The Fraternity:
Lawyers and
Judges in Collusion
....Law loses its way
By John F.
Molloy
When I began practicing law in 1946,
justice was much simpler. I joined a small Tucson practice at a
salary of $250 a month, excellent compensation for a beginning
lawyer. There was no paralegal staff or expensive artwork on the
walls.
In those days, the judicial system was straightforward and
efficient. Decisions were handed down by judges who applied the
law as outlined by the Constitution and state legislatures.
Cases went to trial in a month or two, not years. In the
courtroom, the focus was on uncovering and determining truth and
fact.
I charged clients by what I was able to accomplish for them. The
clock did not start ticking the minute they walked through the
door.
Looking back
The legal profession has evolved
dramatically during my 87 years. I am a second-generation lawyer
from an Irish immigrant family that settled in Yuma. My father,
who passed the Bar with a fifth-grade education, ended up
arguing a case before the U.S. Supreme Court during his career.
The law changed dramatically during my years in the profession.
For example, when I accepted my first appointment as a Pima
County judge in 1957, I saw that lawyers expected me to act more
as a referee than a judge. The county court I presided over
resembled a gladiator arena,
with dueling lawyers jockeying for points and one-upping each
other with calculated and ingenuous briefs.
That was just the beginning.
By the time I ended my 50-year career as a trial attorney, judge
and president of southern Arizona's largest law firm, I no
longer had confidence in the legal fraternity I had participated
in and, yes, profited from.
I was the ultimate insider, but as I looked back, I felt I had
to write a book about serious issues in the legal profession and
the implications for clients and society as a whole. The
Fraternity: Lawyers and Judges in Collusion was 10 years in the
making and has become my call to action
for legal reform.
Disturbing evolution
Our Constitution intended that only elected lawmakers be
permitted to create law.
Yet judges create their own law in the judicial system based on
their own opinions and rulings. It's called case law, and it is
churned out daily through the rulings of judges. When a judge
hands down a ruling and that ruling survives appeal with the
next tier of judges, it then becomes case law, or legal
precedent. This now happens so consistently that we've become
more subject to the case rulings of judges rather than to laws
made by the lawmaking bodies outlined in our Constitution.
This case-law system is a constitutional nightmare because it
continuously modifies Constitutional intent. For lawyers,
however, it creates endless business opportunities. That's
because case law is technically complicated and requires a
lawyer's expertise to guide and move you through the system. The
judicial system may begin with enacted laws, but the variations
that result from a judge's application of case law all too often
change the ultimate meaning.
Lawyer domination
When a lawyer puts on a robe and takes the bench, he or she is
called a
judge. But in reality, when judges look down from the bench they
are
lawyers looking upon fellow members of their fraternity. In any
other
area of the free-enterprise system, this would be seen as a
conflict of
interest.
When a lawyer takes an oath as a judge, it merely enhances the
ruling
class of lawyers and judges. First of all, in Maricopa and Pima
counties, judges are not elected but nominated by committees of
lawyers,
along with concerned citizens.How can they be expected not to be
beholden to those who elevated them to the bench?
When they leave the bench, many return to large and successful
law firms
that leverage their names and relationships.
Business of law
The concept of "time" has been converted into enormous revenue
for
lawyers. The profession has adopted elaborate systems where
clients are
billed for a lawyer's time in six-minute increments. The
paralegal
profession is another brainchild of the fraternity, created as
an
additional tracking and revenue center. High-powered firms have
departmentalized their services into separate profit centers for
probate
and trusts, trial, commercial, and so forth.
The once-honorable profession of law now fully functions as a
bottom-line business, driven by greed and the pursuit of power
and
wealth, even shaping the laws of the United States outside the
elected
Congress and state legislatures.
Bureaucratic design
Today the skill and gamesmanship of lawyers, not the truth,
often
determine the outcome of a case. And we lawyers love it. All the
tools
are there to obscure and confound. The system's process of
discovery and
the exclusionary rule often work to keep vital information
off-limits to
jurors and make cases so convoluted and complex that only
lawyers and
judges understand them.
The net effect has been to increase our need for lawyers, create
more work for them, clog the courts and ensure that most cases
never go to trial and are, instead, plea-bargained and
compromised. All the while the clock is ticking, and the monster
is being fed.
The sullying of American law has resulted in a fountain of money
for law professionals while the common people, who are
increasingly affected by lawyer-driven changes and an expensive,
self-serving bureaucracy, are left confused and ill-served.
Today, it is estimated that 70 percent of low- to middle-income
citizens can no longer afford the cost of justice in America.
What would our Founding Fathers think?
This devolution of lawmaking by the judiciary has been subtle,
taking place incrementally over decades. But today, it's
engrained in our legal system, and few even question it. But the
result is clear. Individuals can no longer participate in the
legal system.
It has become too complex and too expensive, all the while
feeding our dependency on lawyers.
By complicating the law, lawyers have achieved the ultimate job
security. Gone are the days when American courts functioned to
serve justice simply and swiftly.
It is estimated that 95 million legal actions now pass through
the courts annually, and the time and expense for a plaintiff or
defendant in our legal system can be absolutely overwhelming.
Surely it's time to question what has happened to our justice
system and to wonder if it is possible to return to a system
that truly does protect us from wrongs.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John F. Molloy was elected to the Arizona Court of Appeals,
where he
served as chief justice and authored more than 300 appellate
opinions.
Molloy wrote the final Miranda decision for the Arizona Supreme
Court.
|