JanePetersenFirstPaper 4 - 15 Jun 2012 - Main.EbenMoglen
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< < | | | Navigating the Path of the Law | | Navigating the Path of the Law | |
< < | According to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the task of the lawyer – the good lawyer, at least – is to predict. Accurate prediction is the key to her success, as clients pay her to achieve a desired outcome. Holmes instructs us that the law consists of the “prophecies of what the courts will do in fact.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 460-61 (1897). Thus, knowing how the courts will rule, a lawyer will advise her client what action to take or from which to refrain in any given situation. Combined with an intimate understanding of her client’s unique goals, this ability to predict leads the lawyer to an effective risk management strategy that will best yield her client’s desired results. | > > | According to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the task of the lawyer – the good lawyer, at least – is to predict. Accurate prediction is the key to her success, as clients pay her to achieve a desired outcome.
I think Holmes is saying in that passage that the client pays for the prediction.
Holmes instructs us that the law consists of the “prophecies of what the courts will do in fact.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 460-61 (1897). Thus, knowing how the courts will rule, a lawyer will advise her client what action to take or from which to refrain in any given situation.
Not taken in context. Holmes is asking "what is law" for the purpose
of learning law. To say that counseling, "in any given situation"
requires predicting what courts will do shortchanges most counseling.
My organization, SFLC, is primarily engaged in counseling clients. I
think we spend probably no time each week predicting what courts will
do. Predicting what will cause the IRS to issue a positive
determination of 501(c)(3) tax exempt status doesn't require
predicting how the Tax Court would rule if we sued on a negative
determination; predicting whether the California Secretary of State
will file a corporate formation or reject it is not about how courts
will rule. Helping a client decide how much resource it wants to put
into trademark enforcement activity, or suggesting amendments to its
trademark licensing policy does not require any prediction of any
litigation outcome, and so on. Writing an opinion letter on whether
a certain proposed form of software distribution would comply with or
violate the terms of a particular free software license we helped to
draft in the first place does not require prediction of what a court
would rule in a copyright infringement action: it is closer to
issuing a ruling than predicting one. Those happen to be the three
legal matters that crossed my desk as the supervisor of my senior
lawyers in the last thirty-six hours, and none of them conforms to
the archetype advanced.
As I said in my comments on the first draft, getting away from the
litigation-focused examples used by Holmes (who is writing about
learning law rather than practicing law, and who means really
"learning about common and statute law" in doing so) to consider a
broader range of contexts in which lawyers advise clients will help
to create new ideas. You've tried faintly to achieve that result
below, but further effort in that direction would yield further
improvement.
Combined with an intimate understanding of her client’s unique goals, this ability to predict leads the lawyer to an effective risk management strategy that will best yield her client’s desired results.
This makes it appear that lawyers are clients' risk managers. That
may be true in some cases, but not in most. Organizations that
perform risk management are unlikely to do so through their outside
counsel. For them, opinions of counsel are tools for managing risk,
and far from the only or the most important tools in the box.
Individual clients or small businesses aren't likely to perform risk
management activities explicitly, and they are more likely to discuss
most risk and liability issues with their insurance agents than their
lawyers. | | | |
> > | | | PREDICTING THE OUTCOMES
| |
< < | Though seemingly litigation-focused, this advice applies to transactional and other lawyers as well. Knowing the formal consequences of a client’s past or potential choices will impact the advice a lawyer dispenses. The specter of litigation, penalties, or other enforcement actions inform as to the risks of action or inaction. True, some lawyers also counsel their clients as to public perception and other informal consequences, but as Holmes sets forth, the “law” itself is the likelihood and result of the incidence of public force. With the possibility of public force looming, a lawyer’s first goal, then, is prediction. Knowing the consequences of a client’s decisions is the not a lawyer’s only task, but is her primary step in achieving success for her client. | > > | Though seemingly litigation-focused, this advice applies to transactional and other lawyers as well. Knowing the formal consequences of a client’s past or potential choices will impact the advice a lawyer dispenses.
Knowledge impacts advice?
The specter of litigation, penalties, or other enforcement actions inform as to the risks of action or inaction. True, some lawyers also counsel their clients as to public perception and other informal consequences, but as Holmes sets forth, the “law” itself is the likelihood and result of the incidence of public force. With the possibility of public force looming, a lawyer’s first goal, then, is prediction. Knowing the consequences of a client’s decisions is the not a lawyer’s only task, but is her primary step in achieving success for her client.
