Bar Examiner - National Conference of Bar Examiners
Transcription
Bar Examiner - National Conference of Bar Examiners
Bar Examiner THE Volume 82 | Number 2 | June 2013 A publication of the National Conference of Bar Examiners Articles 6 The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 18 Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators: The 2012 International Conference of Legal Regulators by James G. Leipold by Laurel S. Terry 28 ABA Accreditation: A Symbol of Quality by Diane F. Bosse 44 American Legal Education: Where Did We Come From? Where Are We Going? Keynote Address from the 2013 NCBE Annual Bar Admissions Conference by Daniel R. Coquillette Departments 2 Letter from the Chair by Franklin R. Harrison 4 President’s Page by Erica Moeser 34 The Testing Column Quality Control for Developing and Grading Written Bar Exam Components by Susan M. Case, Ph.D. 38 News and Events 51 Litigation Update by Fred P. Parker III and Brad Gilbert Bar Examiner Letter from the Chair THE Editor Claire Huismann Editorial Advisory Committee Beverly Tarpley, Chair Hon. Henry A. Alaniz Bedford T. Bentley, Jr. Donna E. Blanton Marygold Shire Melli Paul H. Mills Fred P. Parker III Hon. Phyllis D. Thompson Publication Production and Design Melanie Hoffman W “Boston Strong” ho would ever have thought that this year’s NCBE Annual Bar Admissions Conference in Boston would be memorable for so much more than just the excellent program? After the bombings at the finish line of the Boston Marathon three days before the start of the conference, NCBE had to make a decision as to whether to pull the plug on the conference or proceed as planned on Thursday evening. As is so often the case during the immediate hours following such horrific events, it was difficult to determine from the news accounts what was actually transpiring in the city. In spite of my inclination to meet this act of violence with determined defiance, we had to Editorial Assistant Lisa Palzkill Publisher National Conference of Bar Examiners NCBE Officers Chair Franklin R. Harrison better understand the situation before making a decision. On Wednesday morning, the hotel, the Boston mayor’s office, and the officials at Logan Airport all assured us that all was safe and that Boston was “open for business.” The decision was made to proceed with the conference as planned. Those of us who arrived in Boston on Thursday found the city fully functioning but with a large police presence. President Obama had just left after flying in to attend a service for the victims of the bombings. Law enforcement vehicles, including those from adjacent jurisdictions, were seen everywhere. The Copley Square and President Erica Moeser Boylston Street areas were cordoned off. There was a Humvee from the Cape Cod Immediate Past Chair Rebecca S. Thiem After the shootings on Thursday night of one of the suspects and of a police SWAT Team parked at the entrance to our hotel. officer, the situation intensified. The “sheltering-in-place” of Boston on Friday was a Chair-Elect Margaret Fuller Corneille Secretary Bryan R. Williams NCBE Board of Trustees Hulett H. Askew Hon. Rebecca White Berch Hon. Thomas J. Bice Mark S. Carlin Robert A. Chong Michele A. Gavagni Hon. Cynthia L. Martin Darryl W. Simpkins 2 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 surreal experience. No public or private transportation was running. All businesses, restaurants, and stores were closed. Except for law enforcement, which clearly had control of the city, the streets were empty. With the arrest of the second suspect on Friday, the city came back to life. I saw outbursts of spontaneous applause for first responders as I walked around the downtown area. Everyone was relieved and proud that the bombers had been identified and found so quickly. In living through these events, we had all become Bostonians. The Red Sox won the game at Fenway that Saturday afternoon, but the celebration of Boston Strong at the game is what all will remember. It was an emotional celebration honoring those who had been killed transition, NCBE assumed responsibility for or injured and recognizing law enforcement MPRE score reporting and—in what proved to personnel and Boston Marathon runners and be a challenging undertaking—processing all volunteers. Special recognition was given to ADA accommodations requests for applicants those ordinary citizens who had ignored dan- taking the MPRE. As always, the NCBE staff, ger to themselves and unselfishly rushed to through long hours and determination, made the injured to give them comfort and aid. Tears it happen. Special thanks go to LSAC President flowed. Cheers erupted. And, if the crowd had Dan Bernstine and his staff for their help and not already experienced enough, Neil Diamond cooperation during this transition. himself stepped out onto the field during the The Long Range Planning Committee has eighth inning to lead the crowd in Fenway’s spent this year intensely digesting the results traditional singing of “Sweet Caroline”! of the job analysis that NCBE commissioned as With another Annual Conference concluded, I find part of the Content Validity Study launched in 2011 related myself reflecting on what will soon be the completion of my to its testing program. The committee, which is charged with year as NCBE Chair. I don’t know what it is—probably global making recommendations for the future of NCBE’s testing warming—but the years keep getting shorter and shorter. program in light of the job analysis results, will present its I will move into the “almost a has-been” slot of Past Chair recommendations to the Board of Trustees at the Board’s next this August. It is impossible to put into words the pride and meeting in August. satisfaction I have felt serving for the past eight years on the The MBE Committee has been putting the final touches NCBE Board of Trustees. Erica Moeser has put together a very on the Civil Procedure questions for inclusion on the Feb- competent and dedicated group of professionals that make up ruary 2015 Multistate Bar Examination. Civil Procedure will the NCBE family in Madison. I don’t know where she finds become the seventh content area covered on the MBE, culmi- these folks, but they are all gems who rightfully take great nating an endeavor that began in 2008. pride in their role in bar admissions. In August, Margaret Fuller Corneille of Minnesota will It is difficult to calculate the considerable amount of succeed me as the next Chair of the Conference. Peg (as we time—whether in the form of lost billable hours, lost time all know her) has a depth of knowledge and experience in bar with families, or other sacrifices—that is contributed every admissions that is shared by few. I look forward to working year by the volunteer members of the Board of Trustees and with her in the coming year. of the Conference’s many committees. These volunteers share a love for our profession and the belief that through a fair and efficient admissions process we can further strengthen it. I also offer a special thanks to all of these volunteers’ colleagues, who wouldn’t have put up with the time out of the office if they had not also been true believers in the future of Thank you all for your support and enthusiasm this past year. I have truly enjoyed every minute of it. Best regards to all. Sincerely, our profession. When I reflect on NCBE’s accomplishments over the past year, several come to mind. Earlier this year, NCBE launched a relationship with a different testing agency, the Law School Admission Council, for the delivery of the Multistate Franklin R. Harrison Professional Responsibility Examination. As part of that Letter from the Chair 3 President’s Page by Erica Moeser B oston was ____________. and-pencil testing, how test content may I can fill in that blank with be modified in the future, and how law so many words: memorable schools are contributing to diversity as and surreal and gripping come they produce tomorrow’s lawyers. to mind. Those who attended NCBE’s Annual Bar Admissions Conference in April will no doubt carry images that are seared into their consciousness. Franklin Harrison has captured some of them in Next year we have set our sights on Seattle for another installment of this invitational Annual Conference to be held May 1–4, 2014. his column. There were so many different This issue marks the farewell—and moments for each of us there. Many are victory—lap for NCBE’s current Chair, unforgettable. Franklin Harrison. It has been such a And then there was the program! The opening pleasure to work with him, and he has put in many, keynote by Professor Dan Coquillette assumed a cer- many hours in fulfilling his role with this organization. tain poignancy, delivered, as it was, during the city’s shelter-in-place lockdown on Patriots Day. We are happy to share it in this issue with those of you who were not in Boston—and, for those of you who were, to give you the opportunity to re-experience Professor Coquillette’s words. This August Franklin will be succeeded by Margaret Fuller Corneille of Minnesota—known to all as Peg. Peg is the Executive Director of the Minnesota Board of Law Examiners, a post she has held for almost three decades. Peg came along when I was early into my career with the Wisconsin Board of Bar The Boston educational program content spanned Examiners, and we have been friends across the river the spectrum of issues that are of great importance to (the Mississippi, that is) ever since. She will be only bar examiners, from nuts-and-bolts sessions on testing, the second bar admission administrator to chair the character and fitness, and ADA matters, to the lessons Conference. (Kathryn Ressel, now Kathryn Seagle, of we can learn from other organizations (such as the Law Florida was the first.) School Admission Council, the National Association for Law Placement, and the American Bar Association), other disciplines (such as medicine and engineering), and other nations (such as the United Kingdom). Many who see the names of the Trustees on the NCBE letterhead may not realize what expertise, experience, and diversity we have on the NCBE Board of Trustees. The credentials of the current Trustees are In addition, the program content tackled the future: impressive, and that is what it takes to steer a nonprofit how to predict future conduct of attorneys through organization so important in the licensing of lawyers. In pre-admission screening, how to move beyond paper- a nutshell, and in order of seniority: 4 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Rebecca Thiem of Bismarck, North Dakota, is a former North Dakota Board Chair and a practicing lawyer. The Board is served by a capable staff at NCBE. Key members include: Franklin Harrison of Panama City, Florida, is a former Florida Board Chair and a practicing lawyer. Vicki Millard, Director of Financial Operations Peg Corneille of St. Paul, Minnesota, is the Executive Director of the Minnesota Board of Law Examiners. Penny Gessler, Director of Investigations Bryan Williams of New York, New York, is the senior member of the New York Board and a practicing lawyer. Susan Case, Director of Testing Mark Carlin of Bethesda, Maryland, is the Chair of the District of Columbia Board. He recently retired from the practice of law. Beth Hill, MBE Program Director Tom Bice of Fort Dodge, Iowa, is a former Iowa Board Chair and a trial judge. Mike Tallman, Associate Director of Information Technology Darryl Simpkins of Hillsborough, New Jersey, is the Chair of the New Jersey Board and a practicing lawyer. Brad Gilbert, Counsel and Manager of Human Resources Bob Chong of Honolulu, Hawaii, is the Chair of the Hawaii Board and a practicing lawyer. Rebecca Berch of Phoenix, Arizona, is the Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court. Missy Gavagni of Tallahassee, Florida, is the Executive Director of the Florida Board of Bar Examiners. Kellie Early, Chief Operating Officer Kent Brye, Director of Information Technology Mark Albanese, Director of Research Judy Gundersen, Deputy Director of Testing and MEE/MPT Program Director Melissa Cherney, MPRE Program Director Doug Ripkey, Associate Director of Testing Claire Huismann, Manager of Publications and Editor of the Bar Examiner Myra Andreassen, Manager of Operations Stacy Littrell, Manager of Testing Services Janet Riley, Manager of Investigations It is with great joy that I report that former NCBE Board Chair Marygold Shire Melli—known to all as Margo—has been chosen to receive one of the presti- Cindy Martin of Kansas City, Missouri, is a former Missouri Board Chair and an appellate judge. gious Margaret Brent Awards when the American Bar Bucky Askew of Atlanta, Georgia, is a former Consultant on Legal Education for the American Bar Association and a former bar admission administrator in Georgia. Francisco, California, this August. (See page 60 of this As this NCBE year ends, Rebecca Thiem’s term on followed along the trail they blazed. During Margo’s the Board will conclude. Nominated to join the Board long career at the University of Wisconsin Law School, of Trustees is Suzanne K. Richards of Columbus, Ohio. and in her capacity as a bar examiner and as a leader at Suzanne recently retired from the practice of law and NCBE, she epitomized both the intrepid pioneer as well has served for many years as a member of the Board of as the generous mentor of so many, including me. All of Commissioners on Character and Fitness in Ohio. us at NCBE are very proud of her. Association conducts its Annual Meeting in San issue.) The award—long overdue, as far as I am concerned—is intended to recognize women who pioneered in law and who chose to mentor others who President’s Page 5 The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market by James G. Leipold Editor’s Note: This article is based on James G. Leipold’s presentation, “An Update on the Legal Employment Market,” during the session “Critical Issues Affecting Bar Admissions” at the 2013 NCBE Annual Bar Admissions Conference held on April 18–21, 2013, in Boston, Massachusetts. J ust how bad is it? During the last two years, there has been an unprecedented amount of writing about the entry-level legal employment market, as well as extraordinary scrutiny of the employment outcomes data that law schools collect and publish. There have even been a number of class action lawsuits brought against law schools alleging that the schools fraudulently misrepresented their employment statistics. During the same time, the American Bar Association has brought further rigor to the consumer protection regulations that govern what employment information law schools are required to disclose.1 In fact the story about the entry-level legal employment market is a simple one, one that is explored in some detail in this article. The truth is that for graduates of many law schools, the job market has long been a scrappy one, and it continues to be a scrappy market for many law school graduates in general. Although many employment sectors continue to provide a predictable number of jobs for law school graduates despite the upheaval of the last few years, the one really dramatic change in the legal employment market has been the loss of private practice job opportunities at the largest law firms, disproportionately affecting a population of law school graduates from certain schools who had previously been destined for large-firm private prac- All of this is to say that there is considerably tice jobs. As these graduates seek alternative employ- more information available in the public domain ment opportunities, they often take jobs that would about the employment prospects for law school in the past have gone to other graduates, and as a graduates than there ever has been before, and yet at result there is a cascading effect that has disrupted the same time—in part because of the proliferation of traditional employment patterns at almost every law extensive Internet publishing, blog posting, and use school. of social media—there is a great deal of misinformation about the legal job market that persists and in many cases has gained ascendency. Nonetheless, despite the hyperbole and half-truths that proliferate in the arguments about whether a legal education is still a worthwhile investment, there is broad agree- The Post-Recession Landscape: How Law Firms Have Adapted and What It Means for New Law School Graduates ment that the entry-level legal job market is tough— In the first half of 2013, we are in a post-recession certainly tougher than it used to be. Words like bleak period, although the recovery for the legal sector has and brutal have even been thrown around to describe been both slow and more than a bit bumpy. With the the job market faced by the class of 2012. reporting of law firm 2012 year-end financial results 6 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 by the press, it became clear that some law firms routine jobs that new associates used to do, particu- were able to achieve substantial growth in revenue larly document review, are now done much more and profits in 2012, while others struggled to main- efficiently and for a lower cost with the assistance of tain level earnings. technology. In addition, sophisticated software and In general, firms that have continued to produce growth in profits and revenues have done so by continuing to cut expenses—and, more specifically, by further reducing lawyer head count. While the recession saw many firms letting associates go, the post-recession period has been marked by reductions in equity partner head count. The point is, the business model for large law firms in particular remains in flux, and one result is an ongoing conservative approach to hiring new law school graduates. Three Forces That Have Changed the Legal Industry It is important to understand that the changes facing the legal industry are not just the result of the recession but really are the result of three significant online tools are allowing lawyers to complete even complex tasks with greater speed and efficiency, cutting down on the number of lawyers needed on a team. Basically, the law industry, like so many other industries before it, is finding that routine and commoditizable work of all sorts is being automated, driving down costs and lowering head count.3 The Force of Globalization Finally, the third driver in the new legal economy is the force of globalization. Law firms in North America must now compete in a price-sensitive global market for legal services. This means that some legal work that used to be done in the United States and Canada is now being done elsewhere for less. Outsourcing to countries like India and the Philippines has become routine. Also, as the corporations that are the cli- forces acting together. ents of the largest law firms see the value in disag- The Recession sophisticated work is being done by non–law firm Certainly the recession had a dramatic impact. According to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data, the legal sector lost about 60,000 jobs at the height of the recession, and almost 9% of all U.S. associates lost their jobs. While the market has recovered some of that lost ground, the legal sector is still down 50,000 jobs from its peak in 2007.2 The Impact of Technology The second driver in the new or emerging normal is the impact of technology. Advances in technology continue to change the legal profession at a rapid gregating the pieces of big legal jobs, often the less entities like legal process outsourcers (LPOs). These LPOs often operate outside of North America, but increasingly foreign- and domestic-owned LPOs are also opening operations in lower-cost locales within North America. Work done by LPOs can range from tasks such as legal coding and legal transcription to more complex projects involving legal research, litigation support, document review, contract drafting and management, legal publishing, and intellectual property-related services such as patent application preparation.4 widely available, and information and expertise Changes to the Legal Industry Are Predicted to Be Permanent that were previously available only from lawyers The impact of these three forces acting together are now readily available online. Also, many of the has resulted in a net loss of private practice jobs for pace. The Internet has made information of all sorts The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 7 lawyers and is driving law firms to grapple with a new business model in which value has emerged as the most important factor. For those who still believe that the current difficulties in the industry are all a result of the recession and that things will go back to “normal” once the economy recovers, two very powerful 2012 year-end reports by industry analysts argue strongly that there will be no return to the market that existed in the years leading up to the recession. Private Practice Job Opportunities Dwindle The net result of these changes has been the erosion of private practice opportunities at large firms for new