State v. Sewell

Decision Date29 November 1972
Docket NumberNo. B--3685,B--3685
Citation487 S.W.2d 716
PartiesThe STATE of Texas et al., Relators, v. James C. SEWELL, Judge, Respondent.
CourtTexas Supreme Court

Davis Grant, Gen. Counsel, State Bar of Texas, Austin, for relator.

Beard & Kultgen, Pat Beard, Waco, Charles B. McGregor, Houston, Reynolds, White, Allen & Cook, Joe H. Reynolds, Houston, for respondent.

POPE, Justice.

The members of the Grievance Committee District No. 6, State Bar of Texas, acting in their official and individual capacities, ask that this court issue its writ of mandamus commanding the Honorable James C. Sewell, Judge of the 13th Judicial District Court of Navarro County, to vacate an order which temporarily enjoins the Grievance Committee from conducting 'A hearing on matters before the Committee' which were considered by the Committee at two earlier hearings. It is our opinion that the injunctive decree should be vacated.

Most of the relevant facts are included in the recitals of the injunctive order which is under attack. Frank B. McGregor is a practicing attorney in Hillsboro and is the District Attorney Elect for the 66th Judicial District. The Grievance Committee in late November, 1971, gave written notice to McGregor of a hearing set for December 9, 1971, concerning complaints of his alleged mishandling of funds during the time that he had previously served as District Attorney. At the December 9 meeting the Grievance Committee determined to file a formal complaint seeking McGregor's disbarment. That suit was filed on March 1, 1972, in the District Court of Hill County.

The Grievance Committee later gave notice to McGregor of a hearing on May 30, 1972, concerning an additional complaint arising out of his representation of a client in a court case in Hill County. After conducting that hearing, the Grievance Committee decided that it did not then have sufficient basis upon which to institute any disciplinary action.

On June 2, 1972, McGregor sought a temporary injunction in the disbarment suit pending in Hill County seeking to enjoin the Grievance Committee from pursuing any further investigation procedures following the institution of the disbarment suit. McGregor urged that, upon the filing of the disbarment suit, discovery procedures were then governed by the usual Rules of Civil Procedure, Article XII, State Bar Rules, 1A Vern.Tex.Civ.Stats., p. 221. He alleged that the Committee was exercising its inquisitorial powers after suit was filed. The trial court denied McGregor's prayer for injunction, but the court of civil appeals reversed that order and directed the trial court to enjoin the Grievance Committee from holding any further hearings or making any further investigation without complying with the Rules of Civil Procedure. McGregor v. State, 483 S.W.2d 559 (Tex.Civ.App., writ pending).

On November 1, 1972, the Grievance Committee took a non-suit on the disbarment case in Hill County. Its alleged purpose in doing so was to begin anew and to satisfy strictly the objections which McGregor had lodged to the procedures leading to the institution of that suit. The order for non-suit was without prejudice to the rights of the Committee to refile the disbarment suit.

On November 1, 1972, the day the Grievance Committee took its non-suit in the Hill County disbarment suit, Steve Latham, the Judge of the 66th Judicial District, lodged a new complaint with the Grievance Committee, and the Committee set a hearing date for November 16, 1972, and so notified McGregor. McGregor then filed a petition for injunction in the 13th Judicial District in a neighboring county. The respondent, Judge James Sewell, first granted a restraining order without notice and then upon hearing on November 13, 1972, temporarily enjoined the Grievance Committee from conducting any hearing which would reconsider any of the matters which were before the Committee at its hearing either on December 9, 1971, or May 31, 1972. The order excepted from the injunction two complaints which appeared to be entirely new and which were not previously considered by the Committee. It is this injunction order which is now before us.

Judge Sewell states the basis for his injunctive decree by recitals in the decree. It says that the Grievance Committee was barred by res judicata since it had already met and reached a decision at its December 9, 1971, meeting to institute a disbarment suit and it had also met and decided on May 30, 1972, that it would not institute any disciplinary action grounded upon the other complaint.

The order dismissing the formal complaint to disbar McGregor was without prejudice to the Committee's right to refile the suit. Such an order is not a bar to the institution of the same suit. The Grievance Committee asserts that there are other evidences of misconduct which need investigation, but the breadth of the injunctive order is such that even the calling of a meeting may subject the members to contempt procedures. It says there is an urgent need to discover and preserve documentary evidence which otherwise may be lost. The Grievance Committee's prior investigations and its decision to take disciplinary action or to forego such action have been inquisitorial in...

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