What did this paragraph say? | | Holmes instructs us, “…a legal duty so called is nothing but a prediction that if a man does or omits certain things he will be made to suffer in this or that way by judgment of the court; and so of a legal right.” Id., at 458. Applying this maxim more broadly, a lawyer must know both the formal consequences of not performing certain duties and the formal enforcement of her client’s rights. A client’s aim may be to avoid being sued in the first place, or to win in front of a court of law, or another result along a continuum of legal consequences. Before choosing a strategy to achieve such a goal, however, the lawyer must convey to the client his rights, duties, and their corollary effects. | |
> > |
This is another use of a statement out of context. Holmes is trying
to show that all juridical relations can be described in terms of
consequences in the actions of courts, rather than as arising
independently, from some moral or extra-systemic locale. A "duty"
refers to an action or forbearance that will be eventually ordered
by a court if not otherwise discharged. A "right" is the benefit of
someone else's duty; elsewhere in Holmes' system we see the
importance of the conclusion that duties are anterior to rights.
This point may be important in its original context, but I'm not
sure exactly what it is adding here. The inference to which it
gives rise is that a lawyer's role is to predict the consequences of
client actions, which is the same point you've expressed earlier in
other ways. What was this proposition supposed to add.
| | KNOWING YOUR CLIENT
Once the risks to her client are clear, the lawyer must engage in her role as a risk manager. In order to perform this job well, she must know her client’s goals and how risk-averse she is expected to be. Though risk management may involve analyzing a range of possible courses of conduct and the outcomes therefrom, a client’s unique perspective of his own goals may significantly narrow this range, sometimes even to a single strategy. Thus, while a lawyer must be able to perform risk management along multiple planes of possibility, her task will be broadened or narrowed by her client’s own risk preferences. | |
> > |
Leaving aside the point about the lawyer as risk manager, treated
above, these 105 words seem to amount to "the lawyer must understand
the client's instructions in light of the client's preferences."
What else was being said here?
| | Robinson in Lawyerland shows a unique but instructive example of the importance of knowing your client. When Robinson discovers that a client of his may actually want to receive jail time, he does the “Popeye dance” to avoid detection and achieve his client’s goals. First, the lawyer must “get the idea” – she has to understand her client’s motivations and goals so she can respond appropriately. Then, however, she does not necessarily make all efforts to “win,” per se; she makes all efforts to achieve the outcome her client seeks. | |
> > |
What makes this example "instructive"? What are we actually learning
from it in this context? Is the point about implicit instructions?
| | This anecdote reminded me of a real-world case about which a mentor told me before I began law school. He practices in the field of medical malpractice, and this story taught me that both defense and plaintiff’s attorneys in criminal and civil litigation alike must focus on their client’s unique goals before choosing strategy and tactics. This lawyer’s client was a widow suing a hospital and its doctors for malpractice resulting in the death of her husband. Typically, he told me, medical malpractice plaintiffs’ attorneys with a strong case seek out a jury trial while the defense side desires settlement. However, this client was unique. The events leading up to her husband’s hospitalization were so embarrassing to her that she would have done nearly anything to avoid trial. Though she almost certainly would have prevailed in front of a sympathetic jury, she utterly refused to expose the details of her husband’s death for any amount of money. | |
> > |
What was the outcome of this "real world" case? Why did this "real
world" practitioner take it, and what fee arrangements did he make, I
wonder, for the representation?
| | In a situation such as this, though her lawyer could easily predict how the court would react to the litigation, he then had to step back to respond to his client’s distinctive wishes. Like Robinson’s, a client’s goals may appear counter-intuitive or risk-intensive compared to traditional practice. However a lawyer is not doing her job if she merely predicts the outcomes; she must next determine her client’s individualized preferences. | |
> > | Why do you speak of
predicting the client's preferences? Surely the lawyer's task is to
receive instructions and execute them, not to predict what they would
be if he sought to receive them. | | MANAGING RISK
Finally, then, knowing how legal duties and rights will translate to public enforcement, and knowing the mix of preferences of any given client, the lawyer must engage in thorough risk management to achieve the desired predicted results. For, merely predicting the result of litigation or knowing that a client expects a certain sum of money is pointless without more. Also required are a lawyer’s judgment as to the best strategy and tactics to choose in pursuit of the optimal outcome. Given the constraints of the system and her client, as well as a given amount of uncertainty, a lawyer must engage in cost-benefit analysis when advising her client as to strategy. She then is able to choose the tactics most likely to bear fruit. | |
> > |
Are you using "strategy" and "tactic" as artful synonyms? Strategy
means choice of objectives and allocation of resources; those are the
decisions one expects clients to make. Tactics, the operational
methods of achieving defined objectives given allocated resources,
might more usually be within the compass of lawyers' decisions. But
those are operational decisions, and in organizations that
differentiate risk management, it is precisely not the business of
the operational decision-maker. Risk managers stand apart from the
operational achievement of objectives. They instead develop
procedural and substantive measures for coping with the unintended
or contingent consequences of operations.