graduates. Law firms, in general, are sticking with smaller summer programs and reduced entrylevel hiring. As firms continue to value experience, we have seen lateral recruiting volumes outpacing entry-level hiring. Going forward, law firms are revisiting how best to deliver first-year training The 2013 Hildebrandt Consulting/Citi Private Bank Client Advisory, which highlights trends in the legal market and factors that these two institutions believe will impact the legal market in the near future, makes the case that the legal industry is not likely ever to return to the way it was before the recession, noting: in an environment where corporate clients continue to be unwilling to absorb those costs. With less live-client, on-the-job training available to new associates, large law firms are having to find ways to train new recruits using nonbillable time, making the hiring of new associates more expensive for firms. Additionally, hiring partners as a group have expressed their desire to see associates who are For the legal industry, the results in 2012, another turbulent year, were largely a repeat of trends that emerged over the prior three years. In fact, we think it is time to let go of any lingering notion that the industry will revert to the boom years before the Great Recession anytime soon. With profit growth and other financial indices reaching lower setpoints in the past four years, we anticipate that the current state of the industry will remain the norm for the foreseeable future.5 more “practice-ready,” which not only means being legally trained, but also arguably includes exposure to more experiential learning (both client-based and simulated); a basic understanding of the business of running a law firm; exposure to the modern technology tools that lawyers use; and exposure to the business school skill sets of problem solving, working in a group, project management, and understanding the client-service business model—as well as strong writing skills, public speaking skills, confidence, and initiative. For recent law school graduates, the impact of Another year-end advisory put out jointly by these changes on the entry-level legal hiring mar- the Georgetown Law Center for the Study of the ket has been dramatic. Between 2008 and 2011, the Legal Profession and Thomson Reuters Peer Monitor National Association for Law Placement (NALP) has 6 reached the same conclusion. Both reports argue measured a 14% drop in private practice opportuni- that the growth in annual revenues, profits per part- ties, with almost all of that erosion happening at ner, and billing rates are likely to be much lower large firms. Between 2009 and 2011, NALP has mea- going forward than they were prior to the recession. sured a 17% drop in mean salaries, again the result of 8 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 job erosion at the largest law firms.7 In broad strokes, we have seen much higher rates of unemployment and underemployment for law school graduates, fewer graduates working as lawyers and more graduates working in business and law-related jobs, more graduates seeking alternative careers of all sorts, and more graduates having to compete with displaced lawyers for jobs. A Closer Look at the Class of 2011 Employment Rate Reveals EntryLevel Job Market Weaknesses A Rise in Temporary and Part-Time Work Of those members of the class of 2011 who did have jobs, 13% of all the jobs reported were temporary, lasting less than one year. In addition, 12% of the Employment Rate Lowest Since the Early 1990s Along with the ABA, NALP measures the employment of each graduating class on February 15, approximately nine months following graduation, to allow time for the bar exam and licensing. At the time of writing this article, the class of 2011 is the most recent class for which we have data, and analyses for the class of 2012 are under way. Early snapshot data from the ABA on the class of 2012, however, suggest that its employment profile will not be much differ8 ent from that of the class that preceded it. Nine months after graduation, only 85.6%9 of class reported working in part-time positions compared to only 6% three years ago. With these two factors combined, 7% of all jobs were both temporary and part-time (and only 82% of jobs were both fulltime and reported as lasting one year or more). ABA analysis has suggested that only 54.9% of graduates reported jobs that were long-term, were full-time, and required bar passage, a number that has been widely reported in the press.10 Employed But Looking for Work Another marker of the weakness of the job market is that a much higher percentage of the class of 2011 indicated that even though they were employed, they were still looking for work (25% compared to the class of 2011 for whom the employment status 16% in 2008), suggesting that graduates took jobs was known were employed in jobs of any sort, only they may not have been satisfied with simply to 65.4% of the class had jobs for which bar passage be able to earn some money to offset their living was required, and 12.1% of the class remained unem- expenses and begin paying their student debt. ployed. The class of 2011 had the lowest employment rate of any class since the last big recession in the early 1990s, when the nine-month employment rate An Increase in Solo Practitioners for the classes of 1993 and 1994 was measured at And in yet another sign of the difficult job market, 83.4%. the number of new graduates entering private practice as solo practitioners has doubled in two years, Low as the employment rate was nine months with 6% of all private practice jobs for the class of after graduation, the number for the class of 2011 is 2011 identified as solo practices. This is twice the higher than we might expect—and in fact the over- rate for solo practices that was measured before the all employment rate on its own masks a number of recession, when the number was routinely about 3%. weaknesses in the entry-level job market faced by The change in that number suggests that when jobs this class. are scarce, a higher percentage of graduates opt to The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 9 work as solo practitioners because they are unable to kind of jobs law school graduates held. The majority secure legal practice jobs elsewhere. held jobs for which bar passage was required. This Examining the Class of 2011 EntryLevel Job Market is a good proxy for practicing law. The second largest number held jobs for which a J.D. provided an advantage but bar passage was not required. These There is reason to believe that the employment pro- are usually law-related jobs. There were also smaller file for the class of 2011 will come to be seen as the groups of graduates who found other professional very bottom of the curve in terms of the decline in and non-professional jobs. A very small percent- the job market following the recession. Certainly the age of the class continued with full-time studies of class of 2011 in many ways was the class that experi- some sort, generally but not always pursuing an enced the worst of the recession. As members of this LL.M. degree, and the remainder of the class was class were preparing to apply to law school, the legal still unemployed nine months after graduation, with economy was booming, and they had every reason a subset of those saying that they were not seeking to believe that it would continue to boom. During the a job. fall of their first year of law school, Lehman Brothers collapsed. The summer after their second year of law school, the summer of 2010, was the summer that the largest number of law firms canceled their summer programs, and as members of the class graduated in 2011 they were facing a job market crowded with graduates and associates who had been deferred and/or displaced during the recession. While historically the distribution of the job types taken by new graduates has not changed much from year to year, over the last four years there have been some fairly significant changes. Most notably, of those graduates for whom employment was known, only 65.4% obtained a job for which bar passage was required. This compares with 76.9% for the class of 2007 and is the lowest percentage NALP has A Drop in Jobs for Which Bar Passage Is Required There are several ways of describing the entry-level job market. Table 1 shows what jobs law school graduates for whom employment was known have taken for the last five years by job type, which means what ever measured for this category. This means in general that fewer graduates found jobs actually practicing law. There were offsetting jumps in the percentage of graduates who obtained jobs for which a J.D. was an advantage, and of course big jumps in the number who were still unemployed nine months Table 1: Employment Status: Initial Job Types for the Classes of 2007–2011 after graduation. (as of February 15, 2012) Private Practice Jobs Job Type 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Bar passage required 76.9% 74.7% 70.8% 68.4% 65.4% J.D. an advantage 7.7% 8.1% 9.2% 10.7% 12.5% Other professional 5.1% 4.9% 5.4% 5.6% 5.3% Other non-professional 1.3% 1.3% 1.8% 1.9% 1.9% Another way to look at Continuing studies 2.3% 2.4% 3.1% 2.9% 2.3% the entry-level job mar- Seeking job 4.1% 5.4% 6.0% 6.2% 9.6% ket is by initial employer Not seeking job 1.7% 2.3% 2.7% 3.2% 2.5% type—in other words, 10 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Drop, While Business and Industry Jobs Increase who were the graduates working for? Here too, In looking at the five-year spread of these num- historically, despite fluctuations in the economy, bers, what is particularly noteworthy is the drop the kinds of employers that law school graduates in private practice jobs by almost seven percentage work for have been relatively constant over time. points since 2008 and by five percentage points in a The majority of law school graduates, not surpris- single year, from 2009 to 2010. This figure had previ- ingly, enter into private practice, but for the first time ously fluctuated only between 55% and 58% since ever that number fell below half of the employed 1993, and only in 1974 was this number lower, at graduates for the class of 2011. Table 2 shows that a time when NALP data were less comprehensive. just 49.5% of the employed members of that class This drop in private practice jobs was absorbed by for whom employment was known obtained jobs in incremental increases in some of the other employer private practice. types, but notably in business and industry. Business Public service jobs, defined broadly, are the next most likely destination for recent graduates. If we total military and other government jobs, judicial clerkships, and positions with public interest organizations, these public service positions combined and industry is a broad category that represents all kinds of non–law firm private-sector work, and for the class of 2011 employment in this category reached a historic high. try. Over 18% of the jobs taken by the class of 2011 How the Erosion of Private Practice Jobs Has Affected Law School Graduates were in business and industry, a rate that has more The net erosion of private practice jobs and the than doubled since 1989 (and is the highest level growth of jobs in business and industry are part of a of business-sector employment measured in the 35 larger historical change in the job market, the origins years that NALP has been collecting this data) and of which precede the recession but which was accel- that indicates the only real growth area by employer erated by the recession. As noted earlier, the change type. And of course a very small percentage of the is the result of a competitive global market for legal class of 2011 took academic jobs of some type—these services, the growth of foreign and domestic legal could be jobs of any type with a law school, a college, process outsourcers, and the downward pressure on or a secondary or primary school of some sort. rates by corporate clients. And again it is important accounted for about 29% of all jobs taken. The third mostly likely destination was business and indus- to emphasize that nearly all of this private practice job erosion Table 2: Employment Status: Initial Employer Types for the Classes happened at the largest law of 2007–2011 (as of February 15, 2012) firms. Employer Type 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Private practice 55.5% 56.2% 55.9% 50.9% 49.5% Offers Fall for 2L Summer Business and industry 14.1% 13.4% 13.5% 15.1% 18.1% Associate Positions in Large Government and military 11.7% 11.8% 11.4% 12.8% 11.9% Law Firms Judicial clerkships 9.8% 9.6% 8.7% 9.3% 9.3% The result of private practice job Public interest 5.8% 5.4% 5.7% 6.7% 7.5% erosion is starkly illustrated by Academic 1.8% 2.3% 3.5% 3.7% 3.0% looking at the median number The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 11 of offers for 2L summer associate positions by law that they are extending in this climate, by contrast, firms differentiated by firm size. (See Table 3.) The the number of offers made by the smallest firms has most dramatic changes have happened at the larg- actually grown in the period following the recession. est firms of more than 700 lawyers, where median Private Practice Employment Shifts to Smaller summer offer rates fell from 30 in 2007 to just 8 in 2009 and now have hovered in the 11 to 13 range for Firms three years. By contrast, mid-sized firms of 251 to 500 Another way to illustrate the loss of large law firm lawyers actually made more offers than larger firms jobs is to look at the distribution of law firm jobs in 2011, coming in at a median of 14.5, but in the taken by the graduating class differentiated by law summer of 2012 that number fell somewhat precipi- firm size. (See Table 4.) Despite the publicity sur- tously to 8.5 for the class of 2014. That drop affected rounding large law firms, very small firms of 2 to the overall median number of offers, which fell back 10 lawyers have long been the most common des- to 8 in 2012, after rising for two consecutive years fol- tination for those entering private practice. For the lowing the recession. While most of the large firms class of 2011, more than 65% of those who entered remain very conservative in the number of offers private practice took jobs at firms of 50 lawyers or fewer, and almost 43% of all private Table 3: Median Number of Summer Offers Extended to 2Ls, 2007–2012 Firm Size practice jobs were with firms of just 2 to 10 lawyers. Note that only just over 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 16% of law firm jobs were at firms 701+ 30 18.5 8 12.5 11 12 with more than 500 lawyers. While it 501–700 16 11 19 19 13 13 has always been true that small firms 251–500 19 8 9 10 14.5 8.5 101–250 17 12 6 9 8 7 100 or fewer 4 4 4 3 4.5 5 All Employers 15 10 7 9 10 8 provide many jobs for new law school graduates, this shift from employment with larger firms to employment with smaller firms has been particularly dramatic over the last two years. Prior to the recession, jobs with firms Table 4: Employment in Law Firms by Size of Firm for the Class of 2011 of 500 or more lawyers made up about (as of February 15, 2012) 25% of all private practice jobs for new Size of Firm Percent of Private Practice Jobs Total graduates. Solo 6.0% 2–10 42.9% 11–25 10.5% 26–50 6.1% 51–100 5.0% entry-level legal employment market 101–250 5.7% has been a significant drop in aggre- 251–500 5.0% gate starting salaries. This has hap- 501+ 16.2% Unknown 2.6% 12 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Starting Salaries Fall for the Class of 2011 65.5% 31.9% Another result of the turmoil in the pened not so much because any individual employers began paying less than they had in the past (though some large law salaries for law school graduates occur along a bi- firm salaries did drop from $160,000 to $145,000), modal distribution, creating an inverted bell curve. but rather because the loss of jobs has happened See Figure 1, with its two distinct peaks. The left- mostly at the highest end of the pay scale, so there hand peak of the graph reflects salaries of $40,000 have been fewer relatively high-paying jobs and to $65,000, which collectively account for about 52% more relatively low-paying jobs for recent graduates. of reported salaries. The right-hand peak shows that As a result, the median starting salary for new law salaries of $160,000 account for about 14% of re- school graduates fell 17% over two years (from 2009 ported salaries. By contrast, for the class of 2008, to 2011), and the mean salary fell 15% over that same 23% of all salaries reported were $160,000, and for period. The median salary for the class of 2011, based the class of 2009, 25% of all salaries reported were on those working full-time and reporting a salary, $160,000. The loss of $160,000 starting salaries cor- was $60,000, down from $72,000 for the class of 2009. responds of course to the loss of the entry-level jobs (See Table 5.) at firms of more than 500 lawyers. Similarly, the reported median salary at law The mean salary is also indicated in Figure 1, firms was $85,000 for the class of 2011, compared marked by the solid vertical line. For the last five with $130,000 for the class of 2009 (falling a whop- years or more, the mean has tended to fall in the val- ping 35%), again reflecting the shift in the distribu- ley between the two peaks, reflecting a salary that not tion of law firm jobs from larger firms to smaller many graduates make. With the recession, however, firms, as well as salary adjustments on the part the mean has drifted to the left, bringing it closer to of some firms. Although salaries of $160,000 still predicting salaries students are likely to make but prevail at the largest firms, their share of jobs has still overstating prospects for many students. dropped, creating further downward pressure on the median. Finally, the mean salary at law firms was $97,800 for the class of 2011, compared with $115,000 two years ago, having fallen 15% over that same twoyear period. The dotted vertical line to the left represents the adjusted mean salary. Because not every graduate reports a starting salary, and because unreported salaries tend to be at the lower end of the scale, the mean of the reported salaries will always overstate Starting salaries for law school graduates dis- the true mean to some extent. NALP uses a statisti- tribute themselves in a peculiar way. Rather than the cal weighting methodology to calculate an adjusted ordinary bell curve that might be expected, starting mean, which approximates what the true mean Table 5: Starting Salaries for the Classes of 2009–2011 2009 2010 2011 Percentage Decrease from 2009 to 2011 Median salary $72,000 $63,000 $60,000 17% Mean salary $93,000 $84,000 $78,650 15% Median firm salary $130,000 $104,000 $85,000 35% Mean firm salary $115,000 $106,000 $97,800 15% All Employment Types Employment at Law Firms The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 13 Percentage of Reported Salaries Figure 1: Distribution of reported full-time salaries for the class of 2011 would be if every job reported had a reported salary Starting Salaries by Other Main Employment to go with it. As indicated in Figure 1, the reported Sectors mean is $78,653 for the class of 2011, and the adjusted The range and distribution of starting salaries in each mean is somewhat less, at $73,984. Remember, however, that as Figure 1 makes plain, graduates are more likely to make either more or less than either of these means than they are to make a salary close to the mean itself. of the other main employment sectors are quite compressed compared to private practice, and in general the medians are lower. Government Jobs, Judicial Clerkships, and Public Interest Jobs Starting Private Practice Salaries by Firm Size Government jobs, which account for about 12% of all When we look at starting private practice salaries by firm size, we can easily see why the salary distribution in Figure 1 looks the way it does. See Table 6, which shows median starting salaries jobs taken by class of 2011 graduates, are distributed fairly evenly between federal, state, and local set- Table 6: Median Starting Salaries by Size of Law Firm by size of law firm. In fact, 46% of all private Number of Lawyers in Firm Median Starting Salary practice jobs pay $75,000 or less. There are 2–10 $50,000 exceptions of course, but salaries of more than 11–25 $65,000 $100,000 are largely confined to firms of more 26–50 $75,000 than 100 lawyers (only about 27% of all private 51–100 $88,000 101–250 $110,000 251–500 $145,000 501+ $160,000 practice jobs), and only those at the very biggest firms are making $160,000 (only about 16% of all private practice jobs). 