The California Supreme Court Has Been Petitioned to Bring Out-of-State Bar Licensing Into 21st Century
FORUM COLUMN
BAR BRAWL
By Joseph Robert Giannini
Full PDF Article available here.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
The Balkanized State and Federal District Court Old Boys Club Bar Admission Rules

This maps shows the lax nationwide rules for admission on motion for government attorneys.

This map displays the accommodating rules for admission to federal agencies.

This map visualizes the needlessly varied conditions regarding availability of admission on motion to state bars.

This map shows the nationwide rules for district court admissions.
Permanent Link: The Balkanized State and Federal District Court Old Boys Club Bar Admission Rules
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
7th Circuit Holds Wisconsin Supreme Court's Diploma Privilege May Violate Commerce Clause
The plaintiffs, and the certified class they represent are graduates of accredited out-of-state law schools who want to practice law in Wisconsin. The Wisconsin Supreme Court admits newly minted graduates of state law schools to practice without requiring them to take the bar exam. Wisconsin is also among the 38 States that provide admission on motion to experienced attorneys. Plaintiffs argued Wisconsin's "diploma privilege" discriminates against graduates of out-of-state law schools who would like to practice law in Wisconsin. The 7th Circuit published decision written by Judge Posner remanded the case for a determination of whether the challenged favoritism for Wisconsin law school graduates violates the Commerce Clause. See PDF http://www.ca7.uscourts.gov/fdocs/docs.fwx?submit=rss_sho&shofile=08-2527_004.pdf
The case was remanded to allow plaintiffs an opportunity to prove their claims.
Hat tip: Inside Higher Ed. and ABA Journal Daily Newsletter [abajournalereport@abanet.org]
Permanent Link: 7th Circuit Holds Wisconsin Supreme Court's Diploma Privilege May Violate Commerce Clause
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Oregon Bar Examiners Propose Rule Change: Request Reciprocity Admission
The Chair of the Oregon Committee of Bar Examiners, the Hon. Jill Tanner, writes: "One of the primary duties of a lawyer is to protect the public interest - to ensure that justice is served and that laws are followed. But how can a lawyer effectively protect the common good in a world of change? Oregon's current rule allows reciprocal admission only with Alaska, Idaho, Utah and Washington. Each of those states is one of the qualifying jurisdictions in the proposed rule. If the rule is enacted, Oregon attorneys could seek admission in 37 qualifying jurisdictions without taking another bar examination. In addition, attorneys licensed in those same qualifying jurisdictions would be allowed to be licensed in Oregon without taking the Oregon bar examination. California is not one of the qualifying jurisdictions because it does not grant reciprocal admission on motion. Judge Hatter writes: "economic protectionism created by barriers to entry may invite constitutional challenges, and it shows little concern for those whom attorneys should serve. Finally, there is no evidence that a disproportionate number of disciplinary matters arise when attorneys are admitted without taking another bar examination." All written comments should be directed to the Oregon Supreme Court in care of the Board of Bar Examiners to admission-on-motion@osbar.org. Written comments must be received no later than 5 p.m, Thursday, Oct. 1. http://www.osbar.org/publications/bulletin/09jun/member.html
Permanent Link: Oregon Bar Examiners Propose Rule Change: Request Reciprocity Admission
Monday, July 6, 2009
Bar Exams for Experienced Attorneys: Time to Connect the Dots and Disconnect the Code of Silence
The practice of law has become nationwide and global. Unfortunately, the licensing process for U.S. attorneys has not caught up with today's reality. The mental model that requires experienced attorneys to re-invent the wheel and take another bar exam to obtain licensing in another state is as outdated as the separate but equal era in the 21st century.
A bar exam, like driver's license testing, is predictive in nature and designed to measure entry level skills. The purpose of the exam is to model what a beginning attorney would confront in practice and thus to provide a measure of comfort that the public will not be injured. The fact that an attorney is already licensed and practicing successfully in another jurisdiction is the best evidence of competence – the proof is in the pudding. The United States Supreme Court has held that there is no reason to presume that an out-of-state attorney will not become familiar with local law or disserve the public. Thus, the mere fact experienced attorneys are required to take another licensing exam illustrates the exam is suspect.
Digging deeper into the licensing function, Robert MacCrate, Esq., was the chair of the ABA's Task Force on Law Schools and the Profession. The "MacCrate Report" identifies 10 fundamental lawyering skills: (1) problem solving, (2) legal analysis and reasoning, (3) legal research, (4) factual investigation, (5) communication, (6) counseling, (7) negotiation, (8) litigation and alternative dispute resolution, (9) organization and management of legal work, and (10) professional self-development.