| | Holmes’s idea of the law as prophecies of courts’ decisions is instructive as a lawyer balances the risks inherent to her clients’ particularized preferences. The law isn’t a list of written rules, but the real-world consequences of a client’s and his lawyer’s decisions. Knowing this, the job of a lawyer is to manage these risks.
-- JanePetersen - 22 Apr 2012
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> > |
I don't think this rewrite is particularly successful. Perhaps I
meant to facilitate in my original comments a more comprehensive
reconceptualization of the first draft. It seems to me that instead
specific propositions or phrases were layered in to the previous
text, leaving less coherence overall, and not quite so much
conceptual progress as I thought you were in a position to make.
Holmes wrote an essay about how to learn the law. You are writing an
essay about how those ideas might be understood in connection to what
lawyers do when they practice, specifically when they advise or
counsel clients. Translated to this context, Holmes' point is that
simple basic charter of realism: things are what they do, not what
they are called. Counseling is about helping clients to understand
the consequences of possible actions and structures, which means
helping them to predict social processes. For a client, the law is a
prediction of what courts and other regulatory agencies will do, in
the same sense that contracts are about predicting what contractors
will do, and marriage is about predicting what one's spouse will do.
Counseling therefore means giving the client improved means to
project into the future the consequences and significance of present
or contemplated decisions, habits, practices, designs. Holmes'
point, which is most relevant to students, is that focusing on the
predictive quality of legal substance simplifies learning the law by
purging it of extraneous ways of formulating rules. The relevance of
consequentialism to practitioners is different. By asking what a
lawyer is really doing in advising a client, one can go beyond
Holmes' point about the effect of realism on how one learns law to
formulate a new view about what we do when we go from learning law in
school to practicing it in the world. Surely that will help us to
understand and overcome some portion of our fear of actually
practicing law, of really "being a lawyer," which drives so many
students into taking office-worker jobs as drones in larger
organizations to which they pawn their licenses.
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JanePetersenFirstPaper 3 - 22 Apr 2012 - Main.JanePetersen
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< < | A Modern Path of the Law | > > | Navigating the Path of the Law | | | |
< < | -- By JanePetersen - 15 Feb 2012 | | | |
> > | According to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the task of the lawyer – the good lawyer, at least – is to predict. Accurate prediction is the key to her success, as clients pay her to achieve a desired outcome. Holmes instructs us that the law consists of the “prophecies of what the courts will do in fact.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 460-61 (1897). Thus, knowing how the courts will rule, a lawyer will advise her client what action to take or from which to refrain in any given situation. Combined with an intimate understanding of her client’s unique goals, this ability to predict leads the lawyer to an effective risk management strategy that will best yield her client’s desired results. | | | |
< < | Section I | | | |
< < | Why use section headings
that convey no information to the reader? | > > | PREDICTING THE OUTCOMES | | | |
< < | According to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the task of the lawyer – the good lawyer, at least – is to predict. Accurate prediction is the key to her success, as clients pay her to keep them out of court. Holmes instructs us that the law consists only of the “prophecies of what the courts will do in fact.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 460-61 (1897). Thus, knowing how the courts will rule, a lawyer will advise her client what action to take or from which to refrain in any given situation. The purpose of this, we’re taught, is to keep her client out of court entirely. | | | |
< < | Is that what Holmes
said? Or rather, that the purpose is to give reliable predictions of
the incidence of the public force? In tax practice, the usual
purpose is to assist in structuring transactions to avoid taxes, or
to determine whether costly and risky efforts to avoid taxes will be
worth it. In administrative contexts, the lawyer's predictions may
be used for the purpose of reducing or sidestepping regulatory
burdens on business profitability. Even in the context of
litigation, lawyers' predictions affect whether litigation is
initiated as well as how it is avoided, managed or defended. | | | |
< < | | > > | Though seemingly litigation-focused, this advice applies to transactional and other lawyers as well. Knowing the formal consequences of a client’s past or potential choices will impact the advice a lawyer dispenses. The specter of litigation, penalties, or other enforcement actions inform as to the risks of action or inaction. True, some lawyers also counsel their clients as to public perception and other informal consequences, but as Holmes sets forth, the “law” itself is the likelihood and result of the incidence of public force. With the possibility of public force looming, a lawyer’s first goal, then, is prediction. Knowing the consequences of a client’s decisions is the not a lawyer’s only task, but is her primary step in achieving success for her client. | | | |