14 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 tings, with corresponding median starting salaries of for the class of 2011. Only 29% of the jobs in the busi- $62,500 (federal), $44,000 (state), and $50,000 (local). ness and industry category required bar passage. Judicial clerkships, which account for about 9% of The aggregate salary information for this category all jobs taken by class of 2011 graduates, are most is less meaningful because of the diversity of sala- prevalent at the state level, accounting for more than ries reflected in the wide range of jobs taken in this half of all clerkships, with the fewest opportunities sector, from service jobs paying an hourly wage to to clerk occurring in local courts, which provide less high-level management positions taken by graduates than 9% of all clerkships. Highly coveted federal with extensive prior work experience. For the class clerkship opportunities have declined a bit for recent of 2011, the median starting salary for business and graduates over a longer arc of time and currently industry jobs was $65,000. account for about 38% of all clerkship opportunities. Federal clerkships pay the most, with a median Academic Jobs starting salary of $60,000; they are followed by state The last sector worth noting is academia. This is also court clerkships, with a median starting salary of a broad category and represents jobs of every sort in $45,000; and local court clerkships pay the least, with education—whether with a law school, a college, or a median starting salary of $42,000. More than 7% a secondary or primary school of some sort. One sig- of the class of 2011 went directly into public inter- nificant difference between the recent recession and est employment, which pays the least of all, with a those that preceded it is that this time law schools median starting salary of just $45,000. have taken on a very active role in employing their own graduates. Startlingly, law school–funded jobs Business Sector Jobs It is less easy to generalize about the broad business sector, where more than 18% of employed graduates from the class of 2011 found jobs (the highest level of business-sector employment measured in the 35 years that NALP has been collecting this data, and a figure that has more than doubled in the last 24 years). This is the most diverse category of employment and includes both those people working as lawyers directly for industry and, much more commonly, those working in non-lawyer capacities in represented 5% of all jobs for class of 2011 graduates, and many jobs in this academic category are law school research assistantships or other law school– based temporary positions. The other jobs in law schools are admissions jobs, career services jobs, and other full-time professional roles in the law school, including law school teaching of any sort. Salaries for this sector were also fairly low and fairly compact in range, with a median of just $45,000, the same as public interest job salaries. Street jobs with firms like Goldman Sachs at one The Role of Law Schools as Employers: A Dramatic Increase in Bridge-to-Practice Programs end of the spectrum and, at the other end, lower- It is worth saying something more about the role paying jobs in service-oriented or retail settings. that law schools are currently playing in employ- This category also includes jobs working for legal ing law school graduates. Since the recession, law temporary placement agencies, a job category that schools have been very active in trying to mitigate represented 11% of all jobs in business and industry the impact of the tough job market for graduates by every possible kind of job. It includes jobs working as consultants for firms like McKinsey and Wall The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 15 creating both on-campus and off-campus postgraduate jobs for their students. One of several ways that law schools have employed their own graduates is through bridge-to-practice programs. Bridge-topractice programs provide law school graduates with funding for some sort of temporary employment with a third party that will give them an opportunity to enhance their practical legal skills as they transition into the practice of law. While some of these fellowship programs are long-standing, the incidence of these programs and the level of funding have both increased fairly dramatically as a result of the recession. Bridge-to-practice employment opportunities are found with public interest organizations, government agencies, members of the judiciary, and even private employers. Conclusion The job market for new law school graduates remains extremely competitive, and the widespread press attention paid to the poor job market likely accounts, at least in part, for the recent dramatic downturn in law school applications. (Data from the Law School Admission Council suggest that law school applications are down more than 30% over the two most recent years.) There are no indications that a quick turnaround is in sight. Law firm recruiting volume for the class of 2014 bobbled a bit, suggesting that recovery for law firms is not unfolding along a smooth upward curve. Early ABA data for the class of 2012 indicate both increased unemployment but also an increase in the number of graduates finding full-time employment Survey research conducted by NALP in 2012, to which about 40% of all law schools provided a response, revealed that 55% of the responding law schools reported having some sort of bridgeto-practice program for the class of 2011. These programs were most common in the largest schools and in schools in the largest metropolitan areas. The working as lawyers.12 Law schools continue to be active in providing funding for initial employment, with the new ABA data showing that one large law school provided employment of some sort for 23% of its graduates from the class of 2012.13 Updated NALP data for the class of 2012 will be available online soon after publication of this article.14 research showed that fellowships were most often It is likely that the class of 2011 will come to be for a period of six months or less. Monthly stipends seen as representing the nadir of the employment for these fellowships ranged dramatically from $417 curve, and smaller graduating classes and a gradu- to $3,666 per month, with a median stipend of $1,225 ally improving economy are likely to boost the and a mean stipend of $1,558. Total per-school fund- employment prospects for future classes—at least ing ranged from $8,400 to $1,463,700, with median gradually. NALP will continue to measure the funding of $175,000 and mean funding of $265,359. employment of law school graduates and will con- The number of fellowships per school ranged from tinue to provide detailed aggregate reporting on the 1 to 111, with a median number of fellowships per employment outcomes for each graduating class for school of 30 and a mean of 38. Forty-eight percent use by all those with an interest in legal education. of fellowship placements were with public interest organizations, 30% with government, 12.5% with courts, and 7% with law firms (the remainder were in corporate or other settings).11 16 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Notes 1.[Editor’s Note: See David Yellen, Advancing Transparency in Law School Employment Data: The ABA’s New Standard 509,” 81:4 The Bar Examiner 6–13 (Dec. 2012), available at http://www.ncbex.org/assets/media_files/Bar-Examiner/ articles/2012/810412beYellen.pdf.] 2. See, e.g., The American Lawyer’s recent parsing of the legal sector jobs numbers from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Tom Huddleston, Jr., Legal Sector’s April Flowers: 2,100 New Jobs, The Am Law Daily, May 3, 2013 (“The recent gains have pushed the total number of professionals employed in the legal industry to 1.13 million—10,000 more than in April 2012 and the highest number since the same month four years ago. Overall, though, there are currently some 50,000 fewer people employed in the legal industry than there were at its peak in May 2007.”), available at http://www .americanlawyer.com/PubArticleALD.jsp?id= 1202598653932&slreturn=20130410095441. 3. For an excellent overview of the force of technology at work, see the first chapter of Richard Susskind, Tomorrow’s Lawyers (Oxford University Press 2013). 4. See Mayer Brown, Is Legal Process Outsourcing Right for Your Company?, 12 February 2010, available at http://www .mayerbrown.com/publications/is-legal-process -outsourcing-right-for-your-company-02-12-2010/. 5. Hildebrandt Consulting LLC & Citi Private Bank, 2013 Client Advisory (2013), available at http://hildebrandtconsult.com/ uploads/Citi_Hildebrandt_2013_Client_Advisory.pdf, at 1. 6. Georgetown Law Center for the Study of the Legal Profession & Thomson Reuters Peer Monitor, 2013 Report on the State of the Legal Market (2013), available at http://www .law.georgetown.edu/continuing-legal-education/ executive-education/upload/2013-report.pdf. 7. To briefly define the terms mean and median used in this article: The mean is the average value of a set of numbers and thus can be affected by unusually high or low numbers. The median is the middle value in a list of numbers ranked from high to low, or the point at which half the numbers are at or above that value and half are at or below. The median, therefore, provides a summary measure that is not affected by extremely low or extremely high values. 8. ABA Now, ABA Releases Class of 2012 Law Graduate Employment Data, http://www.abanow.org/2013/03/aba -releases-class-of-2012-law-graduate-employment-data/ (last visited May 13, 2013). See also posting of Mark Hansen to ABA Journal, http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/ barely_half_of_all_2012_law_grads_have_long-term_full_ time_legal_jobs_data_/ (Mar. 29, 2013, 11:50 CDT). 9. The 85.6% figure includes 0.5% of employed graduates who did not specify type of job held. These graduates are therefore not represented in Table 1 on page 10, which shows initial job types for the classes of 2007–2011. 10. ABA Now, supra note 8. See also posting of Debra Cassens Weiss to ABA Journal, http://www.abajournal.com/news/ article/only_55_percent_of_2011_law_grads_had_fulltime_long-term_legal_jobs_analys/ (June 19, 2012, 6:33 CDT). 11. See NALP, Bridge to Practice Survey Report, http://www .nalp.org/bridge_to_practice_report. 12. ABA Now, supra note 8. 13. Id. 14. See NALP, Class of 2012, http://www.nalp.org/classof2012. James G. Leipold is the Executive Director of the National Association for Law Placement (NALP). Prior to joining NALP in 2004, he worked for the Law School Admission Council. Leipold was previously the Director of Admission at Temple University School of Law, where he was also an instructor in legal writing and research. Leipold earned his bachelor’s degree from Brown University and his J.D. from Temple University School of Law. He speaks and writes frequently on trends in legal employment for recent law school graduates. The New Entry-Level Legal Employment Market 17 Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators: The 2012 International Conference of Legal Regulators by Laurel S. Terry Introduction: The Power of Networks United States. Canada has the Federation of Law Networks are powerful. This is true both person- the Conference of Regulatory Officers and the Law ally and professionally. For example, you are reading this article because the National Conference of Bar Examiners and its Bar Examiner magazine exist to connect “courts, academia, bar admission administrators, members of bar examining boards and character committees, and others with special interest in the bar admissions process.” Many of you have attended NCBE’s conferences, which serve as a conduit for sharing knowledge, approaches, and perspectives regarding bar admissions issues. Networks in the Legal Profession Societies of Canada, Europe has the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe, and Australia has Council of Australia. Networks in Other Professions Law is not alone in recognizing the power of professional networks. Regulators in other fields have both domestic and international networks. For example, not only is there a North American Securities Administrators Organization, but there is also an International Organization of Securities Commissions, the latter of which brings together securities regulators from many different countries. There are international networks for anti- If you had any doubt about the power of profes- trust regulators (the International Competition sional networks, a quick glance around the U.S. legal Network), for labor regulators (the International profession should convince you of the usefulness of Labor Organization), for banking regulators (the these types of organizations. The Conference of Chief Basel Committee), and for insurance regulators (the Justices and the National Center for State Courts International Association of Insurance Supervisors), provide a network for state Supreme Courts. The among others. National Organization of Bar Counsel (NOBC) provides a network for lawyer disciplinary authorities. Public prosecutors and public defenders have networks. The Association of Professional Responsibility Lawyers was created to provide, among other things, a network for lawyers who represent lawyers. It is clear that networks are also important to legal profession regulators located outside the 18 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 When I was getting ready to give a talk about the need to create an international network of lawyer regulators, I sent out an e-mail to my faculty colleagues asking for examples of international regulator networks in the fields within which they taught. By the end of the day, I was inundated with examples. In short, regulators in many, many fields have created international networks. The Need for an International Network of Lawyer San Francisco in conjunction with the NOBC Annual Regulators Meeting (and right before the ABA Annual Meeting). Given the power of networks, it is perhaps surprising that there hasn’t been an international network that could link bar admission authorities (or other types of lawyer regulators) from around the world. There are certainly multi-country regional regulator networks such as the NOBC, which includes disci- Why the Time is Ripe for an International Network of Lawyer Regulators Regulators Share Common Concerns plinary counsel from the United States, Canada, and As I have written elsewhere,2 I believe the time is Australia; and the Council of Bars and Law Societies ripe to establish an international network of lawyer of Europe, which is known as the CCBE and serves regulators. In my view, an international network as an umbrella organization for European bar asso- would be a useful development even if U.S. lawyer ciations, many of which have regulatory functions. regulators didn’t have to deal with the effects of globalization and lawyer mobility. After all, regulators There are international networks for specialized groups within the legal profession, such as around the world face many of the same questions during the different stages of lawyer regulation: the International Association of Prosecutors, the International Association of Law Schools, and the International Institute of Law Association Chief Executives. The International Bar Association has a Bar Issues Commission, some of whose members include lawyers who are officers of or highly placed within bars or law societies that have a regulatory function. There is not, however, an organization devoted to those individuals whose “day job” is lawyer regulation. • Admissions stage: How can a regulator predict or evaluate competency? • Conduct regulation stage: What rules and tools are available to raise standards, minimize risks, and achieve the jurisdiction’s regulatory goals? • Discipline stage: What procedures should be used to weed out “bad apple” lawyers? This situation arguably changed in September Research has shown that collaborative discus- 2012 in London, with the inaugural Inter- sions can help decision makers better understand national Conference of Legal Regulators. NCBE the issues, their own perspectives, and the available Chair Franklin Harrison attended this conference options.3 Networks can help facilitate these types of and wrote about it briefly in his column in the collaborative discussions. December 2012 issue of the Bar Examiner.1 This article provides additional details about that conference, explains why I think it is a useful endeavor, and sug- The Impact of Global Trade on U.S. Legal Services gests why NCBE supporters might also want to sup- In my view, globalization has made the case for an port the establishment of this kind of international international network of lawyer regulators even network. Among other things, one could support stronger. Publications of the U.S. International Trade this network by attending the second international Commission and the World Trade Organization conference, which will be held in August 2013 in have documented the growth in international trade Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators 19 in legal services and the growth in U.S. legal services 4 exports and imports. Other publications have documented the dramatic growth in multinational law firms.5 These statistics should not come as a surprise, since lawyers follow their clients around the globe. An Increase in Foreign-Educated Applicants to the U.S. Bar Regardless of whether these globalization factors are the reason, it is undeniable that there has been a dramatic increase in the number of foreign-educated Consider, for example, the 2012 U.S. trade sta- applicants who take a U.S. bar exam. Starting in 1992, tistics. In 2012, every U.S. jurisdiction except Hawaii NCBE has collected annual statistics that show the and the Virgin Islands had merchandise exports number of foreign-educated applicants who took the that exceeded one billion dollars. (These statistics bar examination in each state. These statistics show a are even more impressive when you realize that significant increase over time. In 2012, 5,916 foreign- these 2012 export statistics capture only merchandise educated applicants took the bar exam. This repre- exports and do not include service exports from U.S. sents more than a 20% increase in the past 5 years jurisdictions.) Although not all of these billions of (4,869 applicants in 2007), almost an 80% increase in dollars of state exports will have required lawyers, the past 10 years (3,299 applicants in 2002), and more U.S. and foreign lawyers were probably involved in than a 500% increase since 1992, when 1,080 foreign- many of these deals. This type of cross-border legal educated applicants took the bar exam and NCBE practice, along with globalization and technology, began publishing these statistics.9 6 has led to new issues, such as determining the practice rights of foreign lawyers and determining which jurisdiction’s ethics rules apply to globally mobile lawyers.7An international network would help regulators learn from one another as they confront these types of issues. Some people may assume that the increase in foreign-educated applicants is found only in New York and California. While those two states have— by far—the most foreign-educated applicants, the phenomenon is not limited to those states. The number of U.S. jurisdictions in which foreign-educated Global trade may also help explain the increased applicants sat for a bar exam has increased by more attractiveness of a U.S. law license for foreign- than 40% in the past 10 years, going from 20 jurisdic- educated lawyers. Some of these foreign-educated tions in 2002 to 29 jurisdictions in 2012. In the last 10 lawyers may want to work in the United States rep- years, in states other than New York and California, resenting outbound U.S clients or inbound foreign the number of foreign-educated applicants more clients. But others may want a U.S. license even than tripled: excluding California and New York, though they plan to practice outside the United there were 140 foreign-educated applicants in 2002 States. There are multiple reasons why these lawyers compared to 429 such applicants in 2012.10 In a might want a U.S. law license, such as the “signal- 2009 survey, bar admission authorities said that ing” or credentialing effect that U.S. bar licensure can they would welcome help with issues related to bar convey or the greater scope of practice provided by admission applications from foreign-educated grad- having both a foreign and a U.S. law license. In some uates, indicating their need to adapt to this growing cases, the regulatory structure in the foreign country trend.11 has created a situation in which the only way for a local lawyer to work in a foreign law firm is to give As these statistics demonstrate, U.S. bar admis- up his or her local license and practice using a for- sion authorities now have to be prepared to deal 8 eign law license, such as a U.S. or U.K. license. 20 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 with inbound foreign lawyers and to recognize that many of “their” lawyers will also be crossing jurisdictional boundaries. This is one of many reasons why U.S. bar admission authorities might want to be able to locate their foreign counterparts and learn more about their respective systems. The 2012 International Conference of Legal Regulators It is against this backdrop that the 2012 International Conference of Legal Regulators must be understood. This conference, held in London on September 27–28, was sponsored by the U.K. Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA). The SRA has been recognized by the U.K. Legal Services Board as the frontline regulator for solicitors in England and Wales. (The Legal Services Board is a new regulatory entity that was • Hon. Gregory Mize, Judicial Fellow at the National Center for State Courts and staff member of the Conference of Chief Justices’ International Agreements Committee; • Robert Hawley, Deputy Executive Director of the State Bar of California; and • Gene Shipp, Chief Regulatory Counsel of the District of Columbia Office of Bar Counsel and former President of the National Organization of Bar Counsel. Also attending the conference from the United States was Ellyn Rosen, who is Regulation Counsel for the ABA Center for Professional Responsibility and was Counsel for the Center’s Commission on Ethics 20/20. established by the U.K. Legal Services Act of 2007; it has oversight responsibility for all of the frontline legal services regulators. For example, in addition to authorizing the SRA, the Legal Services Board has recognized the Bar Standards Board as the frontline regulator for barristers in England and Wales and has oversight authority over this entity.)12 The Conference Attendees Conference Sessions for Everyone The London conference included two full days of programming and two evenings with social events (see the sidebar on page 22 for a list of the conference sessions; see the sidebar on page 25 for a summary of the social events.) The program included some sessions that were of particular interest to bar admission authorities, such as “Competence on Admission,” More than 100 professionals from 30 countries in at which NCBE Chair Franklin Harrison spoke and Africa, Asia, Australia, Canada, Europe, the United which explored what regulators need to know about Kingdom, and the United States attended the 2012 applicants beyond their having fulfilled admission International Conference of Legal Regulators. The requirements. It also included sessions that were of United States had representatives who were involved particular interest to disciplinary authorities, such in all three stages of lawyer regulation: admissions, as “When Things Go Wrong,” which examined how conduct regulation, and discipline. These conference regulators can spot problem signs at an early stage attendees were and take steps to protect clients. Some sessions, such • Franklin Harrison, Chair of the National Conference of Bar Examiners; • Hon. Michael G. Heavican, Chief Justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court and PresidentElect of the Conference of Chief Justices; as “Tools for Setting and Monitoring Standards,” were of particular interest to those regulators who have to adopt conduct rules or standards; this session focused on the experience of regulatory bodies in using benchmarking surveys and risk profiles to raise standards. Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators 21 The 2012 International Conference of Legal Regulators: Conference Sessions • Regulating the Changing Legal Market • The Regulator’s Identity Crisis SRA had asked conference attendees to answer a series of questions about lawyer regulation and their organizations. Among other things, the questions asked for the name of the organization, the jurisdiction it covered, its legislative or other authority, its regulatory functions and regulated populations, contact information • Proactive Regulation (and key individuals), and recent initiatives. • Competence on Admission The results were assembled and distributed in • The Challenge of Raising Professional Standards (parallel workshops): • Tools for Setting and Monitoring Standards • Raising the Standards of Individual Practitioners • Regulating Law Firms • When Things Go Wrong London and are also available on the conference website’s Regulators’ Intranet. While not all conference attendees provided information for the Directory of Regulators, the document assembled for the conference has laid the groundwork for a useful ongoing project. As bar examiners throughout • Non-Lawyer Involvement in the Delivery of Legal Services the United States may already have learned • Scope for Regulatory Co-operation (parallel workshops): the hard way, there isn’t a single resource they • Information Sharing—What Can Regulators Tell Each Other? • Hot Topics—What Trends and Issues Worry Regulators? • Other Influences on Regulatory Policy and Practice • Where Next?—Future Collaboration can go to that can tell them the titles that regulated lawyers use in various countries around the world (such as solicitor or barrister) or the entity or entities responsible for regulating each particular type of lawyer. Thus, the Directory of Regulators has the potential to fill a very important resource gap in a world of increased global Many of the sessions, however, were designed lawyer mobility. to be of interest to all regulators attending the conference, regardless of whether they regulated lawyer Conference Attendees Endorsed Future admission, conduct, or discipline—for example, the Collaboration sessions “Hot Topics—What Trends and Issues Worry Regulators?” and “Information Sharing— What Can Regulators Tell Each Other?” Summaries of all the sessions, together with some of the session materials, are available on the conference website.13 The Directory of Regulators The conference concluded with the session “Where Next?—Future Collaboration.” Chaired by Antony Townsend, Chief Executive of the SRA, this final session included his introduction, my presentation, and extensive audience discussion. I presented some of the same information contained in this article about regulatory models from other sectors and the need In addition to the session summaries and confer- for cross-jurisdictional regulatory cooperation in ence materials, the SRA put together a Directory of the legal sector. I asked the audience to indicate by Regulators as part of the conference materials. The a show of hands whether they wanted to continue 22 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 the dialogue that had begun in London and whether they would support the creation of an international network of lawyer regulators. The audience overwhelmingly indicated support for having an international network. I then asked the audience to indicate by a show of hands the goals they would support for the new international network. I had identified four possible goals for the network, which included the following: Additional Reactions to the Conference Reactions to the London conference were positive. For example, Chief Justice Michael Heavican found that the conference “was a real eye-opener. There was a rich mix of ideas, best practices, experienced insight, and inquisitive discussion—literally from around the world. I think all the participants came away from the conference having found new perspectives from which to view the regulation 1. Cooperation and information sharing in specific cases (e.g., sharing information about “bad apple” lawyers) of lawyers.” Judge Gregory Mize had a similar reaction, noting that “the speakers and working groups enabled 2. Serving as a clearinghouse for information about regulators’ practices and tools me to see more clearly the causes of change in legal markets and what issues need to be addressed by responsible bar regulators.” The very first session 3. Exchanging information on substantive pol- of the conference, “Regulating the Changing Legal Market,” focused on this topic of change by looking icy issues and projects at some common trends and themes shared across 4. Development of common policies or practices The audience overwhelmingly agreed with my jurisdictions and how regulators are addressing them, but it was a topic that was reinforced throughout the conference.15 recommendation to endorse the first three goals. It Gene Shipp was similarly positive, noting the also agreed with my recommendation to reject the benefits that came from having the opportunity fourth goal, because that goal might prove divisive. to interact with regulators from so many different After a few additional remarks, I solicited input jurisdictions: from the audience about the types of programs and initiatives they would find valuable. The audience London was a terrific opportunity for regulators responded with enthusiasm and many ideas.14 from 30 countries to sit down and learn what was going on in the world. We are now at the point where During the course of the audience discussion, attorneys are needed and used from every nation State Bar of California Deputy Executive Director every day, so global practice is upon us. We are faced Robert Hawley volunteered to host a second with the necessity of adapting the attorney regulation International Conference of Legal Regulators in San system to a world where not only travel but Internet Francisco in August 2013, in conjunction with the communication means that attorneys are practicing NOBC Annual Meeting. Audience members were everywhere. If we are to protect the public and the asked whether they would be interested in attending reputation of the legal practice, attorney regulation such a conference, and a significant number indi- must be flexible, vibrant, and tuned in to what is cated their support and interest. going on in the world of practice. Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators 23 It was an extraordinary opportunity to find out of a new international network were unnecessary what we, as regulators, have in common and how we because the International Bar Association (IBA)’s Bar differ. The one takeaway I found reassuring is that Issues Commission already brings lawyer regulators every disciplinary system represented at the confer- together.20 ence protects core values of ethical practice and prosecutes those who would lie, cheat, steal, or neglect their clients. The conference was a great starting point. In my view, however, there is a need for an international network other than the IBA Bar Issues Commission. The conference demonstrated a Franklin Harrison echoed a similar theme when pent-up demand by “day-job regulators” to ex- he wrote about the differences and similarities in change views and information with their counter- regulatory approaches in his December 2012 Bar parts from other countries. To date, few of these Examiner column. After noting that everyone’s stated day-job regulators have participated in the work of goal was protection of the public, he observed that the IBA Bar Issues Commission, perhaps because of “when you have regulators from over 30 jurisdic- the expense of attending IBA meetings. tions comparing notes, you will discover an ocean of differences in their approaches. In spite of this, I left with renewed confidence in the future of our profession worldwide, as well as a renewed awareness of the challenges facing regulators in both admissions and oversight. Continued discussions and conferences on an international stage such as this one can only help all of us learn from one another’s mistakes and accomplishments.”16 Goldsmith has correctly pointed out to me that many jurisdictions do not have day-job regulators to the same extent found in English-speaking commonlaw countries. Nevertheless, in my view, the trend is toward increasing use of day-job regulators and the professionalization of lawyer regulation. A new international network, beyond the IBA Bar Issues Commission, could help connect day-job regulators from around the world. Although the International Conference of Legal Regulators hasn’t (yet) received much publicity in the United States, several sources outside the United States have cited it as a useful development. In addition to the press release issued by the SRA, there were stories about the conference in the U.K. 17 periodicals the Law Society Gazette and the Solicitors Second International Conference of Legal Regulators Scheduled for August 2013 As noted earlier, the 2012 conference attendees expressed their interest in meeting again, and the Journal. The conference was also discussed on the State Bar of California volunteered to host the second Legal Futures website, which is one of the leading International Conference of Legal Regulators in con- sources of information about developments related junction with the NOBC Annual Meeting (which also 18 19 to the U.K. Legal Services Act of 2007. overlaps with the ABA Annual Meeting). Although most of the press about the conference At the time this article was written, the program has been positive, it has not gone without criticism. for the second conference was close to being final- Before the conference was held, Jonathan Goldsmith, ized and the conference website had been estab- Secretary-General of the Council of Bars and Law lished.21 After an informal get-together on the first Societies of Europe, argued in his Law Society Gazette day, the conference will commence with a day and Euro Blog column that the conference and the idea a half of programming. The sessions will be held at 24 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Event Highlights at the Inaugural International Conference of Legal Regulators I would be remiss if I didn’t mention what a wonderful host the Solicitors Charles Plant, SRA Chair Regulation Authority was in London and some of the unforgettable experiences it facilitated. On the first evening, a dinner for conference attendees was held in the Peers’ Dining Room of the House of Lords. Our host for this dinner was the Right Honorable the Lord Hunt of Wirral, MBE (David Hunt, whom some may know because of the influential 2009 “Hunt Report” on lawyer regulation). It was a magical experience walking through Westminster Hall, which is the oldest part of the Parliament complex and was built by the son of William the Conqueror. This is the hall where, among other things, Richard I, Henry Gregory Mize VIII, and Elizabeth I held their coronation banquets; Richard II was deposed; Thomas More and Charles I were tried; kings and queens lay in state after death; and Nelson Mandela addressed the joint Houses of Parliament. The Peers’ Dining Room was only slightly less impressive than Westminster Hall. We had been preassigned to specific tables, which meant we had excellent opportunities to get to know conference attendees from other countries. On the second evening, the SRA organized an equally enjoyable— although somewhat less formal—evening of cruising down the Thames River. Gene Shipp We got to see old sights (Big Ben and the Tower Bridge) and new sights (the London Eye and 2012 Olympic venues) at dusk and later when they were lit. Our Thames River cruise was a fitting end to a wonderful conference that I hope will provide the launch of a new international network of lawyer regulators. I encourage others to participate in this effort in the future and to contribute to its success. Michael Heavican and Franklin Harrison Robert Hawley and Alison Hook, SRA International Advisor Ellyn Rosen Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators 25 the State Bar of California building in San Francisco. Counsel), it is a perfect time to gather again to share There will be a social event on the second day dur- our commonalities and learn from our differences. ing which regulators will have a chance to meet and interact with their counterparts from other countries in a more informal setting. After a full morning of programming and lunch on the third day, conference attendees will be invited to attend the opening session of the NOBC Annual Meeting. After this opening session, the NOBC and the International Conference of Legal Regulators will have a joint session focusing on issues related to multijurisdictional practice. I hope those with an interest in lawyer regulation who happen to be near San Francisco, or who are coming for the ABA Annual Meeting, will consider showing support for the idea of an international network of lawyer regulators by attending the second International Conference and meeting some of their foreign regulatory counterparts. While virtual communications are increasingly important in a globalized world, nothing can match an initial faceto-face meeting. I also hope that NCBE, the What Attendees Can Expect from the Second Conference of Chief Justices, the NOBC, and the Conference ABA Center for Professional Responsibility will con- As was true in London, the second International Conference of Legal Regulators is designed to appeal to admissions, conduct, and disciplinary regulators. One of the sessions that may be of the most interest to admissions regulators is the session on fitness to practice and dealing with mental health and addiction problems. Other sessions may be mostly of interest to disciplinary regulators, such as a session on dual qualification. There will be sessions that should be of interest to all regulators, such as a session on whether the regulator’s view of risk has kept pace with what is happening in the jurisdictions and sessions on regulatory powers and the role of intelligence and investigation in regulation. Robert Hawley, Deputy Executive Director of the State Bar of California and one of the conference planners, has offered this summary of the upcoming conference: The San Francisco conference in August follows the inaugural conference sponsored by the Solicitors Regulation Authority in London last September. That was a huge success, bringing together for the first time attorney regulators from around the world. With the ABA being in San Francisco in August, along with the national association of U.S. attorney regulators (the National Organization of Bar 26 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 tinue to show institutional support for this important but fledgling effort to create an international network of lawyer regulators. Notes 1. Franklin Harrison, Letter from the Chair, 81:4 The Bar Examiner 2 (Dec. 2012), available at http://www.ncbex .org/assets/media_files/Bar-Examiner/articles/2012/ 810412beLetterfromChair.pdf. 2. Laurel S. Terry, Preserving the Rule of Law in the 21st Century: The Importance of Infrastructure and the Need to Create a Global Lawyer Regulatory Umbrella Organization, 2012 Mich. St. L. Rev. 735. I have also given three talks in which I address this topic. The presentation slides from these talks are available on the Selected Presentations page of my website, http:// www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/l/s/lst3/presentations .htm, indexed under the topic heading “Global Network for Lawyer Regulators.” 3. For a quick but useful read on the power of networks and collaboration, I recommend Steven Johnson, Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation (Riverhead Trade 2011). 4. See, e.g., United States International Trade Commission, Recent Trends in U.S. Services Trade: 2011 Annual Report, USITC Pub. 4243, Inv. No. 332-345 (July 2011), available at http://www.usitc.gov/publications/332/pub4243.pdf (“While the global legal services industry experienced a slowdown in 2009, the United States sustained growth in its cross-border trade surplus in legal services.” (at 7-1)); World Trade Organization, Council for Trade in Services, Legal Services, Background Note by the Secretariat, S/C/W/318 (June 14, 2010), available at http://www.americanbar.org/ content/dam/aba/migrated/cpr/gats/wto_legal_services .authcheckdam.pdf, at Chart 3, page 3. 5. See, e.g., The 2012 Global 100: A World of Change, Am. L. (Oct. 2012) at 177. The last column of the “Attorney Head Count” chart lists the percentage of lawyers located outside the home country. The chart is also available online at http://www .americanlawyer.com/PubArticleTAL.jsp?id=1202571229481. 6. Statistics include the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. See U.S. Department of Commerce International Trade Administration, TradeStats Express™ Home, http://tse.export.gov/TSE/MapDisplay .aspx. (Select “State Export Data.” For data for all U.S. states, select “State-by-State Exports to a Selected Market.” To see the countries to which a particular state exports merchandise, select “Global Patterns of a State’s Exports.”) 7. See, e.g., Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, APEC Legal Services Initiative: High-Level Overview, http://www .legalservices.apec.org/index.html (addressing, inter alia, foreign lawyer temporary practice rights); American Bar Association, ABA Commission on Ethics 20/20 Introduction and Overview (Feb. 2013), http://www.americanbar.org/ content/dam/aba/administrative/ethics_2020/20121112_ ethics_20_20_overarching_report_final_with_disclaimer .authcheckdam.pdf. See generally Laurel S. Terry, Steve Mark & Tahlia Gordon, Trends and Challenges in Lawyer Regulation: The Impact of Globalization and Technology, 80 Fordham L. Rev. 2661 (2012). This article concluded that regulators face issues in common regarding who is regulated, what is regulated, when and where regulation occurs, how it occurs, and why it occurs. 