alternatives to litigation to help resolve business and personal
conflicts - skillful negotiation or mediation and arbitration,
for example. Though litigation may sometimes be necessary as
a last civil resort, much of it is a failure of one or more
lawyers to be wiser than their clients. Helping to solve a
client's problem with skillful counseling and negotiation is the
kind of legal service most clients - particularly business
clients - appreciate far more than costly, stressful litigation.
We should explore arrangements other than the billable hour for
the lawyer's compensation that will help motivate lawyers to
identify the most efficient solution to a problem. The tendency
of some lawyers to "keep the meter running" inevitably delays
resolution of client's problems. If, as a business person you
have been frustrated by this tendency, you should discuss with
your lawyer compensation strategies that give your lawyer
financial incentives to serve you more efficiently. The
character of America's legal education needs to become a subject
of serious national discussion. Financial and political support
needs to be found for alternative law schools that better prepare
young lawyers for their responsibilities. Law schools are the
training grounds for our judges as well as our lawyers. They do
not adequately providing students with the skills they need to
determine facts, understand a client's situation, counsel clients
wisely, negotiated solutions and recognize the most practical,
economical and stress-free means of resolving a client's
situation.
The American legal profession and its most accomplished members
have proven themselves to be among the most civilizing and
progressive forces in history. American lawyers, going back at
least to Thomas Jefferson, have helped to provide hope for a
better life to a the world. To-help increase the chances that
our American future will be as bright as its promise, we need to
do what we can to encourage restoration of the model of the
American lawyer as a peacemaker.
Special Thanks to The Washington Post
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Last modified: October 1997