< < | What, then, is the role of Holmes’s theory of lawyering over 100 years later, at a time when society has arguably become more litigious? | > > | Holmes instructs us, “…a legal duty so called is nothing but a prediction that if a man does or omits certain things he will be made to suffer in this or that way by judgment of the court; and so of a legal right.” Id., at 458. Applying this maxim more broadly, a lawyer must know both the formal consequences of not performing certain duties and the formal enforcement of her client’s rights. A client’s aim may be to avoid being sued in the first place, or to win in front of a court of law, or another result along a continuum of legal consequences. Before choosing a strategy to achieve such a goal, however, the lawyer must convey to the client his rights, duties, and their corollary effects. | | | |
< < | "Arguably" is a weasel
word here. It means "I have no data to provide, but I need this
factual assumption in order to make my argument, so "arguably" what I
say is true. | > > | KNOWING YOUR CLIENT | | | |
< < | The statement is plausible. But if your editorial attention had been
scrupulous, questioning the statement might not only have sent you in
search of evidence to back it up, it might have led to a more through
questioning of the exclusively defense-sided litigation-focused
interpretation you are putting on an approach Holmes means more
generally. | | | |
< < | | | | |
< < | Even though a lawyer may correctly predict a judge’s eventual decision, this act alone may not keep her client out of court. Her client’s opponents may very well have less adequate counsel, with poor ability to predict a judge’s decisions. In this context, her client will get sued anyway. Though she will likely eventually prevail in a court of law, she will end up arguing before a judge first, thereby failing in Holmes’s principle goal. | > > | Once the risks to her client are clear, the lawyer must engage in her role as a risk manager. In order to perform this job well, she must know her client’s goals and how risk-averse she is expected to be. Though risk management may involve analyzing a range of possible courses of conduct and the outcomes therefrom, a client’s unique perspective of his own goals may significantly narrow this range, sometimes even to a single strategy. Thus, while a lawyer must be able to perform risk management along multiple planes of possibility, her task will be broadened or narrowed by her client’s own risk preferences. | | | |
> > | Robinson in Lawyerland shows a unique but instructive example of the importance of knowing your client. When Robinson discovers that a client of his may actually want to receive jail time, he does the “Popeye dance” to avoid detection and achieve his client’s goals. First, the lawyer must “get the idea” – she has to understand her client’s motivations and goals so she can respond appropriately. Then, however, she does not necessarily make all efforts to “win,” per se; she makes all efforts to achieve the outcome her client seeks. | | | |
< < | Today’s lawyers, then, must attempt to understand Holmes’ conception of the job of a lawyer in a way that will be as effective now as it was in 1897. Holmes instructs us, “…a legal duty so called is nothing but a prediction that if a man does or omits certain things he will be made to suffer in this or that way by judgment of the court; and so of a legal right.” Id., at 458. To apply this maxim today, a lawyer must know whether her aim is to avoid her client being sued in the first place, or to win in front of judge in the event of a lawsuit. | > > | This anecdote reminded me of a real-world case about which a mentor told me before I began law school. He practices in the field of medical malpractice, and this story taught me that both defense and plaintiff’s attorneys in criminal and civil litigation alike must focus on their client’s unique goals before choosing strategy and tactics. This lawyer’s client was a widow suing a hospital and its doctors for malpractice resulting in the death of her husband. Typically, he told me, medical malpractice plaintiffs’ attorneys with a strong case seek out a jury trial while the defense side desires settlement. However, this client was unique. The events leading up to her husband’s hospitalization were so embarrassing to her that she would have done nearly anything to avoid trial. Though she almost certainly would have prevailed in front of a sympathetic jury, she utterly refused to expose the details of her husband’s death for any amount of money. | | | |
< < | Wouldn't it be correct
to say that the decisions about which risks to evaluate are shared
between lawyers and clients? That clients ultimately decide, and
that lawyers may suggest but not determine possible courses of