8. 9. See, e.g., Carole Silver, The Variable Value of U.S. Legal Education in the Global Legal Services Market, 24 Georgetown J. Legal Ethics 1, 35–36, 40–45, 55–56 (2011); see also Carole Silver & Mayer Freed, Translating the U.S. LLM Experience: The Need for a Comprehensive Examination, 101 Nw. U. L. Rev. Colloquy 23 (Nov. 17, 2006), available at http://www.law .northwestern.edu/lawreview/colloquy/2006/3/. National Conference of Bar Examiners, Bar Examination and Admission Statistics, http://www.ncbex.org/publications/ statistics/. See also Laurel S. Terry, “Summary of Statistics of Bar Exam Applicants Educated Outside the US: 1992–2012 (It’s Not Just About New York and California)” (April 30, 2013), http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/l/s/lst3/ Summary_of_Statistics_Bar_Applicants_Educated_Outside_ the_US_1992-2012.pdf. 10. National Conference of Bar Examiners, supra note 9. mary of each session, click on the session titles found on this page. 14. A summary of this final session, including my presentation slides and those of Antony Townsend, is available on the conference website at http://www.international-conference -of-legal-regulators.org/the-london-conference/where-next -future-collaboration/. My slides are also available on the Selected Presentations page of my website, http://www .personal.psu.edu/faculty/l/s/lst3/presentations.htm. 15. A summary of this first session and Professor John Flood’s presentation slides are available on the conference website at http://www.international-conference-of-legal-regulators .org/the-london-conference/regulating-the-changing-legal -market/. John Flood is a Professor of Law and Sociology and a Leverhulme Research Fellow at the University of Westminster, England. 16.Harrison, supra note 1, at 3. 17.Rachel Rothwell, Policing Professionals—International Regulators, The Law Society Gazette (Oct. 3, 2012), http:// www.lawgazette.co.uk/print/67635; Rachel Rothwell, SRA Goes Global, The Law Society Gazette (Oct. 1, 2012), http:// www.lawgazette.co.uk/print/67579. 18. John Flood, Legal Regulation Is Not a Uniform Concept, Solicitors Journal (Oct. 8, 2012), http://www.solicitors -journal.com/comment/legal-regulation-not-uniform -concept. 19. Dan Bindman, SRA Throws Weight Behind Global Legal Regulators’ Network, Legal Futures (Oct. 1, 2012), http:// www.legalfutures.co.uk/latest-news/sra-throws-weight -behind-global-legal-regulators-network. 20. See Jonathan Goldsmith, Networking Order, The Law Society Gazette, Euro Blog (Aug. 30, 2012), http://www.lawgazette .co.uk/opinion/state-union/networking-order. 21. See International Conference of Legal Regulators, The San Francisco Conference, http://www.international -conference-of-legal-regulators.org/the-san-francisco -conference/. 11. See American Bar Association Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, Report of the Special Committee on International Issues (July 15, 2009) (known as the “Lacy Report,” after the Committee’s chair, Justice Elizabeth Lacy), available at http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/ aba/administrative/legal_education_and_admissions_ to_the_bar/council_reports_and_resolutions/20090715_ international_issues_report.authcheckdam.pdf, at 10–11 (discussing the survey results) and Appendix A (reproducing the survey). 12. The U.K. Legal Services Act of 2007 dramatically changed the regulation of the legal profession in England and Wales. It created a new regulatory structure, provided a new route for consumer complaints about legal services, and created a framework that would allow new forms of legal practice, known as alternative business structures or ABS. For a short introduction to the U.K. Legal Services Act of 2007, see these presentation slides: Laurel S. Terry, “Facing a Transformed Global Legal Landscape: Introduction to the U.K. Legal Services Act” (Oct. 2008), available at http://www.personal .psu.edu/faculty/l/s/lst3/presentations%20for%20 webpage/Terry_UK_LSA.pdf. 13. International Conference of Legal Regulators, The London Conference, http://www.international-conference-of-legal -regulators.org/the-london-conference/. To access a sum- Laurel S. Terry is the Harvey A. Feldman Distinguished Faculty Scholar and Professor of Law at Penn State Dickinson School of Law. She writes and teaches about legal ethics and the international and inter-jurisdictional regulation of the legal profession. She was educated at the University of California San Diego and the UCLA School of Law. Creating an International Network of Lawyer Regulators 27 ABA Accreditation: A Symbol of Quality by Diane F. Bosse I n our daily lives, we regularly rely on surro- gated and enforced? And what is the process for gates for quality. The iconic Good Housekeep- obtaining accreditation? It is the goal of this article to ing Seal of Approval on our soap, the FDA answer these questions, to remind us all of the value approval on our medications, and the UL mark this symbol of quality brings to our jurisdictions, on our electrical appliances all have meaning. These and to encourage our collective participation in the labels tell us that the products to which they are at- accreditation process. tached have been tested and found to meet applicable standards of quality, safety, and effectiveness. The evaluation done by those granting the mark of approval substitutes for the assessment we lack the ability and resources to independently and individually perform. The Foundation of ABA Accreditation First, let’s correct our definition. “ABA accreditation” is often used as shorthand (including in this In much the same way, the American Bar article) but is, in truth, a misnomer. The ABA does Association accreditation of law schools is an indi- not accredit law schools. It is the Council of the ABA cium of educational quality that we all rely on in Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the performing our bar admissions functions. The ABA Bar, along with its Accreditation Committee, that accreditation process substitutes for an investigation is recognized by the United States Department of and evaluation of educational quality that none of Education (DOE) as the national accrediting body our jurisdictions has the resources to perform. It is a for the J.D. degree. For antitrust reasons, DOE regu- valuable service. lations require that the decision-making authority In pursuit of our mission to protect the public from incompetent legal practice, each jurisdiction has established what we believe to be appropriate educational eligibility requirements to sit for the bar exam. In general, we default to the ABA for this determination. That is, graduation from a law school that is approved by the ABA is necessary in many states and is sufficient in most to qualify for the opportunity to take the licensing test. for the accreditation function be separate and independent from the related trade association. Thus, the Council has the final say on accreditation matters, and the larger ABA cannot interfere. The Council is composed of 21 members, 10 of whom are typically law school deans or faculty members. The remaining members of the Council include judges, practicing attorneys, public members, and a representative of the Law Student Division of the But what does ABA accreditation mean? What ABA. NCBE is well-represented. The Council pres- standards apply? How are the standards promul- ently includes one current member of the NCBE 28 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Board of Trustees, Rebecca Berch, and two prior individual Standards covering curriculum, academic chairs of NCBE, Greg Murphy and Jequita Napoli. standards and achievements, and course of study The Accreditation Committee, which I am privileged to chair, consists of 19 members. Membership may include law school deans, doctrinal faculty, law librarians, clinical legal educators and legal writing faculty, private practitioners, bar examiners, federal and academic calendar. The chapter on Admissions and Student Services includes individual Standards covering admission requirements, a required notice regarding character and fitness, consumer information, and student complaints. and state court judges, and public members, includ- The Rules of Procedure govern the process of ing accountants and university presidents and pro- accreditation and decision making regarding the sta- vosts. The Accreditation Committee is charged with tus of individual schools. The 30 Rules cover topics the administration of the law school accreditation such as applications for provisional or full approval, process. the process for site evaluations, action concerning The Office of the Consultant on Legal Education, housed in the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, administers the project of accrediting law schools, supporting the Council and the Accreditation Committee in their oversight functions. The Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools The Substance of the Standards Law schools are evaluated for accreditation purposes against a set of criteria known as the Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law 1 apparent non-compliance with the Standards, sanctions, and complaints and appeals of adverse actions of the Accreditation Committee or the Council. How the Standards Are Promulgated The Standards are written by the Standards Review Committee of the Section, subject to approval of the Council. NCBE President Erica Moeser presently serves on the Standards Review Committee. In reviewing and amending the Standards, the Council seeks to ensure that the requirements are appropriate for current programs of legal education and that they focus on those matters that are most pertinent to quality legal education. A comprehensive review of the Standards is Schools. The “Standards” include both Standards, currently under way, with changes to the existing which are the black-letter law, and Interpretations, Standards being proposed and considered.2 Among which give guidance as to the application of the the proposed revisions under consideration as part Standards. The Standards are divided into eight of the current comprehensive review are require- chapters, such as Program of Legal Education, The ments for outcome measures, including the articu- Faculty, Admissions and Student Services, Library lation and assessment of student achievement; law and Information Resources, and Facilities—each of school admission requirements, including whether which is further divided into individual numbered or not the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or any Standards, totaling 57 Standards in all. For instance, test should be required of applicants to law school; the chapter on Program of Legal Education includes and bar passage standards, particularly what bar ABA Accreditation: A Symbol of Quality 29 passage rate is acceptable as indicating that the law states and beyond. Thus, review and comment by school prepares its graduates for entrance into the those involved in the licensing process is critical. profession, and how soon after a class graduates should that bar passage rate be achieved. The Accreditation Process Once the Standards Review Committee com- Provisional Approval pletes its work on one or more Standards, it sends A law school wishing to become ABA-approved the proposed Standards to the Council. After its must first apply for provisional approval. That review and possible modification of the proposed application cannot be filed until the school has com- Standards, the Council publishes them for public pleted one full year of operation. The law school must submit a feasibility study, as comment. The proposed revisions are always specifically sent to the In chief justice of every state and to visional approval , a law every office of bar admissions in the country, with an invitation for com- order to be granted pro- school must demonstrate well as an Annual Questionnaire, a Site Evaluation Questionnaire, and a self study, as described below. The feasibility study evaluates the that it is in substantial nature of the educational program compliance with all of the and goals of the school, the profile ing the proposals. The Standards Standards and has a reli- of the students who are likely to Review Committee considers the able plan for bringing itself apply, and the resources necessary comments and, if necessary, revises into full compliance. to create and sustain the school. ment. Public hearings are held to air concerns and voice opinions regard- its recommendations to the Council; The Consultant’s Office sends a site the Council then acts on the Committee’s recom- team to conduct a site evaluation, using a process mendations as appropriate before releasing a writ- similar to that for fully approved law schools, also ten report to the public summarizing the results of described below. the review and explaining the revisions that were adopted. Any decision of the Council to adopt revisions to the Standards must be reviewed by the ABA House of Delegates. The House can concur in the revisions or refer them back to the Council for further consideration. Because of the requirement that the Council be separate and independent from the larger ABA, the House has no authority to change or reject a proposed revision to the Standards. The site team produces a report, to which the law school may respond. After receiving the report of the site team and the school’s response, the Accreditation Committee conducts a hearing at which representatives of the law school appear. In order to be granted provisional approval, a law school must demonstrate that it is in substantial compliance with all of the Standards and has a reliable plan for bringing itself into full compliance. The Accreditation Committee then makes a recommendation to the Council as While not every Standard is such as to impact to whether or not to grant provisional approval. issues related directly to bar admissions, every The Council accepts the Accreditation Committee’s change to a Standard implicates the educational findings of fact, unless not supported by substantial eligibility requirements of every state by altering the evidence, but the Committee’s conclusions and rec- rules for the accreditation of law schools within our ommendations are not binding on the Council. 30 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Once provisional approval is granted, the law school has five years in which to become fully eligible to sit for the bar exam in any state, subject to any local idiosyncratic rules or requirements. approved by demonstrating compliance with all of the Standards. While a law school is provisionally approved, it is visited each year by a site team, alternating between full site inspections and inspections more limited in the size of the site team and the scope of the review. The goal of the site inspections is to evaluate the school’s progress toward full compliance with the Standards and full approval. The The Site Evaluation Process Site teams, both for law schools seeking provisional or full approval and for those that are fully approved, typically consist of six or seven members. Site teams are chaired by an experienced site evaluator, often a dean, and generally consist of one or two doctrinal faculty members, a Accreditation Committee monitors the progress of the school each year In preparation for a full by review and consideration of the site visit , a law school is report of the site team, directing the required to prepare a self law school, as may be appropriate, to address certain Standards where the law school’s compliance and/ or progress toward achieving full compliance with the Standards may be deficient. study , describing the pro gram of legal education , A law school that is provisionally approved may apply for full member, a librarian, a practitioner or judge, and a university provost or other non–law school administrator. Site team members undergo training provided by the Consultant’s Office evaluating the strengths and are given detailed guidance as and to the conduct of the site visit. weaknesses program , setting of the goals to improve the program , Full Approval clinician and/or legal writing faculty Site teams are not standing entities; rather, they are assembled on a and identifying the means school-by-school basis, with mem- to accomplish the law bers selected based on their exper- school’s unrealized goals. tise in any specific area of concern at approval after three years. Again, a hearing will be held before the Accreditation Committee, with a recommendation made to the Council. As with provisional approval, the Council will conduct its own hearing and may accept or reject the Committee’s recommendation. the school in question, the availability of volunteers to fill the various positions on the team, and any preferences of the site team chair. Site teams are assembled from lists of willing volunteers maintained by the Consultant’s Office. In preparation for a full site visit, a law school is required to prepare a self study, describing the Once a law school receives full approval, it program of legal education, evaluating the strengths will be visited by a site team and reviewed by and weaknesses of the program, setting goals to the Accreditation Committee after three years. improve the program, and identifying the means to Thereafter, every fully approved law school is accomplish the law school’s unrealized goals. The inspected by a site team every seven years, in what is law school also must complete a Site Evaluation known as the sabbatical review process. Once a law Questionnaire, providing specific and detailed school is approved by the ABA, its graduates become information regarding the law school’s compliance ABA Accreditation: A Symbol of Quality 31 with the Standards. The site team members receive Between site visits, law schools are subject to these documents, along with the law school’s recent interim monitoring by the Accreditation Committee, Annual Questionnaires, reporting such matters as which is accomplished by a review and evaluation entering credentials of students, enrollment and of various data reported by the school in its Annual attrition data, bar passage information, faculty pro- Questionnaire and, where appropriate, a request to files, financial information, and the like, and a his- the school to provide information to the Committee. tory of the Accreditation Committee’s findings on past evaluations of the law school. The site team reviews that material and spends typically three Conclusion days on site, meeting with the dean, the university The process for the accreditation of law schools and president if the school is affiliated with a university, monitoring of their continued compliance with the and law school administrators, faculty, and students, Standards is exacting and labor intensive. The work and attending classes. Following the visit, the site is primarily done by volunteers who donate their team prepares an extensive report setting forth facts time to the accreditation project, for the benefit of that bear on the law school’s compliance with the both legal education and the bar admissions process. Standards. By establishing graduation from an ABA- The site team’s report is supplied to the school approved law school as the educational prerequisite for comment, correction, and response. The site to sit for the bar exam, states have, in effect, given team’s report and the law school’s response, as well to the ABA the authority to determine what the spe- as all of the documents and information available to cific educational requirements for licensure should the site team, then go to the Accreditation Committee be and the responsibility to determine whether law for its review. schools satisfy those requirements. States have sur- The Accreditation Committee reviews the facts as reported by the site team, makes findings of fact, and draws conclusions as to compliance with the Standards. As a result of the Committee’s review, the law school may be required to report back on various Standards in order to demonstrate compliance. If the Accreditation Committee finds the law school out of compliance with any Standard, the law school rendered that authority for good reason—we lack the time, resources, and expertise to establish and administer a process for evaluation of law schools. And we have surrendered that authority with the knowledge and confidence that the process the ABA utilizes for the accreditation of law schools is appropriate, comprehensive, rigorous, and effective. Our confidence is well placed. will be required to appear before the Committee to But the process requires our participation. Those show cause why the school should not be required involved in bar admissions and the supreme courts to take remedial action, have sanctions imposed, be that supervise them need to be engaged in the pro- placed on probation, or be removed from the list cess to ensure that the Standards adopted and of approved law schools. A law school found out applied, and the manner in which they are enforced, of compliance has two years to come into full com- continue to serve our collective needs. To that end, I pliance or face removal from the list of approved urge you to comment on proposed Standards, volun- schools. teer for a site team,3 or offer to serve on committees 32 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 within the Section. I believe you will find that your participation is personally rewarding, and I know it will benefit all of us who look to the ABA for its mark of quality in legal education. Notes 1. The Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools are available at http://www.americanbar.org/ groups/legal_education/resources/standards.html. 2. All current draft proposals and agendas for upcoming meetings are available at http://www.americanbar.org/groups/ legal_education/committees/standards_review.html. The Standards Review Committee welcomes comment on the proposals it is considering. All comments are posted, and comments previously received by the Committee can also be viewed. [Editor’s Note: For a summary of the comprehensive review of the Standards currently under way, see Donald J. Polden, Comprehensive Review of American Bar Association Law School Accreditation Policies and Procedures: A Summary, 79:1 The Bar Examiner (Feb. 2010), at 42.] 