Vol. 71, No. 9,
September 1998
Letters
Go forth and multiply
I thoroughly enjoyed the article
"Following in the Family
Footsteps" (August 1998). The only question I thought the article
neglected was "Are you a lawyer because of your family, or despite
them?"
As the daughter of two attorneys, Judge Frederick P. Kessler and Joan
F. Kessler, I spent the first 22 years of my life insisting that I was not
going to become a lawyer myself. It wasn't until I discovered that I disliked
the jobs I'd become qualified for as an undergraduate that I began to consider
law school. And it wasn't until I was in law school that I realized my parents
hadn't been pushing me to follow in the family footsteps. They had recognized
that my personality was that of a diligent advocate even when I was a little
girl.
I posed the question of the relationship between having a family full
of lawyers and deciding to become a lawyer to some of the other second-generation
lawyers I became friends with while in law school - Virginia Finn, whom
you quoted in your article, Kathleen Garvey McNeil, and Laura Skilton Verhoff
come to mind. None of us had a simple answer to the question of family influence,
and all of us forged a different career path from that of our attorney-parents.
In particular, none of us went straight from college to law school.
But the true unifying factor among all of us is a dedication to
community service and justice for the less fortunate. If a strong social
conscience like that of Finn, McNeil, or Verhoff is - even partially
- the result of being raised in a legal family, I say, "Fellow
attorneys, go forth and multiply!"
Liza Kessler, Madison
Cure IOLTA constitutional
defect with disclosure to client
Thomas Heine's report on the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Phillips v. Washington
Legal Foundationwas an exercise in damage control and spin. (See
"U.S. Supreme Court
Decision Raises Questions About Wisconsin IOLTA program" July
1998 Wisconsin Lawyer, page 7.)
The Phillips case involved a constitutional challenge to the Texas
IOLTA (Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts) program. The Texas lawsuit threatened
IOLTA programs across the country. Last November, former State Bar President
John Skilton readily admitted that the outcome in Phillips "would
be of significance to our IOLTA program - and its million dollars."
Indeed, that was why the Wisconsin Trust Foundation (WisTAF) joined an amicus
brief in support of the nonprofit corporation that administered IOLTA funds
in the Lone Star state - the Texas Equal Access to Justice Foundation.
That legal brief urged the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the Texas program
because "IOLTA programs are in the best tradition of the legal
profession and not violative of the [Constitution]."
The bad news arrived last June when the Supreme Court rejected the legal
arguments that IOLTA administrators have been relying upon for the past
15 years. Describing state IOLTA procedures as "confiscatory,"
the Court ruled that "the interest income generated by funds held in
IOLTA accounts is the 'private property'" of legal clients.
Instead of a forthright report about the shellacking that he took at
the Supreme Court, Mr. Heine does his best to save face. The WisTAF Board,
he solemnly pronounces, believes the Phillips precedent to be of
marginal relevance to Wisconsin clients because "the property laws
of Texas and Wisconsin are different." Rest assured, he continues,
that the WisTAF Board is "studying the decision to determine if it
should adjust Wisconsin's program."
It seems clear that Mr. Heine and the WisTAF Board have grown very comfortable
with the way in which the Wisconsin IOLTA program has operated over the
years. They simply do not want to come to grips with the fact that their
IOLTA program is as constitutionally flawed as the one administered in Texas.
The constitutional defect can be cured by a simple disclosure requirement.
That is, if clients voluntarily decide to park their money in an IOLTA-like
arrangement, after full and fair disclosure by the lawyer of all the relevant
facts, no constitutional problem would exist. If IOLTA is as great a program
as the bar leadership says it is, why is there so much reluctance to make
sure clients are informed about where their money will be going?
Timothy Lynch,
Associate Director
Center for Constitutional Studies,
Cato Institute, Washington, D.C.
Joint custody is better standard
How can we seriously debate the standard in child custody placement decisions
without bringing into the debate fathers or the substantial number of professionals
who advocate for joint custody? The July article, "Debating
the Standard in Child Custody Placement Decisions," only included
Sen. George as a political advocate and left the impression that the professional
community stands solidly against the presumption of joint equal placement.
Certainly, fathers have an interest and an insight as they normally are
the party who suffers from gender discrimination in the courts and from
the prejudices of the quoted professionals in the article.
The laws of nature, the Wisconsin and U.S. constitutions, and human rights
guarantee equal rights to parents of children and form the basis for the
presumption of joint custody at divorce.
