Opinion by
This is a proceeding for the removal or suspension of an attorney of this court, and is here for hearing on a demurrer to the information. The sole charge is that defendant was tried and convicted in the Federal Court for the District of Oregon for “conspiracy to suborn perjury,” and sentenced to the county jail of Multnomah County, which judgment was subsequently affirmed on appeal, and defendant committed to the jail to serve his sentence. There is no averment in the information of the facts constituting the alleged crime, or the nature or • character of the offense for which defendant was convicted, other than as above, or that the acts committed by him were such as would justify his removal or suspension, or that he has been guilty of unprofessional or improper conduct, or is in any way unfit to be a member of the bar.
1. The relators rely entirely upon Section 1067, Subd. 1, B. & C. Comp., which provides that an attorney may be removed or suspended “upon his being convicted of any felony or of a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, in either of which cases the record of his conviction is conclusive evidence.” Their position is that the judgment of conviction in the federal court is conclusive evidence against the defendant, without any additional allegation or proof. This is true if the crime for which he was convicted is either a felony or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, within the meaning
2. Neither the words “felony” or “misdemeanor” of themselves have any exactness or precision of definition. At common law felony was an offense which occasioned a total forfeiture of land or goods, or both (4 Blackstone Com. 95), and a misdemeanor was an offense less than felony (2 Abbott’s Law Diet. 111). In this state, and generally in this country, a conviction of a crime does not work a forfeiture of the estate of defendant (Constitution, Oregon, Article I, § 25), and therefore the word “felony” is of itself, as said by Mr. Chief Justice Agnew, “incapable of any definition, and is descriptive of no offense”: Lynch v. Commonwealth, 88 Pa. 189, 192 (32 Am. Rep. 445). It is a matter of statutory provision, and what may be a felony in one jurisdiction may be a misdemeanor in another, and vice versa, and in some jurisdictions crimes may not be classified at all. There is no specific definition of either term in the Federal Statutes. In this state a felony is defined as a crime punishable by death or imprisonment in the penitentiary (Section 1230, B. & C. Comp.), and every other offense is a misdemeanor (Section 1231). When the legislature used the words “felony” and “misdemeanor” in the disbarment statute, it necessarily intended that they should be understood as above defined, otherwise they would have been meaningless and the statute incapable of enforcement.
3. Before an attorney can therefore be removed or suspended, under the provision of the statute invoked in
The demurrer to the complaint is therefore sustained.
Demurrer Sustained.