3. ABA membership is not required in order to serve on a site team. Those interested in serving on a site team may contact the ABA Consultant’s Office to volunteer. Diane F. Bosse is chair of the New York State Board of Law Examiners. She currently chairs the Accreditation Committee of the American Bar Association’s Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar and is a former NCBE chair. A graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, Bosse is of counsel to the Buffalo law firm of Hurwitz & Fine PC. ABA Accreditation: A Symbol of Quality 33 The Testing Column Quality Control for Developing and Grading Written Bar Exam Components by Susan M. Case, Ph.D. I n the May 2010 issue of the Bar 8. Test administration practices must ensure that examinees cannot take test material or information out of the testing room. 1 Examiner, I discussed the concept of best practice and outlined the following 10 best practices in test- ing for admission to the bar. These cover three main categories: A. Best practices for C. Best practices for grading individual essays and combining scores exam development 9. Grading practices must follow professional standards, with emphasis on grader training, calibration, grading consistency, and monitoring. 1. Each exam component must have a stated purpose. 2. Each exam component must be developed using professional standards of test development and with strictest adherence to security. 3. Grading criteria must reflect the exam purpose, and the grading processes must adhere to professional standards. 4. Each exam question must be reviewed and pretested to ensure the quality of the test development and grading criteria. B. Best practices for test administration 5. Test administration practices must ensure that each examinee is authorized to take the test. 6. Test administration practices must ensure that examinees do not have access to testing aids. 7. Test administration practices must ensure that examinees cannot copy from one another. 34 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 10. Scores must be equated, scaled, and weighted to ensure appropriate score meaning. Because of continuing questions from jurisdictions, I have devoted this column to addressing issues related to exam development, as well as issues related to grading individual essays and combining scores.2 Exam Development Each Exam Component Must Have a Purpose Statement Every high-stakes examination such as the bar examination must have a written purpose statement that explicitly states what skill and knowledge set each component is designed to assess.3 For example, the purpose of the MEE is to test the examinee’s ability to (1) identify legal issues raised by a hypothetical factual situation; (2) separate material which is relevant from that which is not; (3) present a rea- Each question and the grading materials should soned analysis of the relevant issues in a clear, be reviewed by independent content experts. To concise, and well-organized composition; and (4) ensure that the difficulty is appropriate for the exam- demonstrate an understanding of the fundamental inee group, each question should be pretested, using legal principles relevant to the probable solution of recent admittees who write responses to the ques- 4 the issues raised by the factual situation. Jurisdictions that develop their own essay or performance tests should have similar statements to define the content and scoring of their specific tions under secure, timed conditions. Obviously, in selecting the expert reviewers and pretesters, care should be taken to ensure that they will not disclose the contents of the exam. exam components. As NCBE has done, the jurisdic- Jurisdictions developing their own questions tion should make sure that this purpose statement should ensure that each question assesses compe- is widely distributed, preferably by displaying it tence in key areas of the law—areas that are either prominently on the jurisdiction’s website. seen frequently by newly licensed lawyers or that are Every Question Must Conform to the Exam Purpose Statement so critically important that every new lawyer should be competent in the area being assessed. NCBE has recently completed a job analysis of what the newly Every question must conform to the purpose of the licensed lawyer does and what knowledge, skills, exam. For example, the bar exam is developed to and abilities newly licensed lawyers believe they assess the extent to which each examinee has the need to carry out their work. This job analysis, avail- knowledge and skills that are required of newly able on the NCBE website,5 provides valuable infor- licensed lawyers. Each question should be framed mation that could be useful in deciding which topics within a context of a case that might be seen by a new should be covered in a jurisdiction’s test component. lawyer and that a new lawyer would be expected to If a jurisdiction believes that the national job analysis handle. is not entirely relevant to practice in its jurisdiction, The Quality of Each Question and Its Supplementary Materials Must Be Ensured the jurisdiction should perform its own job analysis sampling newly licensed lawyers practicing locally. Jurisdictions that develop their own exam questions The questions, analyses, and grading guidelines need to ensure the quality of each question. Each should be of publishable quality. They should be question’s author must be familiar with the purpose made available to the public by posting them on the of the exam and with the content specifications of the jurisdiction’s website after test administration. topic area. The author of the question should prepare not only the question but also other materials such as the grading guidelines, analysis (scoring rubric), and model answer. The author should be sufficiently knowledgeable about the topic to be sure that the Grading The Quality of the Grading Materials Must Be Ensured supplementary material is accurate and that the ques- The grading materials are prepared to help the grader tion addresses the most important aspect of the topic score the written answers accurately and also to help from the perspective of what a newly licensed law- each grader maintain consistency in the grading of yer would deal with. the essays. As noted earlier, the grading materials The Testing Column 35 should be reviewed carefully by content experts tinue until all the grading points have been used— to ensure that they accurately reflect the law. In that is, if a jurisdiction has a 1 to 6 grading scale, addition, someone other than the question’s author some of the graded papers should be assigned to should review the grading materials to make sure each of the available points.6 they are consistent with the purpose of the exam. For example, if the purpose of the exam includes the assessment of writing quality, writing quality should be part of the scoring rubric. Grader Calibration Must Be Achieved If the responses to each question are graded by a single grader, the grader should grade approximately 30 papers (selected at random), place them in grading buckets, and then review each bucket to ensure that the papers within the bucket are consistent in quality. These 30 papers, referred to as calibration papers, should then be spread throughout the remaining papers to be graded, with their grades masked, and checks should be made to ensure that the calibration papers’ grades remain consistent across the grading period. For jurisdictions not scaling essay grades to the MBE, there are additional hurdles that must be met. First, the graders must have a consistent definition of what constitutes a grade of passing, as well as a consistent definition of what each score on the grading scale represents. Discussions should be held to ensure a common understanding of the characteristics of the just-passing examinee and how these characteristics would manifest themselves on the papers being graded. Obviously, it is very difficult to maintain consistent standards from one administration to the next, but this is required in order to ensure fairness. The Importance of Ensuring Score Reliability Must Be Recognized Jurisdictions must ensure that any score that is used If the responses to each question are graded by for decision making is sufficiently reliable for high- more than one grader, 30 or so papers should be stakes testing. High reliability is essential to ensure randomly selected to be graded as part of the cali- that the pass/fail status of examinees would not flip- bration. Each grader should read several papers and flop from one administration to the next or if differ- assign grades to them. Then the graders should dis- ent questions were asked, if different graders were cuss the grades that have been awarded and resolve grading the papers, or if the examinees were testing any differences. A second group of papers should with a more or less able group of examinees. then be graded and discussed. This process should be continued until the graders are in sync. Jurisdictions that scale the essays to the MBE scores for their jurisdiction, that weight the MBE at Almost all jurisdictions scale their essay grades least 50%, and that make the pass/fail decision on to the MBE. Under this condition, the graders should the total score are assured of a sufficiently high reli- rank-order the papers instead of deciding which ability and high decision consistency. Jurisdictions papers are passing and which are failing. The top that make a separate pass/fail decision based on the grade does not necessarily indicate an excellent written exam need to undergo separate psychomet- paper; it just indicates a paper that is better than the ric analyses to ensure that they are meeting stan- other papers. The calibration process should con- dards for high-stakes examinations. 36 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Conclusion 3. See American Educational Research Association, American Psychological Association, and National Council on Measurement in Education, Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing (American Educational Research Association 1999), Standards 3.2, 3.6, 14.14 (regarding purpose); Standard 3.22 (regarding scoring); Standard 4.21 (regarding standard setting). components, such as locally developed essay ques- 4. tions and performance tests, requires quality control National Conference of Bar Examiners, The Multistate Essay Examination, http://www.ncbex.org/multistate-tests/mee/. 5. National Conference of Bar Examiners, NCBE Job Analysis: A Study of the Newly Licensed Lawyer, http://www.ncbex.org/ publications/ncbe-job-analysis/. 6. For additional details regarding the calibration process, see Susan M. Case, Ph.D., The Testing Column: Procedure for Grading Essays and Performance Tests, 79(4) The Bar Examiner 36–38 (November 2010), available at http://www.ncbex.org/ assets/media_files/Bar-Examiner/articles/2010/790410_ TestingColumn.pdf. The best practices described in this article are required for high-stakes standardized tests used for licensure of professionals. Using non-standardized procedures unlike those that are followed for the standardized multiple-choice component. Notes 1. Susan M. Case, Ph.D., The Testing Column: Top 10 List of Best Practices in Testing for Admission to the Bar, 79(2) The Bar Examiner 36–39 (May 2010), available at http:// www.ncbex.org/assets/media_files/Bar-Examiner/ articles/2010/790210_TestingColumn.pdf. 2. The best practices described in this article are not typically followed for classroom tests but are followed for high-stakes standardized tests used for licensure of professionals. Susan M. Case, Ph.D., is the Director of Testing for the National Conference of Bar Examiners. The Testing Column 37 American Legal Education: Where Did We Come From? Where Are We Going? by Daniel R. Coquillette Editor’s Note: This is the keynote address made by Professor Daniel R. Coquillette on the morning of April 19, 2013, at the NCBE Annual Bar Admissions Conference held in Boston, Massachusetts. Professor Coquillette arrived at the Boston Marriott Copley Place conference site at 7:00 that morning only after navigating two police checkpoints and traveling through deserted streets, in the face of a citywide lockdown, as police searched for the second suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings. He began his speech by acknowledging the audience’s support in the wake of the bombings. W elcome! And thank you for coming My topic is to address the historic roots of to Boston. Your support means a American legal education, many of which are also lot to us these days. Today is the here in Boston, particularly in what we call the real Patriots’ Day, April 19th, the People’s Republic of Cambridge, and to reflect on anniversary of the battles at Lexington and Concord. where we are headed now. Most of you have prob- I was going to start by making a few cute jokes about ably heard of the current “crisis” in American legal Patriots’ Day, like how it is the day all New England- education. I recently made the mistake of ordering ers give thanks for Tom Brady and Bill Belichick, but Brian Tamanaha’s blockbuster book, Failing Law Patriots’ Day has this week taken on a new, and grim, Schools, from Amazon.com. This means that I have significance for us Bostonians, as it has for the people now been bombarded by other suggested books pre- of Waco, Texas, and Oklahoma City. dicting the imminent death of American law schools But, trust me, nothing that has happened will defeat this great city. One of my students passed and the legal profession. I share with you some titles (my additions in parentheses!): the finish line two minutes before the bombs, and Don’t Go to Law School (Unless Your Father Is Chief another has been severely injured. But I promise Justice) you this: next year at this time will be an even bigger Marathon, with more runners, and with more Bostonians on the sidewalk cheering! And nothing that has happened will diminish the symbolism of your being here, at the birthplace of American freedom, on this historic day. I will return to Patriots’ Day, and its deep relevance to why you are here— your mission as guardians of the law—at my conclusion. 44 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Growth Is Dead, Now What? The Vanishing American Lawyer Declining Prospects (for Everybody) Tomorrow’s Lawyers (Will There Be Any?) The Lawyer Bubble (and Will It Burst?), etc. There is not a ray of hope! Now it is true that law school applications are down, from a peak of over 100,000 a few years ago of the world—and guess what, all three arose less than a mile from this room. to just over 60,000 now. The result is that law schools have drastically reduced enrollment, down 17% in nearly three years, from over 50,000 to about 37,500. (That figure, incidentally, is the lowest since 1971, and has dropped despite a very large unmet need for legal services among the American middle class and poor.) Responsible law schools are cutting costs. All this reminds me of a sweet ”Oh please,” you’re thinking! First Tom Brady, then the “Birthplace of American Liberty,” and now the “Birthplace of American Legal Education.” Does this Bostonian have no shame at all? Well, we Bostonians do admit there are some other law schools in the country, including a pesky little one down in New Haven, Connecticut, of I was in there looking at china . . . [S] urvive H arvard did , and from its survival , one mile from here , origi - for my wife, and this lovely lady nated the three essential little old lady who ran an antique store in Georgetown. One day asked me what I did. “Well,” I replied, “I teach new lawyers and then release them onto the unsus- A merican education. It is impor- ideas that drive legal all places, where they go around bragging they are “Number One” because of some stupid magazine. (Talk about pathetic!) But it is actually true that these three great ideas originated here. When Harvard Law School tant we understand these opened in 1817, in two rooms ideas because , as great as of question!” “Sure,” I replied. She they have been, each contains ing known—and I am not kid- asked me, “If a divorce lawyer, a within itself the seeds of the products liability lawyer, and a troubles we face today pecting public.” “Oh,” she said, “then you can help me answer a .... corporate lawyer all jump at the a crummy ding—as frame Wiswall’s build- Den, it was the first truly professional law school in America to be founded within a university and same time from a 20-story building, who hits the ground first?” “I don’t know!” I replied. She looked at me with her sweet eyes and said, “Who cares?” to survive. It had all of 11 students. Now for you Virginians here, William & Mary might have been able to contest this honor but for the thoughtfulness of some Union troops, doubtless from Boston, who So “who cares” that law school applications are had the foresight to trash the William & Mary Law down, and that law schools are cutting costs and School during the Peninsula Campaign and shut it cutting enrollments, possibly moving to entirely new down until 1920. (The janitor still rang the bell every models, including two-year curriculums and inte- day, but that doesn’t count.) Even Harvard Law grated apprenticeships? This could even be good! School, in its early years, just barely survived, sink- And if some law schools go to the wall, and some ing to just one student and one really bad teacher, faculty have to get real jobs, so much the better. Asahel Stearns, in 1829, the best student/faculty So let me address this question by looking to ratio of its history! where we’ve come from. There have been essentially But survive Harvard did, and from its survival, three great ideas that have made American legal one mile from here, originated the three essential education what it is today—literally the envy of most ideas that drive American legal education. It is American Legal Education: Where Did We Come From? Where Are We Going? 