Vol. 75, No. 12, December
2002
Letters
Letters to the editor: The
Wisconsin Lawyer publishes as many letters in each issue as space
permits. Please limit letters to 500 words; letters may be edited for
length and clarity. Letters should address the issues, and not be a
personal attack on others. Letters endorsing political candidates cannot
be accepted. Please mail letters to "Letters to the
Editor," Wisconsin Lawyer, P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158, fax
them to (608) 257-4343, or email them to wislawyer@wisbar.org.
Bar's branding effort boosts public's and lawyers' perceptions
Congratulations on the most excellent job on the work you have begun
to "brand the profession." Please pass my kudos on to the members of the
committee involved in leading the project. Not only is there a crisis
when it comes to the public's perception of lawyers, but lawyers lose
the idealism they had of righting wrongs when they chose to become a
lawyer. For some of us, that choice was made as a snot-nosed kid growing
up in rural Wisconsin.
I practiced for 17 years in La Crosse before closing my law office to
create a virtual law community where lay people could learn about the
law; how to find good, caring lawyers, and not the hucksters on TV; and
to interact with each other and lawyers. The goal was to empower people
and improve the image of lawyers.
Now that my company has been sold to Martindale-Hubbell, I am working
on a new tech project with similar goals. I also intend to instill some
pride in the young lawyers who may have lost it since law school. The
information you put together as the basis of the Bar's branding effort
has helped in my marketing research. Thanks for that.
Continue the great work. The State Bar of Wisconsin is one of the
nation's leaders when it comes to bar association Web sites.
Kevin O'Keefe
Bainbridge Island, Wash.
Zealous advocacy hurts our profession
I read with interest Dean Dietrich's article "Drawing the Line on
Discovery Abuse" in the November issue. All of Attorney Dietrich's
articles are helpful and informative and serve to keep ethical issues at
the forefront of our day-to-day practices. I want to commend him for the
articles and commend the Wisconsin Lawyer for providing the
forum for this important discussion. However, there were several
comments in that most recent article that merit debate and
discussion.
The article's basic premise is that the line between zealous
representation and unethical behavior is a fuzzy one. That opening
premise gives undue and unwarranted credence to zealous representation.
The word zealous is an unfortunate one. Webster defines zeal as
"enthusiastic, diligent devotion in pursuit of a cause, ideal, or goal."
That seems appropriate. We need to be enthusiastic and diligent in our
representation. Unfortunately, some lawyers confuse zealous activity
with the activity of a zealot, who is one with an excessive, religious
fanaticism. It is not our role to be zealots.
There is no requirement of zealousness to be found in SCR 20, the
Rules of Professional Conduct. In the context of litigation, we have the
obligation to provide competent representation (SCR 20:1.1); to be
diligent (SCR 20:1.3); to communicate effectively (SCR 20:1.4); to
charge reasonable fees (SCR 20:1.5); to preserve client confidences (SCR
20:1.6); and to avoid conflicts of interest (SCR 20:1.7, 1.8, 1.9). The
word zealous is not to be found in any of these rules or in the official
comments to the rules. The word zealous is used once in SCR 20 and that
is in the Preamble. The context of the word is important:
"A lawyer is a representative of clients, an officer of the legal
system and a public citizen having special responsibility for the
quality of justice.
"As a representative of clients, a lawyer performs various functions.
As advisor, a lawyer provides a client with an informed understanding of
the client's legal rights and obligations and explains their practical
implications. As advocate, a lawyer zealously asserts the client's
position under the rules of the adversary system. As negotiator, a
lawyer seeks a result advantageous to the client but consistent with
requirements of honest dealing with others..."
This portion of the preamble is a description of the roles of a
lawyer, not a directive or a license. We "zealously assert the client's
position." We guide our clients through the thicket of legal process and
procedure and we speak for them. Our clients deserve an articulate,
thoughtful and forceful assertion of their case. They do not have the
right to be represented by a zealot.
There is nothing in the rules or in the logic of the system that
requires or even permits abusive tactics. In fact, there are many rules
that specifically prohibit the tactics that some justify as zealous
advocacy. We must assert only meritorious claims and contentions (SCR
20:3.1). We are obligated to expedite litigation (SCR 20:3.2). We must
be candid to the tribunal (SCR 20:3.3). We must be fair to opposing
parties and their counsel (SCR 20:3.4). We must respect the rights of
third persons (SCR 20:4.4). And, we must supervise our associates and
staff to see that they also follow the rules (SCR 20:5.1, 5.3).
In the Attorney's Oath (SCR 40.15) we affirm that we will not counsel
or maintain any suit or proceeding that shall appear to be unjust or any
defense unless honestly debatable under the law of the land. We further
pledge that we will only use such means as are consistent with truth and
honor and will never seek to mislead a judge or jury. Then we pledge to
abstain from all offensive personality.
In this ethical scheme, where do we find support for the idea that we
can obstruct discovery, use offensive personality tactics, engage in a
war of attrition, or shade the truth?
Attorney Dietrich said that when there is an ethical issue raised by
guerilla tactics, "The question will always be whether the conduct that
occurred was, in some manner, advancing the client's interests. If so,
it is not likely that the conduct will be considered a violation of the
Supreme Court Rules." That sounds like the end justifies the means. The
destruction of smoking gun evidence, sponsoring perjury, and all manner
of illegal conduct could find a home under that umbrella. I know that is
not what Attorney Dietrich meant by his comment, but my point is that
any reasoning that the end justifies the means has no place in our
ethics rules.
For too long we have used a nonexistent duty of zealous advocacy to
excuse unethical and unprofessional conduct. That is not necessary, it
is not ethical, and it is not professional.
Gary L. Bakke
New Richmond
Mr. Bakke's comments again underscore the debate over the conduct of
lawyers and compliance with Wisconsin Supreme Court Rule Chapter 20.
The concept of "zealous representation" can be interpreted many ways
and I concur with Mr. Bakke that the end result of representation of a
client should not allow lawyers' use of inappropriate tactics or
unprofessional behavior to go unchecked. Because this is such a
difficult area, I believe the oversight of lawyer conduct will be more a
matter of lawyers setting examples or refusing to reward inappropriate
behavior rather than enforcement through the Office of Lawyer
Regulation.
Dean Dietrich
Wausau
Author says, 'Keep up the great work'
Thank you for doing such a great job (once again) to showcase my
November article, "Wisconsin's 'Stream of Commerce' Theory of Personal
Jurisdiction." As a former high school newspaper editor-in-chief, I am
well acquainted with the challenges of layout, graphics/photographs,
publishing deadlines, and so on, and the Wisconsin Lawyer staff
does such a great job on all of these fronts. We as a Bar are truly
fortunate to have such capable people at the helm of our magazine.
Again, many thanks, and keep up the great work!
Daniel J. La Fave
Milwaukee
Thank you. We believe that the primary reason members consistently
rank the WL among the top three member benefits is the consistently high
quality of articles contributed by members like you and the active
involvement of our editorial review board. The WL could not be what it
is without the volunteer contributions of State Bar members. The WL
staff try to make the publishing experience as pain-free as possible,
and invite members to contact us with their manuscripts and ideas for
articles. Writing guidelines are at www.wisbar.org,
or email the editors.
Wisconsin Lawyer