an attorney of long practice in the courts of justice. Again, he says that he did not intend that the affidavits should be filed until he had seen all the parties, and that as soon as he ascertained that they had been sent away he undertook to call the attention of the court to the matter, and to withdraw them from its consideration, so far' as he was able. Facts contained in the record are not in apparent harmony with these statements in detail. The affidavits themselves bear date October 10,1896, and were filed in this court the fourteenth of the same month. Other affidavits *529of several of the alleged affiants, stating the manner in which their signatures .were obtained, were taken on the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteeth of November, and filed here on the twenty-eighth of the same month, — the same day upon which defendant’s letter to the chief justice bears date. It is hardly probable that, with a bona fide intention of seeing the other parties, he completely lost sight of the affidavits for the space of more than six weeks, and that in the meantime he was ignorant of the fact that they were filed in court. But he writes: “I am now informed that many of the affiants have retracted, for the purpose of screening themselves, by swearing that they did not make oath to their former affidavits. Upon ascertaining this fact, I made due inquiry of them, to ascertain their object, and learn that they were intimidated by the appellants,— induced to believe that unless the affidavits were subscribed in the presence-of the notary, and oath administered with uplifted hand, precisely in the manner of swearing a witness-in open court, it did not constitute an oath, and their declaration in the affidavits, of ‘being first duly sworn,’ constitutes perjury, for which they have been threatened with criminal prosecution.” Here is inherent proof that the motive which induced the sending of the letter was not altogether the one ascribed. And it is not at all probable that the letter would have ever been indited, had it not been that the manner in which the affidavits had been obtained was about to be disclosed to the court, or, taking a more charitable view, it was doubtless this fact that aroused his sensibilities of the real condition of the transaction, and oi' *530his own connection therewith. It is evident that he had no intention of asking a withdrawal of these papers, except as a means of extricating himself from the charges of professional misconduct which followed. In this connection it may be remarked that there is not a scintilla of pertinent evidence in the record that any of such witnesses had been intimidated, or threatened with criminal prosecution, although direct inquiry was made of those sworn touching the matter.
His course has not been altogether consistent and candid in other respects. His letter represents that he had, prior to the time the affidavits were forwarded, approached the affiants with the inquiry as to whether the documents contained their signatures, and if they swore to them, “except probably one or two instances,” and each answered that he did. In his testimony he is not positive whether he asked any of them if they swore to their respective affidavits, and is not certain of having seen more than three of the purported affiants, but thinks he saw four, and does not pretend that he had seen any others; but the testimony against him contains strong proof that he did not even so much as see more than' two of them. He further writes that: “Bather than the respondent’s case should.be prejudiced in any manner, I prefer to withdraw the affidavits, or that they be not considered on the rehearing.” The more direct way, and the one suggested by candor, would have been to have filed a motion in the case, with the clerk, for leave to withdraw the objectionable papers from the files, or that -they be stricken therefrom, knowing that they were *531not what they purported to be. The chief culpability about the transaction, confining the proof to the charges preferred, is that it shows a reckless and willful disregard of the regularity of the means employed for the accomplishment of ultimate purposes. Furthermore, it shows a deliberate willingness to permit the court to be deceived and misled by the consideration of fictitious documents and evidence, for the production of which the accused is solely and directly responsible. Such reckless demeanor by an attorney is not consistent with professional ethics or obligations, and constitutes, as we are led to conclude, willful misconduct in his profession. This seeming disregard for truth, we regret to say, has characterized the defendant’s subsequent demeanor as it respects the matters charged against him.
We have examined this case in detail, with great care and consideration, that no injustice may be done the defendant; and, while the duty of passing judgment is a delicate and unpleasant one, our duty to an honorable profession, and the need of preserving unsullied that high standard of truth and purity by which alone an officer of justice should be measured, demand firmness in declaring the result. It is not the purpose of proceedings of this character to punish the accused attorney, as in matters of criminal cognizance, but they are inaugurated and entertained as “ necessary for the protection of the court, the proper administration of justice, and the dignity and purity of the profession, and for the public good and the protection’of clients”: Weeks on Attorneys at Law> § 80. We have determined that a suspension will *532accomplish, the purpose of correcting the evil in the present case, and therefore direct that the defendant be suspended from practice in all the courts of the state for the period of one year. An order will be entered accordingly.
Sentence oe Suspension.