45 important we understand these ideas because, as take some of the burden of research off of student great as they have been, each contains within itself tuition, and almost all university law schools would the seeds of the troubles we face today, and, as Mark like to increase their endowed chairs. Of course, Twain observed, “History does not repeat itself, but some law schools do fund faculty research largely on it does rhyme a lot!” student tuition, and the direct return to students is So here are the three big ideas. The first is that legal education should ideally be embedded in a true university. Now we have had some great arguable. Only a few universities now use their law schools as “cash cows” (the decline in applications will almost certainly put an end to that!). freestanding law schools, such as the Litchfield The most important commodity in any uni- Law School, which predated Harvard and William versity, however, is faculty time, and to the extent & Mary but became extinct in 1833, but every research and publication are valued as much as top-ranked American law school today, including teaching, students will benefit only indirectly. But Harvard and Boston College, is embedded in a great my point is that the university priorities and struc- university. At Harvard, this came about largely by ture existed before legal education and extend to all accident—the bequest of a large sum of money to university departments. It was a great idea to embed found a law professorship by a loyalist slaveholder American legal education in universities, but its costs who escaped to England during the Revolution— are now apparent. but once this idea took root, it became a feature of American professional legal education, unique even compared to Europe. I mentioned that Harvard Law School was down to one student in 1829. The reason is that it could not compete with the prevalent way of learning to But with this idea came the rest of the ideals be a lawyer: apprenticeship. Recent scholarship, of a university, including research agendas and including some of my own, has now shown that the tenure-track faculty. Tenured faculty are called “anti- idea that traditional American legal apprenticeship quated” in the new Failing Law Schools literature was “catch as catch can” is fake and was probably (look, I may be old and bald, but I am not anti- invented by law professors to give apprenticeship a quated!). The point, however, is that if law schools bad name. The likes of John Adams, Josiah Quincy, are going to be part of universities, they are going to Robert Treat Paine, Chief Justice John Marshall, be influenced by university priorities and agendas— James Otis, Simon Greenleaf, Joseph Story, and which are only partly about teaching and training Abraham Lincoln were skillful lawyers and proud professionals and are also about pure research and professionals. They also did not go to law school. research faculty. Most universities resist having They learned by apprenticeship. their law schools subject to different rules from their other academic departments, including rules about tenure and publication. Is this good or bad for legal education? The savior of the infant Harvard Law School, and of American university legal education, was Joseph Story, who became a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States at age 32. If there is any- The answer is both. In this century, many uni- body here younger than 32, you still have a chance, versities have assisted law schools in developing the but for now Story holds the record as the youngest kinds of endowed chairs and research institutes that justice. Story was brought in to save the school by a 46 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 big donor, Nathan Dane, with the secret cooperation Pure experimental apprenticeship could not of Harvard’s president, Josiah Quincy. First they meet Story’s vision of the profession as more than fired Asahel Stearns, who thought he was tenured. a trade. Future leaders needed to know legal his- Dane endowed a second chair and built Dane Hall, tory, comparative law, international law, and legal the first real home for the school. philosophy, as well as how to find the courthouse. This vision has inspired almost every law school in It was Story who had the second great idea in America. You will not find many deans who will say American legal education, and it became his weapon their goal is to train plumbers, not architects. But against the competition of apprenticeship. It was just again, like university education, this agenda contains this: law schools do not just exist its own problems. It is vision- to train practicing lawyers. They also exist to train the leaders of the Pure Republic—the diplomats, politi- ticeship cians, statesmen, judges, indus- S tory ’ s trialists, and scholars who would fession be an elite cadre. Story rejected the values of the Federalists, who saw merit in the inherited tradition of great families—imag- trade. experimental apprencould in teaching “nuts and bolts law,” meet and it can seem irrelevant to what vision of the pro - new lawyers do, particularly if as not ary, and as such it is inefficient a they can’t get jobs. The Failing Law leaders needed Schools crowd thinks that only the more Future than to know legal history, comparative law, international top tier of American law schools should have Story’s vision, and that the others should give it up. ine a man who, like John Quincy law , and legal philosophy , Adams, became president because as well as how to find the his father was president!—and he courthouse . vision has mon suggestions today to improve also rejected the egalitarianism of inspired almost every law American legal education are to the Jacksonian Democrats, who school in America. permit taking the bar examination would have abolished bar exams This Now among the most com- after two years, to permit students and put some of the people in to start law school before obtain- this room out of office! Story wanted to train a ing their B.A. (thus also potentially saving a year of national elite, chosen on merit only, but an elite tuition), and to require a year of apprenticeship upon nevertheless. graduation. This may come as a shock to you, but for most of its first century Harvard Law School was a The idea was fabulously successful. Students two-year school linked, in the case of almost every flocked from all over the new nation, and enrollment student, to at least one year of apprenticeship. And went from one student when Story arrived to over a no undergraduate degree was required for admis- hundred when he died. Right now, Story is in a tomb sion—hence the degree of Bachelor of Law (LL. B.)! you can visit in the Mount Auburn Cemetery, but to And Story’s tuition would really please Tamanaha: have a presidential election between two graduates $100 a year, the equivalent of about $2,690 a year of his school, and to have the winner be sworn in by today. a third, would be the vindication of his dream. (And, I must loyally add, our Secretary of State came from Boston College Law School!) This school, once on its feet, not only survived but became the national standard in the new American Legal Education: Where Did We Come From? Where Are We Going? 47 Republic and well into the Civil War. Incidentally, at cannot blame Langdell for cost. His large Socratic this time of the Civil War Sesquicentennial, it is not classes and formal curriculum permitted a fac- widely known that Harvard Law School was sec- ulty/student ratio of 9 professors for 850 students, ond only to West Point in producing leaders of the a nearly 1 to 100 ratio, and tuition was very low, Confederacy. There were 350 students from the Deep even adjusted to today’s dollars. Indeed, I may look South at the school in the 1850s, and 286 fought for ancient, but it wasn’t the Jurassic Period when I went the Confederacy—11 as generals, 16 as colonels, and to law school, supported, like many of my class- 27 in the government of Jefferson Davis. Forty-eight mates, by my spouse, who worked as a secretary. died, as opposed to 52 for the Union. As director of In 1970, I paid all of $2,100 in tuition, or $12,400 in the Harvard Law School History Project, I suggested today’s dollars, not $52,350. There were just 40 fac- that we put up the portraits of our 11 Confederate ulty for 1,600 students. generals in the library, maybe in time for Newly Admitted Student Day, and was told to go back to my office. So what is my point? The three great ideas of American legal education, all invented within a mile of here, continue to dominate our thinking. And why Now comes the third, and last, great idea. The not? As a distinguished visiting Chinese law profes- Civil War—which devastated all of America’s law sor auditing my class observed, “Everybody says schools—left Story’s national vision in tatters. A American legal education is in trouble, but it is the returning veteran, wounded three times, named envy of the world! We are copying it now in China, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., wrote in a journal that and so are law schools in Japan and South Korea! Harvard Law School would be “close to worthless,” Are we wrong?” The ideas of having legal education except “no school is completely worthless.” Into embedded in great universities; of envisioning law this gap came a poor boy from New Hampshire, schools as more than trade schools, but the source Christopher Columbus Langdell. His great idea was of the leaders of our nation—and, I would add, the that law was a science, capable of being taught to world; and of defining legal education as a demand- large classes using cases as the empirical data, as we ing analytical science that teaches men and women study chemistry, and that teaching law students to how to think: these are great ideas, and to abandon think in a formal, disciplined way could be achieved them in a moment of panic about declining applica- in classes of 135 through Socratic interrogation and tions is absolute folly. We must address the dilem- competitive exams. He established everything my mas inherent in each of these ideas—and, histori- students hate about law school: (1) required exami- cally, the accelerating cost of legal education today nations, (2) rank in class, (3) grade-on law reviews, is not an essential part of any of the three—but these (4) Socratic teaching, and (5) impenetrable case three great ideas are invaluable parts of the heritage books. He also adopted a required B.A. for admis- of the rule of law in America. sion and a required minimum three-year curriculum. There was no “experiential” curriculum whatsoever. Now, back to the 19th of April. As a boy, I grew up in Lexington, where the first battle was fought. Of course, it is Langdell’s vision of legal educa- The battle was fought exactly two hours ago, at about tion that is particularly under attack today. But we 6:30 a.m., on this day. I was a Boy Scout, and one of 48 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 my Boy Scout activities was to act as a guide to those And why did they not just disperse? What held visiting the battlefield. But some days, no one came, them there, facing death? We historians know! Their and I stood there alone, with my brochures, in the detailed deposition letters, diaries, and accounts of morning mist. There was Buckman Tavern, where the battle survive and tell the story.1 They stood there the men met, still looking out on the scene, and the because they believed in the rights of Englishmen, Old Belfry, which rang the alarm, still standing on a the right to property, the right to freedom from lonely mound. intimidation, the right to have democratically elected On those mornings, I could almost see the little ragged line of farmers, maybe as few as 38 of them, with their crude flintlocks. Their leader, Captain John Parker, an invalid dying of tuberculosis, was standing out in front. (His voice was so weak, the leaders who alone could tax or imprison them. One of the Minutemen, Prince Estabrook, was a slave, and he was severely wounded, fighting for the rights that would be, for him and his race, only a distant dream. men could hardly hear his commands.) And I could These are legal rights. As President Gerald Ford hear the throb of drums from over the Arlington said on the battlefield at the 200th anniversary, hills as the British regulars pulled into sight, 700 “These are sacred rights.” All Americans must pro- strong, crack light infantry backed with the legend- tect them, but we lawyers have a special duty. We ary grenadier guards, their officers on great char- are, in Joseph Story’s words, “the Sentinels of the gers, immaculate scarlet uniforms, rank upon rank Republic.”2 We, the legal profession, are the special of the Empire’s finest. Major John Pitcairn, the British guardians of these sacred, inalienable public rights, commander, ordered them to fix bayonets. He then and you are the guardians of the profession. rode up to Parker and yelled at the ragged group, “Disperse, you damn’d Rebels. Throw down your guns!” The American militia looked to Parker for orders. In an almost inaudible voice he issued one of the great commands of American history. “Stand your ground. Don’t fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here.” It may seem like a big jump from that ragged line on Lexington green to the future of legal education and our profession, but, in fact, the two are deeply, inextricably bound together. As Longfellow wrote, “… [t]hrough the gloom and the light, / The fate of a nation was riding that night;….” The fate of our nation still hangs on the rule of law. And it was for Someone fired. And then a broadside from exactly that, the rights that make us free, that our the British regiments. Down went 18 men: 7 were forefathers laid down their lives that bright spring instantly dead. The rest fled for shelter. Jonathan April morning, right here, exactly 238 years ago. Harrington, whose house still stands looking over Thank you. the battlefield, had left his wife with his gun, minutes before. Now he crawled, covered with blood, to his own doorstep, and when she opened the door, he died at her feet, the eighth fatality. Standing alone in the mist, I slowly realized that the grass beneath my feet had been soaked in blood, the blood of Patriots. Notes 1. See the classic accounts: David Hackett Fischer, Paul Revere’s Ride (Oxford University Press 1994); Allen French, The Day of Concord and Lexington (Little, Brown, and Company 1925); Robert A. Gross, The Minutemen and Their World (Farrar, Straus and Giroux 1976); and Mary B. Fuhrer, American Legal Education: Where Did We Come From? Where Are We Going? 49 The Revolutionary Worlds of Lexington and Concord Compared, 85 New England Q. 18 (2012). 2. See Story’s inaugural speech as Dane Professor of Law at Harvard in 1829. Joseph Story, Miscellaneous Writings 503–548 (William W. Story ed., C.C. Little and J. Brown 1852). Daniel R. Coquillette is the J. Donald Monan, S.J., University Professor at Boston College Law School and the Charles Warren Visiting Professor of American Legal History at Harvard Law School. He teaches and writes in the areas of legal history and professional responsibility. Professor Coquillette holds an A.B. from Williams College, a B.A. (Juris.) from Oxford University, and a J.D. from Harvard University. 50 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 Litigation Update by Fred P. Parker III and Brad Gilbert Cases Reported Character and Fitness Criminal conduct; violation of fiduciary duties as a trustee; dishonesty; permanent denial In re Application of Wiseman, Slip Opinion No. 2013-Ohio-763 Dishonesty; fraud; deceit; rehabilitation In re Application of McKinney, 134 Ohio St. 3d 260, 2012-Ohio-5635 Lack of candor; false statements and omissions on bar application; neglect of financial responsibilities In re Application of Clark, 2013 WL 829100 (Ohio) Submitting a false letter of recommendation; dishonesty Vandrilla v. Connecticut Bar Examining Committee, Superior Court, Judicial District of Hartford, February 5, 2013 Character and Fitness Criminal conduct; violation of fiduciary duties as a trustee; dishonesty; permanent denial In re Application of Wiseman, Slip Opinion No. 2013-Ohio-763 Jay Wiseman graduated from law school in 2010 hear the matter. At the hearing, the panel addressed and applied for admission to the Ohio bar and to three primary areas of concern: 1) Wiseman’s past take the bar exam. The admissions committee of the criminal conduct (including incidents of underage Columbus Bar Association first interviewed Wiseman possession of alcohol, destruction of property, public on June 30, 2011, and recommended that his charac- intoxication, and disorderly conduct), 2) his past-due ter and fitness be approved. However, the Board of debts, and 3) his extensive record of traffic violations. Commissioners on Character and Fitness exercised Following the hearing, Wiseman submitted an affi- its investigatory authority and appointed a panel to davit and a driving abstract that demonstrated that Litigation Update 51 he had not committed any further traffic offenses. the Columbus Bar Association, a mother testified Believing that Wiseman had satisfied his delinquent that Wiseman was driving recklessly and nearly hit accounts and corrected his driving habits, the panel her young son, who was delivering a competing approved his application to sit for the February 2012 newspaper. bar exam. Regarding Wiseman’s past-due debts, the panel Prior to the bar exam, the board found out that Wiseman had been charged with receiving stolen property and asked for an explanation. His reply was that he had no duty to found that he had reported zero balances on most of his debts but that the NCBE report contradicted his statement. One of the debts had been sold to a collection agency and one had a balance, but no payments had been made. report this charge until it had been resolved. The board then reopened T he second panel revis - Wiseman’s traffic record the investigation and appointed a ited the issues addressed at panel to conduct a second hearing. included at least 13 citations for the first hearing and found speeding, improper lane change, The second panel revisited the issues addressed at the first ... the transcript of a improper turn, reckless opera- character and fitness hear- tion, failure to control, and driv- Florida ing under suspension. He claimed that hearing and found that while ing conducted by the Wiseman’s testimony at the first B oard of B ar E xaminers in March 2012 presented a different perspective. hearing had put the best possible construction on his record, the transcript of a character and fit- in March 2012 presented a different perspective. For example, Wiseman testified before the Columbus issue and that he had taken steps to rectify his problem. Wiseman also became argumentative when the panel suggested that his traffic ness hearing conducted by the Florida Board of Bar Examiners that this was a time-management record showed a lack of concern for the safety of others and a selective disregard for the law. Bar Association that while working as a contractor The affidavit Wiseman had submitted to the for the Toledo Blade, he was charged with assault first panel stated that he had no additional traffic (later reduced to disorderly conduct) after a fight violations, but he failed to disclose that he had been with a competing newspaper carrier, who Wiseman charged with receiving stolen property after purchas- alleged had begun the fight by pushing him. But ing a faculty parking pass from someone outside the Wiseman’s testimony before the Florida Board of Bar parking office for $10. He purchased the pass rather Examiners indicated that Wiseman, who had left his than buying a commuter-student pass from the uni- car and followed the other carrier, was the aggres- versity for $60. He admitted to the Florida Board that sor. In another incident, Wiseman was charged with he knew that the passes were not transferable, but he criminal damaging after he was seen driving very claimed that trading and purchasing parking passes fast across a lawn between two apartment complexes was a common occurrence on campus. However, at while delivering newspapers; the Florida transcript his second Ohio panel hearing he testified that he adds that Wiseman was “flooring it” and nearly did not discover that his conduct violated university hit someone. In a third incident, not addressed by policy until after he was charged. The panel felt that 52 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 his testimony was not credible, nor did they believe of $100,000. Wiseman initially used the cash value to his explanation that he was waiting for the matter to pay the premiums, but when the cash value reached be resolved before disclosing it. $75,000 he surrendered the policy. Wiseman and his brother were both beneficiaries of the trust, and The panel also investigated Wiseman’s actions any distributions had to be authorized by the next in regard to a life insurance trust established for the eligible successor trustee—a fact that was repeat- benefit of Wiseman and his younger brother, for edly brought to Wiseman’s attention by his father’s which Wiseman himself was the trustee, and also attorney. Wiseman distributed some of the funds in regard to the trust of his deceased mother, for to himself, which he said was for “reinvestment.” which Wiseman’s father was the trustee. When the Wiseman’s father filed a motion for an accounting, Toledo Blade terminated its contract with Wiseman, and Wiseman threatened his father’s lawyer with leaving him and his wife without income, he asked a grievance if he did not withdraw the motion. On his father for $75,000 to support his family of six March 5, 2012, two weeks before Wiseman’s Florida children while he attended law school. His father hearing, the probate court ordered Wiseman to pro- denied this request. Wiseman then filed suit seeking vide an accounting to his brother’s guardian ad litem an accounting, a distribution, and the removal of his by April 4, 2012, which he failed to do. However, father as trustee of his mother’s trust. The father’s Wiseman told the Florida Board that he had pre- counterclaim alleged that Wiseman and his wife had sented an accounting that had been accepted by the accepted a $160,000 loan from the trust but had not court but that the court had not yet ruled on all the executed a note and mortgage to secure the loan. The claims. In responding to this inconsistency, Wiseman probate court refused to remove the father as trustee claimed that his wife had received