Yeiser v. Dysart/Opinion of the Court

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871622Yeiser v. Dysart — Opinion of the CourtOliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

United States Supreme Court

267 U.S. 540

Yeiser  v.  Dysart

 Argued: Oct. 24, 1924. --- Decided: April 13, 1925


Upon a report of the respondents, a committee of members of the bar, the plaintiff in error was ordered to be suspended from the right to practice as attorney unless he should refund to a client a fee received by him of $620 and interest within a time fixed. The ground of the order was that by section 3031, Comp. St. 1922, only such sum could be demanded for services in bringing a suit under the Workmen's Compensation Act of the State as the Court should allow, and that a contract for other and further pay was void. The Supreme Court of the State while crediting the plaintiff in error with an honest belief that the statute had a narrower meaning, made the order complained of and the case is brought here on a contention that the statute as construed unreasonably restricts the liberty of contract and contravenes the Fourteenth Amendment by depriving the plaintiff in error of his liberty and property without due process of law.

The plaintiff in error recognizes that this Court is bound by the construction given to the State law by the State Court, yet wastes a good deal of argument in the effort to prove the construction wrong. When the constitutional question is reached late cases are relied upon for the general proposition that unreasonable interference with freedom of contract cannot be sustained. Adkins v. Children's Hospital, 261 U.S. 525, 43 S.C.t. 394, 67 L. Ed. 785, 24 A. L. R. 1238; Charles Wolff Packing Co. v. Court of Industrial Relations, 262 U.S. 522, 43 S.C.t. 630, 67 L. Ed. 1103. But the question is specific, whether we can pronounce this law unreasonable, against the opinion of the Legislature and Supreme Court of the State. The Court adverts to the fact that a large proportion of those who come under the statute have to look to it in case of injury and need to be protected against improvident contracts, in the interest not only of themselves and their families but of the public. A somewhat similar principle has been sanctioned by this Court. Calhoun v. Massie, 253 U.S. 170, 40 S.C.t. 474, 64 L. Ed. 843. When we add the considerations that an attorney practices under a license from the State and that the subject-matter is a right created by statute it is obvious that the State may attach such conditions to the license in respect of such matters as it believes to be necessary in order to make it a public good. Of course a reasonable time from the issue of the mandate of this Court will be allowed for the plaintiff in error to comply with the judgment affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Notes

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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