conduct and levels of tolerable risk? | > > | In a situation such as this, though her lawyer could easily predict how the court would react to the litigation, he then had to step back to respond to his client’s distinctive wishes. Like Robinson’s, a client’s goals may appear counter-intuitive or risk-intensive compared to traditional practice. However a lawyer is not doing her job if she merely predicts the outcomes; she must next determine her client’s individualized preferences. | | | |
< < | Though some might reply to such a question, “That’s obvious. Both,” this response overlooks the possibility that a lawyer’s advice to her client might differ depending on which of these two goals she is pursuing. These choices may be mutually exclusive, | | | |
< < | Not analytically. In
advising clients I evaluate all the time the nature of risks and
costs intermediate to desired outcomes, as well as the overall
likelihoods of those outcomes. Some thought devoted to the
difference between strategy and tactics might be useful
here. | > > | MANAGING RISK | | | |
< < | and today’s lawyers must know which path to pursue. If the objective is to avoid suit entirely, it stands to reason that good counsel would be even more conservative, so as not to enflame the less competent lawyers and more litigious clients who are quicker to sue and less able to accurately predict outcomes in court. In Holmes’ day, this may have been the exception, and thus he avoided basing theory on infrequent occurrences. Today, though, the courts frequently see frivolous lawsuits and many clients factor a certain amount of legal conflict into their budgets. As such, lawyers must be able to advise their clients’ actions given both the possibility of winning a lawsuit, and also the possibility of being sued in the first place. | | | |
< < | As well as many other
probabilities in many other contexts. Why doesn't the concept of
"risk management" enter into the
conversation. | > > | Finally, then, knowing how legal duties and rights will translate to public enforcement, and knowing the mix of preferences of any given client, the lawyer must engage in thorough risk management to achieve the desired predicted results. For, merely predicting the result of litigation or knowing that a client expects a certain sum of money is pointless without more. Also required are a lawyer’s judgment as to the best strategy and tactics to choose in pursuit of the optimal outcome. Given the constraints of the system and her client, as well as a given amount of uncertainty, a lawyer must engage in cost-benefit analysis when advising her client as to strategy. She then is able to choose the tactics most likely to bear fruit. | | | |
< < | Section II
An alternate, more modern, school of thought might provide the answer on updating Holmes’ wisdom for today’s lawyers. Robinson in Lawyerland suggests that the lawyer’s job is not only to predict outcomes, but ultimately to do what her client wants. When Robinson discovers that a client of his may actually want to receive jail time, he does the “Popeye dance” to avoid detection and achieve his client’s goals. First, the lawyer must “get the idea” – she has to understand her client’s motivations and goals so she can respond appropriately. Then, however, she does not necessarily make all efforts to “win,” per se; she makes all efforts to achieve the outcome her client seeks.
I think this is a
peculiar example to choose. Most of the time, the way we know what
our clients want is that they tell us. The usual problem in
counseling is that the client hasn't yet formulated relevant
instructions, because the issues on which a decision is required have
not yet become clearly visible. The lawyer's task is to bring to the
client's attention the issues that require decision, to frame the
inquiries necessary to determine the risks or opportunities involved,
to indicate the strategic objectives and resources involved in
managing the risks or exploiting the opportunities, and to frame
tactics intermediate to the achievement of the client's resulting
strategic determinations. Robinson's point about the obscurities
involved in dealing with client subterfuge is hardly a general theory
of representation.
Then, reconciling the implicit advice of these two lawyers, which may yet be compatible, the good lawyer must predict what will get a client sued, what a judge will decide, and what her client desires.
Predicting client
intentions does not strike me as a good summary of the process of
counseling.
Some clients will choose to be more conservative, adopting an approach that avoids the likelihood of suit entirely. Other clients, however, may be less risk-averse; his lawyer will be doing her job when she, as Holmes directs, predicts if her client will be made to suffer by judgment of the court. All of this comes down to a lawyer’s ability to predict, the key element in Holmes’s piece. Without the paramount assets of foresight and sound judgment, she will be hard pressed to deliver on her client’s goal, whatever it may be.
The most obvious places
for improvement of the draft have been indicated in the comments
above, I think. In general, the effort to show that Holmes is wrong
or outmoded probably could give way to a more analytic discussion of
lawyers' inputs to risk management for business clients, or a further
inquiry into how individual client counseling works in the context of
Holmes' general point, among other possible approaches.
