Legal Ethics Course Name

86px-US_Department_of_Justice_Scales_Of_Justice.svgThe October 2009 edition of the National Jurist magazine includes a statement from Jack Crittenden, the publication’s editor-in-chief, calling for law schools to begin teaching morality.  Citing the embarrassing role played by lawyers in the financial meltdown of 2008, Crittenden writes that “our law schools should be discussing the concepts of fairness and compassion in relation to the law and representing clients.” He further notes: “Today, it is the institutions of higher education that must carry forth the banners of morality, virtue and responsibility in order to keep America great. And law schools play a greater role in that responsibility than perhaps any other institution of higher learning.”

How to teach ethics and morality, or even if it is appropriate to do so, has been a much discussed topic in the legal academy, going back at least to the Watergate Crisis of the mid-1970’s.  One aspect of the debate has involved what to call the basic course in legal ethics and professional responsibility required of all law students.  Should the course be primarily about the formal rules governing lawyer conduct or should it focus on the ethical conduct of lawyers separate and apart from the rules that govern them?  Although course titles can be misleading, they often reflect the way that a particular institution has answered this question.

Marquette’s experience has reflected the uncertainty over the proper name for the course that used to be universally known as “legal ethics.”  While the course at Marquette traditionally was called “Legal Ethics” at some point that title was abandoned, and the over the past twenty years it has been known variously as “Professional Responsibility,” “Law and Ethics of Lawyering,” and the current “Law Governing Lawyers.”  At Marquette, the term “ethics” was in the course name, then it wasn’t, then it was brought back, albeit in a secondary position to “law,” and then it was dropped again.  Although the current course description refers to “ethical principles” they are listed as second to “legal principles,” and the course’s focus is described as primarily a “study of the principal ways in which lawyers are regulated.”

From 1997 to 2000, Marquette had a second required course on the legal profession, called “The Lawyer in American Society.”  Initially, the primary text for this course was American Legal Ethics by the noted ethical theorist Thomas Shaffer of the Notre Dame Law School.  Shaffer’s book was not about the Rules of Professional Conduct but about the moral consequences of becoming a lawyer.  After the first year, the Shaffer text was abandoned, although one section did replace it with another Shaffer book entitled, Lawyers, Clients, and Moral Responsibility. By the end of the second year of the four year experiment, the ethics focus of the class was largely abandoned.

Why does Marquette Law School, a branch of a Christian university, seemingly have such difficulty in holding itself out as a teacher of ethics and morality?   Why don’t we still call the course “Legal Ethics”?

I am not suggesting that individual professors do not raise questions of ethics and morality in their classes. I am certain that many do.  But at the level of course names, we seem to be reluctant to use words like “ethics” and “morality,” as our inability to settle on a permanent name for our required course on professional obligations suggests.

This phenomenon is not limited to Marquette.  As an experiment, I examined the web pages of 20 leading law schools to determine how each school deals with the question of what to call its basic course in professional obligation.

Of the twenty schools, only Notre Dame refers to the course simply as “Ethics,” but five others include the word “ethics” in the course title.   Northwestern still uses the traditional “Legal Ethics” and at Washington University, the course is “Lawyer Ethics.”  Other schools combine “ethics” with other concepts as Marquette did in the most recent former name of the course.  The University of Michigan uses “Ethics and Law of Lawyering—the Marquette version of this switched ethics and law.  At the University of Chicago, the title is “Legal Practice and Ethics” while it is “Ethics, Business, and Lawyers” at the University of California-Berkeley.

The most popular name for the course is the ethically neutral “Professional Responsibility” which is how the course is known at the University of Virginia, Georgetown, Penn, Columbia, Texas, Stanford, Vanderbilt, Washington & Lee, and UCLA.  Wisconsin, apparently to emphasize the multiplicity of obligations, calls it “Professional Responsibilities.”  At NYU, it is “Professional Responsibility and the Regulation of Lawyers;” while at Yale it is “Professional Responsibility and the Legal Profession.”  Harvard, being Harvard, uses its own name, “Legal Profession.”