the order four and granted the trust a judgment against Wiseman days before the Florida Board hearing, but that and his wife for $160,000 plus interest at 5.5%. The she had neither opened the envelope nor told him panel felt that Wiseman’s statements during this that it had arrived. The panel did not believe this litigation were not consistent. At one point he chal- testimony. lenged the enforceability of the loan agreement, stating that neither he nor his wife had any obliga- Before the Florida Board, Wiseman testified tion to repay the money used to buy their home, that he had absolute discretion to determine how but at the hearing he acknowledged the need for a the money was used and left that Board with the note and mortgage and said that he objected only impression that his brother had received his share to some of the terms of the loan agreement. Before by referring to his brother’s investment portfolio the Florida Board, he testified that he had filed the valued between $120,000 and $140.000. The evidence probate action because his father had refused his is clear, however, that those funds are separate funds request for money, but before the Ohio panel he said belonging to the brother and that none of those funds that the impetus to file suit was the father’s claim came from the life insurance trust. Wiseman eventu- that the sons would receive nothing from the trust ally admitted that he had spent all but $256 of the until the father died. $75,000 trust fund for his own benefit. When Wiseman’s father stopped paying premi- Because of Wiseman’s less-than-credible testi- ums on the life insurance trust, it had a cash value mony, his obfuscation, his inability to be honest, and Litigation Update 53 his misappropriation of money held in trust for him future, that he possesses the requisite character, fit- and his younger brother, the panel and board recom- ness, and moral qualifications to practice law in the mended that the Ohio Supreme Court disapprove state of Ohio. his pending application and prohibit him from reapplying as a candidate for the Ohio bar. The Court agreed that Wiseman had not established, nor would he be able to establish in the Wiseman’s application was disapproved, and he was forever barred from applying to practice law in Ohio. Dishonesty; fraud; deceit; rehabilitation In re Application of McKinney, 134 Ohio St. 3d 260, 2012-Ohio-5635 Michele McKinney registered in June 2010 to take the the other acknowledging that she had accepted the February 2011 Ohio bar exam. The admissions com- transfer. Both letters were purportedly drafted by a mittee of the Cincinnati Bar Association, following nonexistent employee of the firm, “Kelly Richards.” a hearing, disapproved her application. Following McKinney then changed the voice mail on her sis- an appeal and her application to take the July 2011 ter’s phone to state that the caller had reached “Kelly exam, a panel of the Board of Commissioners on Richards” in the event the landlord called to verify Character and Fitness conducted a hearing. the move. McKinney began law school at Northern The law firm had a strict policy prohibiting Kentucky University in 2007 and shortly thereafter employees from using company e-mail for personal accepted a paralegal position at a Cincinnati law purposes. Believing that McKinney was violating the firm. Before deciding to attend law school, she had policy, the firm’s human resources director began signed a lease for an apartment in Louisville where monitoring her e-mail account in real time and found she and her sister would reside. The sister had not that McKinney was sending e-mails and immedi- signed the lease. McKinney’s sister began to expe- ately deleting them from her sent folder. One e-mail rience health problems which prevented her from indicated that McKinney needed “a contact number working and paying the rent, and she planned to for [her] fake human resources person,” and another vacate the premises, which would leave McKinney had the falsified letters attached. Based on this infor- responsible for the rent. When McKinney inquired mation, McKinney was fired. about terminating the lease, she was told she could sublet or the lease could be cancelled if she was transferred by her employer. On her bar application, McKinney stated that her reason for leaving the firm’s employment was ”terminated/conflicted with school schedule.” Later Instead of subletting, McKinney planned to in the same application, she stated, “I was fired fake an employment transfer by producing two [for] using company email for personal reasons.” documents on her employer’s letterhead, one veri- Prior to the panel interview, the Cincinnati Bar fying a transfer from Louisville to Cincinnati and Association contacted the law firm seeking addi- 54 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 tional information about McKinney’s termination school and one from a former employer. Her current and learned about the scheme to defraud the land- employer testified that he planned to keep her on lord. At McKinney’s interview, she was given the after her admission to the bar because he was satis- opportunity to fully disclose the circumstances of her fied with the quality of her work and believed her to termination, but she did not disclose the creation of be honest. the fictitious letters on her employer’s letterhead and was evasive when the interviewers revealed their knowledge of the letters. The panel recommended that McKinney’s application be disapproved but that she be allowed to apply for the July 2014 exam. The board adopted the When the matter came before the full admissions panel’s findings of fact, but noting that McKinney committee, both McKinney and the committee had was a 30-year-old law student when she engaged in the deceptive behavior and that obtained copies of McKinney’s employment records, which included a memo by the human In arguing before the Ohio she had been evasive throughout the admissions process, the board resources director memorializing S upreme C ourt , M c K inney McKinney’s termination meeting. conceded that disapproval able to establish her character and The memo included information of her current application fitness and she should not be per- about the e-mail policy violation was fair but objected to the mitted to reapply for admission to and the falsified letters. McKinney board’s practice law in Ohio. McKinney testified that she did not recall being told that the letters were the reason for her termination. recommendation that she be forever barred from reapplying. She attempted to excuse her evasiveness, claiming that she had forgotten many of the details. The panel felt that the human resources director’s memo was a more credible account of the meeting than McKinney’s version. concluded that she would never be appealed this decision to the Ohio Supreme Court. In arguing before the Ohio Supreme Court, McKinney con- ceded that disapproval of her current application was fair but objected to the board’s recommendation that she be forever barred from reapplying. She contended that she had matured since her first year of The panel found the remainder of McKinney’s law school and that the lengthy admissions process record unremarkable, despite her 2001 conviction for had had a profound impact on her. In her objections, operating a vehicle while under the influence of alco- however, she maintained that she had been “honest hol and five speeding tickets. Noting that McKinney and forthright” in her character and fitness interview had not reported two of the speeding tickets on her and that the law firm’s human resources director’s application, the panel attributed that omission to memo of the termination meeting was not credible. inattention rather than deliberate misrepresentation. The Court disagreed, finding that the memo was The panel noted that McKinney had volunteered more credible than McKinney’s self-serving testi- at a domestic violence and sexual assault shelter, mony and that the panel was in the best position to a juvenile court diversion program, and an animal assess the credibility of the witnesses. The Court also shelter. She also presented five character references, found that McKinney had not been candid through- including three letters from professors at her law out the admissions process and had failed to disclose Litigation Update 55 that she had drafted the false letters to breach her one day rehabilitate herself and prove that she pos- legal obligation to her landlord. The Court noted sesses the requisite character, fitness, and moral that McKinney appeared to be “genuinely remorse- qualifications for admission to the practice of law. ful” for her conduct in drafting the falsified letters The board’s findings were adopted along with the and felt that “[d]espite McKinney’s recent and panel’s recommendation that McKinney be permit- troubling pattern of dishonest conduct,” she might ted to reapply as a candidate for the July 2014 exam. Lack of candor; false statements and omissions on bar application; neglect of financial responsibilities In re Application of Clark, 2013 WL 829100 (Ohio) Andrew Logan Clark graduated from the Florida ous enough.” Next, he said, “I thought that I had Coastal School of Law in 2010 and applied to reg- answered the questions the way that they should ister as a candidate for admission to the Ohio have been answered. But I knew that I’d also done Bar. The admissions committee of the Columbus it with a lot more speed and a lot more brevity than Bar some of the ones we as lawyers should.” Then Clark Association initially recommended ap- proval of Clark’s application. However, the Board of Commissioners on Character and Fitness noted Clark’s failure to disclose numerous traffic violations on his application and returned the file to the bar association for further review. On its second review, the bar association recommended disapproval of Clark’s application. Clark appealed the decision to the board, and a hearing was conducted on November 17, 2011. Clark admitted that he had provided a false answer said, “So as at least a partial explanation, I would say that I always knew that this would be disclosed even if it didn’t appear on my application, that there would be knowledge in the State of Ohio that I did have traffic violations.” And finally, he said, “At the time I believed that I was being honest because I believed that I did not have the responsibility to disclose things that I thought were either not important enough or already disclosed.” to the question “Have you been charged with any Following the November 2011 hearing, the moving traffic violations that were not alcohol- or board discovered that Clark had applied to take the drug-related during the past 10 years?” In fact, Clark February 2012 bar examination. On that application, had at least 14 moving violations, some of which had Clark disclosed a default judgment related to a tax occurred while he was driving under a suspended delinquency which had not been disclosed on his license. August 2010, September 2010, and March 2011 appli- Clark provided multiple explanations for falsely cations. Clark represented that he was “currently in answering the question. First, he said, “I did not the process of satisfying” a judgment for failure to think the traffic offenses were the kind of thing pay Columbus city income taxes from 2002 through that had to be disclosed. I did not think it was seri- 2007. 56 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 The Board of Commissioners on Character and expressed a hope that with time and maturity, Clark Fitness appointed a panel to conduct a second hear- might one day come to understand the critical role ing. The panel found that Clark’s representation that that honesty and forthrightness play in the legal he was “currently” in the process of satisfying the profession. Therefore, the board recommended that judgment was false. The panel also questioned Clark Clark be allowed to reapply to take the July 2017 bar about why he had not disclosed the tax delinquency exam. on his previous applications. He replied that he had not learned of the delinquency until August or September of 2011. The panel did not find this explanation credible, given that the city had begun sending notices of delinquency in April The Supreme Court of Ohio agreed. The Court stated that an applicant to the Ohio Bar must prove by clear and convincing evidence that he or she “possesses the requisite character, fit- 2006 to an address at which Clark admitted that he received mail. T he C ourt stated that Additionally, the panel discovered an applicant to the that Clark had falsely answered Bar another question regarding whether he had defaulted on any student loans. O hio Gov. Bar R. I(11)(D)(1). “A record manifesting a significant defi- convincing evidence that ciency in the honesty, trustwor- he or she the req- thiness, diligence, or reliability uisite fitness , of an applicant may constitute a “possesses character , and moral qualifications self best summarized the short- for admission to the practice he explained, “I have a—I have admission to the practice of law.” must prove by clear and The panel felt that Clark himcomings of his character when ness, and moral qualifications for of law.” basis for disapproval of the applicant.” Gov. Bar R. I(11)(D)(3). The Court further noted that, exhibited an inability to be hon- “[b]ased upon Clark’s numer- est when—when there’s a gigantic ous false statements and omissions throughout the amount of embarrassment involved, when there admissions process and his neglect of his financial is nothing I can do. I felt very helpless, and I had responsibilities, as demonstrated by the default judg- difficulty being honest.” Despite this admission, ment entered against him for delinquent tax obliga- however, the panel noted that Clark failed to tions, we agree that Clark has failed to sustain his demonstrate any remorse or appreciation for the burden at this time. Furthermore, we agree that his seriousness of his misconduct. belated candor in acknowledging his struggle to be Given Clark’s numerous attempts to mislead the board, the panel recommended that Clark be permanently prohibited from reapplying for admis- honest when the truth proves to be embarrassing offers a glimmer of hope that he will mature and learn from his past mistakes.” sion to the bar in the future. The board adopted the panel’s findings of fact and agreed that Clark did not The Court held that Clark could reapply to currently possess the character, fitness, and moral take the July 2017 bar examination and that he qualifications necessary to practice law. However, in would have to submit a new application and light of Clark’s willingness to admit his difficulty in complete a new character and fitness investigation being honest under trying circumstances, the board at that time. Litigation Update 57 Submitting a false letter of recommendation; dishonesty Vandrilla v. Connecticut Bar Examining Committee, Superior Court, Judicial District of Hartford, February 5, 2013 David Vandrilla appealed from a decision of the hearing, in which Vandrilla testified that he believed Connecticut Bar Examining Committee (CBEC) the professor had forgotten writing the letter. He entered in February 2012. In his petition, Vandrilla also implied that the professor was suffering from claimed that he had successfully passed the dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. In the Trinity hear- Connecticut Bar Examination on October 15, 2010. ing, which was more formal, both Vandrilla and the He was then notified by the CBEC that it was professor gave evidence consistent with their own conducting an inquiry as to his versions of events. Trinity’s con- application. The CBEC informed The professor testified and clusion was that the professor had Vandrilla that it was seeking infor- again asserted that he had not written the letter but that it mation about a reference letter he not written the letter . could not be determined whether had submitted to the Law School support of his testimony, he Admission Council (LSAC) as cited several factors includ- part of his law school application process. In ing his custom not to give a recommendation directly to Vandrilla had written it. The CBEC held extensive hearings and considered the records of the other proceedings. a student and not to write a The professor testified and again graduate education at Trinity recommendation for a sopho- asserted that he had not written College. In the spring of his soph- more, in addition to a number the letter. In support of his tes- omore year, he claims that he of deviations in writing style timony, he cited several factors asked a microeconomics professor and the form of the letter Vandrilla received his under- to write a recommendation letter on his behalf. He claims that he itself. received the letter and put it away including his custom not to give a recommendation directly to a student and not to write a recommendation for a sophomore, in until his senior year, when he began applying to law addition to a number of deviations in writing style schools. He then sent it to LSAC with other applica- and the form of the letter itself. A handwriting expert tion materials. LSAC sent a notice to the professor testified that the signature on the letter was not the acknowledging receipt of the letter, and the profes- professor’s. Vandrilla testified that the professor sor then contacted LSAC by phone and fax denying had forgotten he had written the letter and was too authorship of the letter. Additionally, the professor embarrassed to admit his mistake. The CBEC found made a complaint against Vandrilla to the Trinity that the professor had not written the letter and that College Honors Council. Vandrilla had written it himself. Based on this determination, the CBEC further found that Vandrilla Both LSAC and Trinity investigated and held hearings. The LSAC procedure involved a telephonic 58 The Bar Examiner, June 2013 lacked good moral character and that it would not recommend him for admission. Vandrilla appealed, claiming that the CBEC had the Trinity College Honors Council proceedings and abused its discretion and that its finding was based a number of fact witnesses as well as witnesses who on an “ambiguous, isolated single event.” The court testified in support of Vandrilla’s character. It was found this argument unpersuasive, as it was within not bound by the decision of the Honors Council or the authority of the CBEC to determine the credibil- by LSAC’s decision. To arrive at a conclusion dif- ity of witnesses and to weigh the evidence presented ferent from that arrived at by another entity is not before it. The CBEC was within its rights to consider an abuse of discretion. Vandrilla claimed that he Vandrilla’s reaction to the professor’s complaint and was unfairly made to carry the burden of proving his claims that the professor was dishonest, that he that he did not write the letter, but the court said suffered from memory lapses, and that his motiva- his only burden was to prove good moral character. tion in denying his authorship of the letter was to The court said that the CBEC had sufficient evidence save himself embarrassment. The CBEC did not find to draw its conclusion that Vandrilla did write the that this event was “ambiguous,” nor did they find letter. it to be “isolated.” It was within their discretion to do so. Vandrilla also claimed that the CBEC had ignored the results of the other investigations. However, the record shows that the CBEC did consider the other proceedings. The CBEC listened to the recording of The decision of the CBEC was affirmed. Fred P. Parker III is the Executive Director of the Board of Law Examiners of the State of North Carolina. Brad Gilbert is Counsel and Manager of Human Resources for the National Conference of Bar Examiners. Litigation Update 59 Marygold Shire Melli Receives 2013 Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award Congratulations to Marygold (Margo) Shire Melli, the first woman chair of NCBE (1989–1990), for being one of the recipients of the 2013 Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award. The award, established in 1991 by the American Bar Association Commission on Women in the Profession, recognizes and celebrates the accomplishments of women lawyers who have excelled in their field and have paved the way to success for other women lawyers. The award was named for Margaret Brent (1601–1671), the first woman lawyer in America. Margo, Voss-Bascom Professor of Law Emerita at the University of Wisconsin Law School, was the first woman to receive tenure at the UW Law School. She was the first woman to be elected to serve on the NCBE Board of Managers, the predecessor to the Board of Trustees, in 1980. Generally viewed as the “mother of the MEE,” she contributed significantly to the development of the MEE and was the first chair of the MEE Committee. She is a longstanding member of NCBE’s Editorial Advisory Committee. Marygold Shire Melli 60 The Bar Examiner, June 2013