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> > | Holmes’s idea of the law as prophecies of courts’ decisions is instructive as a lawyer balances the risks inherent to her clients’ particularized preferences. The law isn’t a list of written rules, but the real-world consequences of a client’s and his lawyer’s decisions. Knowing this, the job of a lawyer is to manage these risks.
-- JanePetersen - 22 Apr 2012 | | \ No newline at end of file |
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JanePetersenFirstPaper 2 - 13 Apr 2012 - Main.EbenMoglen
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< < | | | A Modern Path of the Law
-- By JanePetersen - 15 Feb 2012 | | Section I | |
> > | Why use section headings
that convey no information to the reader? | | According to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the task of the lawyer – the good lawyer, at least – is to predict. Accurate prediction is the key to her success, as clients pay her to keep them out of court. Holmes instructs us that the law consists only of the “prophecies of what the courts will do in fact.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 460-61 (1897). Thus, knowing how the courts will rule, a lawyer will advise her client what action to take or from which to refrain in any given situation. The purpose of this, we’re taught, is to keep her client out of court entirely. | |
< < | What, then, is the role of Holmes’s theory of lawyering over 100 years later, at a time when society has arguably become more litigious? Even though a lawyer may correctly predict a judge’s eventual decision, this act alone may not keep her client out of court. Her client’s opponents may very well have less adequate counsel, with poor ability to predict a judge’s decisions. In this context, her client will get sued anyway. Though she will likely eventually prevail in a court of law, she will end up arguing before a judge first, thereby failing in Holmes’s principle goal. | > > | Is that what Holmes
said? Or rather, that the purpose is to give reliable predictions of
the incidence of the public force? In tax practice, the usual
purpose is to assist in structuring transactions to avoid taxes, or
to determine whether costly and risky efforts to avoid taxes will be
worth it. In administrative contexts, the lawyer's predictions may
be used for the purpose of reducing or sidestepping regulatory
burdens on business profitability. Even in the context of
litigation, lawyers' predictions affect whether litigation is
initiated as well as how it is avoided, managed or defended.
What, then, is the role of Holmes’s theory of lawyering over 100 years later, at a time when society has arguably become more litigious?
"Arguably" is a weasel
word here. It means "I have no data to provide, but I need this
factual assumption in order to make my argument, so "arguably" what I
say is true.
The statement is plausible. But if your editorial attention had been
scrupulous, questioning the statement might not only have sent you in
search of evidence to back it up, it might have led to a more through
questioning of the exclusively defense-sided litigation-focused
interpretation you are putting on an approach Holmes means more
generally. | | | |
< < | Today’s lawyers, then, must attempt to understand Holmes’ conception of the job of a lawyer in a way that will be as effective now as it was in 1897. Holmes instructs us, “…a legal duty so called is nothing but a prediction that if a man does or omits certain things he will be made to suffer in this or that way by judgment of the court; and so of a legal right.” Id., at 458. To apply this maxim today, a lawyer must know whether her aim is to avoid her client being sued in the first place, or to win in front of judge in the event of a lawsuit. | > > | | | | |
< < | Though some might reply to such a question, “That’s obvious. Both,” this response overlooks the possibility that a lawyer’s advice to her client might differ depending on which of these two goals she is pursuing. These choices may be mutually exclusive, and today’s lawyers must know which path to pursue. If the objective is to avoid suit entirely, it stands to reason that good counsel would be even more conservative, so as not to enflame the less competent lawyers and more litigious clients who are quicker to sue and less able to accurately predict outcomes in court. In Holmes’ day, this may have been the exception, and thus he avoided basing theory on infrequent occurrences. Today, though, the courts frequently see frivolous lawsuits and many clients factor a certain amount of legal conflict into their budgets. As such, lawyers must be able to advise their clients’ actions given both the possibility of winning a lawsuit, and also the possibility of being sued in the first place. | > > | Even though a lawyer may correctly predict a judge’s eventual decision, this act alone may not keep her client out of court. Her client’s opponents may very well have less adequate counsel, with poor ability to predict a judge’s decisions. In this context, her client will get sued anyway. Though she will likely eventually prevail in a court of law, she will end up arguing before a judge first, thereby failing in Holmes’s principle goal. | | | |
< < | Section II | | | |
< < | An alternate, more modern, school of thought might provide the answer on updating Holmes’ wisdom for today’s lawyers. Robinson in Lawyerland suggests that the lawyer’s job is not only to predict outcomes, but ultimately to do what her client wants. When Robinson discovers that a client of his may actually want to receive jail time, he does the “Popeye dance” to avoid detection and achieve his client’s goals. First, the lawyer must “get the idea” – she has to understand her client’s motivations and goals so she can respond appropriately. Then, however, she does not necessarily make all efforts to “win,” per se; she makes all efforts to achieve the outcome her client seeks.