A pen and paper bar examination cannot and does not test nine of the ten skills identified by the MacCrate Report as fundamental to the successful practice of law. The only identified skill that can be tested is legal analysis and reasoning. Dr. Geoff Norman is a well known and highly respected psychometric expert who has 30 years of experience in the field and has written numerous articles for The Bar Examiner. Dr. Norman reports, "Study after study has shown that it is almost impossible to get judges to agree on scores for essay answers." For example, California's licensing exam for experienced attorneys is 100 percent subjective. The RAND Corporation reports a 23 percent or less agreement among graders of the exam. Deborah Rhode, a Stanford law professor, reports that there has never been a study proving a correlation between passing a bar exam and competently practicing law. Yet, two out of three already licensed attorneys are disqualified for California licensing based on a high-stakes licensing test that has no other purpose other than to limit supply and increase demand.
Imagine, if you took an AIDS test, and the test results 23% of the time were the same, and there was no proof the test had any correlation with having the virus? This putative re-testing scheme is a cancer that needs to be removed by any and every means necessary.
Many bar examiners at the state and national level know these indisputable facts. They have a code of silence that permits each of them to make money off the profession by selling additional bar exams. They are by silence perpetuating the status quo long after the quo has lost its status.
Join the NAAMJP www.mjplaw.org. Let's connect the dots and disconnect this code of silence.
Permanent Link: Bar Exams for Experienced Attorneys: Time to Connect the Dots and Disconnect the Code of Silence
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Ninety percent of the population needs a new model for legal services
The Los Angeles Times on June 2, 2009 reported that Harvard Law School graduate Luz Herrera stated: "Ninety percent of the population needs a new model for legal services." Herrera said: "There's only a system [of legal representation] for the well off, and for the very, very poor." Herrera hung up her shingle in Compton, California, home to 50,000 Latinos, and took on the kinds of cases that typically are the bread and butter of small-town attorneys -- divorce and child custody, bankruptcy, probate and real-estate transactions. Herrera said, "I learned to think like a lawyer there (Harvard)... I learned how to be a lawyer here. That's what Compton gave me."
Chief Justices, Others, Consider Ideas On Regulating Lawyers in Global Setting
The ABA/BNA Lawyers' Manual on Professional Conduct, 25 Law. Man. Prof. Conduct 300, reports an invitation only event, "The Future Is Here: Globalization and the Regulation of the Legal Profession" was held on May 27, 2009 in Chicago. Some conference participants expressed concern about tackling internationalization when the United States has yet to implement a driver's-license approach to domestic multijurisdictional practice. ABA President-Elect Carolyn B. Lamm told the audience that this country simply does not have the luxury of avoiding the issues. Panelist Anthony Davis of Hinshaw & Culbertson in New York cited what he sees as the absurdity of state-by-state regulation of lawyers favors national, uniform regulation of the legal profession. It makes no sense for a team of lawyers to be working under multiple sets of rules, Davis said.
The NJ Supreme Court Lightens Up on In-House-Counsel Licensure by a Micron for Unemployed Lawyers
Charles Toutant, of the New Jersey Law Journal on June 8, 2009 reported the Court said an in-house lawyer whose employment is terminated need not re-apply for a license if the Court is notified of new employment within one year, rather than the prior 90 day period. The Court also said registered in-house who are terminated may continue to work on a contract or per diem basis for his or her former employer, without having to get a plenary license, and provide pro bono if other hoops are swished from the three point line. These micrometer (millionth of a meter) were made in consideration of the plight of lawyers laid off from their corporate jobs.
See http://www.law.com/jsp/nj/PubArticleNJ.jsp?id=1202431313861
Permanent Link: Ninety percent of the population needs a new model for legal services
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
ABA Reciprocity Reform: A Nationwide Need for the Primacy of the First Amendment Rights to Advocate, Associate, and Petition In The New Millennium
0 CommentsPermanent Link: ABA Reciprocity Reform: A Nationwide Need for the Primacy of the First Amendment Rights to Advocate, Associate, and Petition In The New Millennium
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Attorneys Tested on Subjective Bar Exam to Determine if They Are Qualified to Practice is Fundamentally Flawed.
Jeffrey Russell Remarks Prepared For The ABA Commission On Multi-Jurisdictional Practice
Full PDF Article available here.
Permanent Link: Attorneys Tested on Subjective Bar Exam to Determine if They Are Qualified to Practice is Fundamentally Flawed.
