This condemnation proceeding was instituted in the County Court of Erie County by the plaintiff Erie County Water Authority to acquire property rights of the defendants Western New York Water Company and New York Water Service Corporation. When the issues came on to be heard, counsel for the defendant companies orally moved the County Court for an order prohibiting Laurence J. Olmsted, a member of the profession of the Bar in this State, from appearing in the proceeding as counsel for the plaintiff water authority.
In 1936, Mr. Olmsted had entered the employ of the Public Service Commission of this State as an attorney at law and several years later had been advanced to the rank of Assistant Counsel to the commission, a position which he occupied until May 16, 1951, when he resigned and accepted employment as counsel for the plaintiff water authority. When the defendant companies challenged the propriety of the appearance of Mr. Olmsted herein, he entered a special appearance, denied the power of the County Court to determine the charge made against him by the defendant companies and insisted that exclusive jurisdiction to dispose of such an accusation was conferred by section 90 of the Judiciary Law upon the Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court. The County Court, however, assumed jurisdiction of the motion made against Mr. Olmsted by the defendant companies and, after a hearing, denied that motion in an opinion which reads in part as follows:
“ Did Olmsted investigate or pass upon this matter while acting as attorney for the Public Service Commission?
“ Olmsted had never appeared in this proceeding or any other related thereto prior to his employment by the plaintiff. He has never appeared for or on behalf of the Western New York Water Company in any manner. His former employer the Public Service Commission, is not a party to and is not interested in this condemnation action.”
In accordance with its views as so expressed, the County Court made an order which (1) denied the oral motion whereby the defendant companies sought to bar appearance herein by Mr. Olmsted as counsel for the plaintiff water authority, and (2) granted leave to Mr. Olmsted to appear herein as trial counsel and as attorney for the plaintiff water authority.
From that order of the County Court the defendant companies appealed to the Appellate Division where that order was affirmed on the sole ground that the County Court had no jurisdiction to grant the motion made by the defendant companies against Mr. Olmsted. All the Justices of the Appellate Division were of opinion that the County Court was without jurisdiction of that motion. One Justice, however, dissented and voted for reversal of the order of the County Court and dismissal of the motion upon these grounds: (1) The County Court was without jurisdiction to entertain the motion or to grant the relief therein sought; (2) the order of the County Court was a nullity; (3) the objection made by Mr. Olmsted to the jurisdiction of the County Court should have been sustained.
On an appeal by the defendant companies from the order of the Appellate Division, the case is now properly here (Erie Co. Water Authority v. Western N. Y. Water Co., 303 N. Y. 908. See Cohen and Karger, Powers of the New York Court of Appeals, § 45, pp. 181-183).
In the brief submitted to us in behalf of the defendant companies, their counsel says: “ The issue in this proceeding involves neither censure or suspension * * *. The issue involves disqualification in a particular matter, or more par
In the County Court counsel for the defendant companies accused Mr. Olmsted of violating Canon 36 of the Canons of Professional Ethics of the American Bar Association by accepting employment with the plaintiff water authority in connection with matters which he had investigated or passed upon in the course of his employment as an attorney at law for the New York Public Service Commission. At the same time, counsel for the defendant companies also accused Mr. Olmsted of a violation of section 15 of the New York Public Service Law by making unauthorized disclosures of information which had come to his knowledge when, as an employee of the New York Public Service Commission, he was examining records of the defendant companies.
In short, counsel for the defendant companies at the hearing herein charged Mr. Olmsted with professional misconduct and conduct that was prejudicial to the administration of justice. If the County Court had 1 ‘ disqualified ’ ’ Mr. Olmsted upon the basis of that charge, as the defendant companies requested, then the action of the County Court would have been nothing more than a futile attempt to exercise a jurisdiction which had not been committed to that court.
The members of the profession of the Bar in this State are officers of the New York Supreme Court and the Appellate Division of that court has exclusive jurisdiction to say what constitutes professional misconduct on their part (Judiciary Law, § 90, subd. 2; see People ex rel. Karlin v. Culkin, 248 N. Y. 465). Moreover, the punishment that is to follow must be determined by the Appellate Division and is not subject to revision even in this court (Matter of Axtell, 257 N. Y. 210).
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
1.
Section 15 of the Public Service Law insofar as pertinent provides: “ Any employee or agent of the commission who divulges any fact or information which may come to his knowledge during the course of any inspection or examination of the property, accounts, records or memoranda of any person, corporation or municipality subject to the jurisdiction of the commission, except in so far as he may be directed by the commission, or by a court or judge, or authorized by law, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”