Then, reconciling the implicit advice of these two lawyers, which may yet be compatible, the good lawyer must predict what will get a client sued, what a judge will decide, and what her client desires. Some clients will choose to be more conservative, adopting an approach that avoids the likelihood of suit entirely. Other clients, however, may be less risk-averse; his lawyer will be doing her job when she, as Holmes directs, predicts if her client will be made to suffer by judgment of the court. All of this comes down to a lawyer’s ability to predict, the key element in Holmes’s piece. Without the paramount assets of foresight and sound judgment, she will be hard pressed to deliver on her client’s goal, whatever it may be. | > > | Today’s lawyers, then, must attempt to understand Holmes’ conception of the job of a lawyer in a way that will be as effective now as it was in 1897. Holmes instructs us, “…a legal duty so called is nothing but a prediction that if a man does or omits certain things he will be made to suffer in this or that way by judgment of the court; and so of a legal right.” Id., at 458. To apply this maxim today, a lawyer must know whether her aim is to avoid her client being sued in the first place, or to win in front of judge in the event of a lawsuit. | | | |
> > | Wouldn't it be correct
to say that the decisions about which risks to evaluate are shared
between lawyers and clients? That clients ultimately decide, and
that lawyers may suggest but not determine possible courses of
conduct and levels of tolerable risk?
Though some might reply to such a question, “That’s obvious. Both,” this response overlooks the possibility that a lawyer’s advice to her client might differ depending on which of these two goals she is pursuing. These choices may be mutually exclusive,
Not analytically. In
advising clients I evaluate all the time the nature of risks and
costs intermediate to desired outcomes, as well as the overall
likelihoods of those outcomes. Some thought devoted to the
difference between strategy and tactics might be useful
here.
and today’s lawyers must know which path to pursue. If the objective is to avoid suit entirely, it stands to reason that good counsel would be even more conservative, so as not to enflame the less competent lawyers and more litigious clients who are quicker to sue and less able to accurately predict outcomes in court. In Holmes’ day, this may have been the exception, and thus he avoided basing theory on infrequent occurrences. Today, though, the courts frequently see frivolous lawsuits and many clients factor a certain amount of legal conflict into their budgets. As such, lawyers must be able to advise their clients’ actions given both the possibility of winning a lawsuit, and also the possibility of being sued in the first place.
As well as many other
probabilities in many other contexts. Why doesn't the concept of
"risk management" enter into the
conversation. | | | |
> > | Section II | | | |
< < |
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.
To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines: | > > | An alternate, more modern, school of thought might provide the answer on updating Holmes’ wisdom for today’s lawyers. Robinson in Lawyerland suggests that the lawyer’s job is not only to predict outcomes, but ultimately to do what her client wants. When Robinson discovers that a client of his may actually want to receive jail time, he does the “Popeye dance” to avoid detection and achieve his client’s goals. First, the lawyer must “get the idea” – she has to understand her client’s motivations and goals so she can respond appropriately. Then, however, she does not necessarily make all efforts to “win,” per se; she makes all efforts to achieve the outcome her client seeks. | | | |
< < | | > > | I think this is a
peculiar example to choose. Most of the time, the way we know what
our clients want is that they tell us. The usual problem in
counseling is that the client hasn't yet formulated relevant
instructions, because the issues on which a decision is required have
not yet become clearly visible. The lawyer's task is to bring to the
client's attention the issues that require decision, to frame the
inquiries necessary to determine the risks or opportunities involved,
to indicate the strategic objectives and resources involved in
managing the risks or exploiting the opportunities, and to frame
tactics intermediate to the achievement of the client's resulting
strategic determinations. Robinson's point about the obscurities
involved in dealing with client subterfuge is hardly a general theory
of representation.
Then, reconciling the implicit advice of these two lawyers, which may yet be compatible, the good lawyer must predict what will get a client sued, what a judge will decide, and what her client desires.