If law schools do decide to follow Crittenden’s recommendation and focus much more explicitly on ethical and moral behavior on the part of lawyers and clients, a good way to start would be to return to the use of “Legal Ethics” as the name of the basic courses in … legal ethics.

I will acknowledge that teachers of this course in Wisconsin do face a type of pressure to orient their courses around the formal rules governing the practice of law that does not exist in other states.  Forty-six states now require prospective lawyers to take the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination, a separate examination that requires knowledge of the American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional Conduct.  Law students in these states invariably take an MPRE review course which provides them with a systematic presentation of the Model Rules.  Three of the other four states test knowledge of ethical rules as part of the regular bar examination and the topic is covered, sometimes extensively, in bar review courses for those states.

Wisconsin’s diploma privilege, however, means that the only exposure that students at Marquette and the UW receive to the rules governing law practice is what they are exposed to in their required Professional Responsibilities or Law Governing Lawyers course.  However, I do not find persuasive the argument that there is not time in this class to provide both a thorough explication of the Wisconsin Rules and to challenge students to think systematically about the moral and ethical obligations that follow from bar membership.

I, for one, would be happy to see the name of our course returned to “Legal Ethics.”

This Post Has 5 Comments

  1. Josh Byers

    I don’t object to instructors imparting moral and ethical lessons into law classes–whatever the name may be–covering various laws governing lawyers and their relationships with others. However, I wonder whether the law schools that have shifted focus from teaching morality/ethics to instructing students on the legal rules that govern the profession is, at least in part, due to the realization that morality/ethics may not be something that is teachable. In other words, in all professions there are going to be those individuals who are or who act unethically with little regard for morals. It is doubtful that formal instruction on such matters will make a difference to the students (they already are or are not ethical/moral beings) and somewhat questionable whether there would be general consensus among instructors as to what constitutes ethical/moral behavior. In sum, instructing future lawyers about the laws and rules governing the profession is likely more effective in setting clear standards to prevent outright fraud and criminal behavior by lawyers than instruction on ethics/morality.

  2. Rebecca Blemberg

    I would be happy to see the course name return to Legal Ethics, too.

    I don’t believe that morality/ethics are not “teachable” to law students. Serious inquiry into and reflection and debate about morality/ ethics gives students a glimpse into the complex world they enter after graduation. Students need to start thinking critically now about the kind of professionals they aspire to be.

    This summer I met a bioethicist who was curious about the type of ethics taught in law school. He wanted to know whether we focus on virtue ethics or applied ethics and whether there are different ethics courses for students wanting to pursue public versus private law practice. I explained the Law Governing Lawyers course and how law is a self-governed profession and that all lawyers must understand the rules of professional conduct. He wanted to know why law schools don’t call the course Ethics or offer any supplemental ethical theory courses.

    Those are interesting questions.

  3. Jessica E. Slavin

    I think that I also would favor changing the title back. The situation seems precisely the opposite to me, Josh. If a course about lawyers’ ethical duties is not framed against the background of lawyers’ humanness, their connection to the rest of humanity, and the way ethics/morality comes up in lawyers’ professional life, then instruction about bare rules could be taken by some students as instruction in amorality. Fortunately I doubt that the instruction is ever presented that way, but I would favor the change in title to create a change in emphasis in the students’ minds.

  4. Mike McChrystal

    Although I usually refer to the field as “legal ethics” and would be fine if that were the course name, I am not inclined to think of the choice in course coverage as between (1) the formal rules governing lawyer conduct and (2) the ethical conduct of lawyers separate and apart from the rules that govern them.

    Without launching into too long a thesis, the law of lawyering is comprised of a substantial body of law in addition to the Model Rules of Professional Conduct. My own fascination and respect for law derives in large measure from its taking account of much of the complexity of life (at least the law read deeply takes account of this complexity; particular cases and rules can seem awfully shallow and ignorant).

    It is hard to teach law well, in my view, without attending to the complexity, especially including the social/ethical/moral values that drive law formation.

    Some people might teach the rules in a shallow way in a legal ethics course, as they might in constitutional law or federal income tax, but that doesn’t sound to me like a very good law school course.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.