The
best interest of the child standard is an extension of the tender years
doctrine. Gender and race biases have disappeared in America in legal and
overt formats. The gender bias hidden within the best interest of the child
standard is simply that what is considered nurturing is more often than
not associated with the traditional gender role of the mother. Under this
hidden standard, unless a father is a better Mr. Mom than is mom, then his
parenting is not considered as being in the best interests of the child.
By example, this would mean that while dad earns the money to buy a baseball
uniform, teaches his child how to play baseball, and takes his child to
little league games, this does not really count for nurturing, because after
the game mom launders the baseball uniform. What dad has done is fun; what
mom has done is nurturing. This type of mind-think by the professionals
is representative of today's gender bias in family law.
Never defining the best interest of the child was fine as long as gender
roles were rigid in raising children. It was always presumed that what mother
did (tender years doctrine) was in the child's best interest and this was
rarely challenged, because only in the cases of an extremely unfit mother
did the standard have to be applied. Simply put, dad made the money. Mom
did not have an education or job commensurate with mom's societally defined
role to raise the children. These rigid role functions in the marriage were
extended into the divorce.
This all worked fine and dandy until the role functions began to change
in the 1960s. Young women went to work, entered roles outside the family,
and demanded that fathers take on a substantial role in raising the children.
Fathers hesitatingly entered their new role as a hands-on parent only to
find that nurturing one's children was far more satisfying than the unfulfilling
and never-ending demands of corporate life. Dad thus became not only involved
in the details but also in the emotional satisfaction of raising his children.
However, at divorce, mom did not want to lose her respectable role as mother,
and also was interested in the short-term financial benefits that accompany
primary placement. But the world had changed. Dads were emotionally involved
in the daily events of their children's lives with all its satisfactions.
The family law system that we have in Wisconsin never considered that many
fathers actually would challenge mothers over placement; the best interest
of the child standard simply presumed that mom would have the children.
The substantial change in gender roles over 30 years has brought numerous
contested custody cases which the best interest of the child standard never
anticipated. The best interest of the child standard not only is antiquated
but works against the best interest of the child. In the age of two parents
working to be a middle class family, our children are not suffering from
too much parenting, but from too little parenting. Equal joint parenting
is the best means to maintain both parents and keep them fully involved
in their children's lives after divorce.
The best interest of the child standard harms children because it draws
parents into an adversarial law system that furthers the hurt and disappointments
of a failed marriage and even after a trial, or perhaps especially after
a trial, leaves both parents so alienated from each other that they are
not likely to want to cooperate in parenting their children. The best interest
of the child standard harms children by transferring the family assets from
the parents to the parents' attorneys, the guardian ad litem, and the psychological
professionals. The best interest of the child standard moves massive numbers
of families into the ranks of the poor with the commensurate effect that
children suffer under poverty. The best interest of the child standard is
for many families a transfer of their hard-saved assets from their children's
college education funds to the college education funds of lawyers, psychologists,
and other upper middle class divorce professionals. No one has fought harder
against equal joint placement than the State Bar Family Law Section.
In Wisconsin, we treat property better than we treat children. When the
marital property law with its presumption of a 50/50 division of property
was passed in Wisconsin, contested divorce cases based upon property division
all but dried up. If Wisconsin citizens were sensible enough to treat material
possessions outside an adversarial system, why can we not be sensible enough
to treat our children much better than our property, recognizing that our
children need all the parental involvement they can get? Our children understand
what is the best interest of the child. Ask them what they are concerned
about in a divorce and they will say, "I want my mother and I want
my father." They fear losing either one. Our adversarial divorce system
normally means that children will have one parent and one visitor, fulfilling
the fear of every child of divorce.
The best interest of the child standard motivates each parent to be destructive
to the other within the context of an adversarial family law system. At
trial's end, neither parent nor child is better off. Families are poorer.
One parent feels a winner; the other feels a loser. Children are destabilized
for years to come. Only the attorneys are winners.
The Wisconsin family law best interest of the child standard harms most
children of divorce. This standard is barbaric in an age where moms and
dads are both physically and emotionally involved in raising their children.
The presumption of joint custody is good public policy, good constitutional
law, and removes most custody issues from the negative aspects of adversarial
family law.
James Novak, President
Wisconsin Fathers for Equal Justice Inc.
Madison
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