Predicting client
intentions does not strike me as a good summary of the process of
counseling.
Some clients will choose to be more conservative, adopting an approach that avoids the likelihood of suit entirely. Other clients, however, may be less risk-averse; his lawyer will be doing her job when she, as Holmes directs, predicts if her client will be made to suffer by judgment of the court. All of this comes down to a lawyer’s ability to predict, the key element in Holmes’s piece. Without the paramount assets of foresight and sound judgment, she will be hard pressed to deliver on her client’s goal, whatever it may be.
The most obvious places
for improvement of the draft have been indicated in the comments
above, I think. In general, the effort to show that Holmes is wrong
or outmoded probably could give way to a more analytic discussion of
lawyers' inputs to risk management for business clients, or a further
inquiry into how individual client counseling works in the context of
Holmes' general point, among other possible approaches. | | | |
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JanePetersenFirstPaper 1 - 15 Feb 2012 - Main.JanePetersen
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
A Modern Path of the Law
-- By JanePetersen - 15 Feb 2012
Section I
According to Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., the task of the lawyer – the good lawyer, at least – is to predict. Accurate prediction is the key to her success, as clients pay her to keep them out of court. Holmes instructs us that the law consists only of the “prophecies of what the courts will do in fact.” Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 460-61 (1897). Thus, knowing how the courts will rule, a lawyer will advise her client what action to take or from which to refrain in any given situation. The purpose of this, we’re taught, is to keep her client out of court entirely.
What, then, is the role of Holmes’s theory of lawyering over 100 years later, at a time when society has arguably become more litigious? Even though a lawyer may correctly predict a judge’s eventual decision, this act alone may not keep her client out of court. Her client’s opponents may very well have less adequate counsel, with poor ability to predict a judge’s decisions. In this context, her client will get sued anyway. Though she will likely eventually prevail in a court of law, she will end up arguing before a judge first, thereby failing in Holmes’s principle goal.
Today’s lawyers, then, must attempt to understand Holmes’ conception of the job of a lawyer in a way that will be as effective now as it was in 1897. Holmes instructs us, “…a legal duty so called is nothing but a prediction that if a man does or omits certain things he will be made to suffer in this or that way by judgment of the court; and so of a legal right.” Id., at 458. To apply this maxim today, a lawyer must know whether her aim is to avoid her client being sued in the first place, or to win in front of judge in the event of a lawsuit.
Though some might reply to such a question, “That’s obvious. Both,” this response overlooks the possibility that a lawyer’s advice to her client might differ depending on which of these two goals she is pursuing. These choices may be mutually exclusive, and today’s lawyers must know which path to pursue. If the objective is to avoid suit entirely, it stands to reason that good counsel would be even more conservative, so as not to enflame the less competent lawyers and more litigious clients who are quicker to sue and less able to accurately predict outcomes in court. In Holmes’ day, this may have been the exception, and thus he avoided basing theory on infrequent occurrences. Today, though, the courts frequently see frivolous lawsuits and many clients factor a certain amount of legal conflict into their budgets. As such, lawyers must be able to advise their clients’ actions given both the possibility of winning a lawsuit, and also the possibility of being sued in the first place.
Section II
An alternate, more modern, school of thought might provide the answer on updating Holmes’ wisdom for today’s lawyers. Robinson in Lawyerland suggests that the lawyer’s job is not only to predict outcomes, but ultimately to do what her client wants. When Robinson discovers that a client of his may actually want to receive jail time, he does the “Popeye dance” to avoid detection and achieve his client’s goals. First, the lawyer must “get the idea” – she has to understand her client’s motivations and goals so she can respond appropriately. Then, however, she does not necessarily make all efforts to “win,” per se; she makes all efforts to achieve the outcome her client seeks.
Then, reconciling the implicit advice of these two lawyers, which may yet be compatible, the good lawyer must predict what will get a client sued, what a judge will decide, and what her client desires. Some clients will choose to be more conservative, adopting an approach that avoids the likelihood of suit entirely. Other clients, however, may be less risk-averse; his lawyer will be doing her job when she, as Holmes directs, predicts if her client will be made to suffer by judgment of the court. All of this comes down to a lawyer’s ability to predict, the key element in Holmes’s piece. Without the paramount assets of foresight and sound judgment, she will be hard pressed to deliver on her client’s goal, whatever it may be.
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.
To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:
Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules for preference declarations. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of these lines. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated ALLOWTOPICVIEW list. |
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