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    Wisconsin Lawyer
    May 01, 2005

    Letters

    Michelle Behnke; Thomas Dixon Jr.; John Edmondson; Nicholas Zales; Mary Catherine Fons; Mark Daspit

    Wisconsin Lawyer
    Vol. 78, No. 5, May 2005

    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.

    Contested Judicial Elections Ensure Independence

    In Wisconsin, we elect our judges to ensure their independence. In this way, the authority of the judicial branch is drawn directly from the people. Wisconsin Supreme Court Chief Justice Shirley S. Abrahamson is clearly correct in citing the need for judicial independence as a campaign issue. (See "Making Judicial Independence a Campaign Issue," in the February 2005 Wisconsin Lawyer.) Nevertheless, judicial independence as a campaign issue means little when so many judges run for election unopposed. This spring all three appellate court seats went uncontested. Statewide, only eight circuit court judgeships were contested. Elections with only one candidate represent a failure of the system. No judge, not even the great John Marshall, is so good that he or she does not deserve a stiff challenge.

    People like to vote when they have a choice. Contested elections make the system work, bring needed attention to the court system, and give the people a personal stake in the process. Contested elections force the candidates to go out and meet the people and share the candidates' wisdom, thus educating the public about the judiciary and its role in our lives. In uncontested elections the public learns nothing. That is a great threat to judicial independence, because it leaves defining of the court system to the media and other groups that may not favor judicial independence. Single candidate elections leave the people feeling shut out of the process, because a choice of only one candidate is really no choice at all.

    Nicholas C. Zales, Milwaukee

    Section Supports $50 Assessment to WisTAF

    When the Wisconsin Supreme Court decided that all lawyers of Wisconsin must help to support legal services for low-income people, some Wisconsin lawyers greeted this well-reasoned and morally grounded decision with anger, and disdain. Now the State Bar's Board of Governors has authorized a process to retain counsel to review a potential challenge to the court's decision. And over what? A $50 assessment that lawyers will be required to pay to support the delivery of legal services for the have-nots of our society.

    The State Bar Public Interest Law Section applauds the action by the supreme court and believes the State Bar should follow this lead with grace and dignity. Our supreme court's decision to approve a $50 assessment is a measured attempt to support providers of legal services to those who can't afford them, and it represents a move toward a partnership of key stakeholders, including the legislature, lawyers, and the philanthropic community in Wisconsin.

    Sadly, it was the State Bar's reluctance to vigorously support the notion of equal justice for all that moved the court to action. As Justice Roggensack commented when she introduced a motion in support of the petition: "This is a leadership issue for the court." And indeed it was. The supreme court stepped into the leadership void that the State Bar of Wisconsin left vacant. Although some lawyers go to extraordinary lengths to provide pro bono services to the people of our state, the distressing fact remains that the needs are overwhelming.

    The failure by some of our colleagues to acknowledge the immediate legal service needs of the state's poor reflects badly on our profession, and this failure contradicts and undermines the State Bar's recent campaign to brand the profession in a positive image to the public. That some lawyers balk at the prospect of supporting legal services for the poor over a $50 surcharge is disheartening. The State Bar Board of Governor's action to seek out counsel to potentially challenge the supreme court's 5-2 majority decision is a public relations disaster waiting to happen.

    We as lawyers bear a responsibility - indeed, a higher responsibility - to all of the residents of our state to promote the ideal of equal justice for all. Our supreme court wisely recognized this and nudged the bar to action.

    Wisconsin lawyers should heed the motto of our state and look and move Forward to lead the effort to promote a justice system that serves everyone and brings us closer to the day when we truly will live in a society where there is equal justice for all.

    Public Interest Section Board of
    Directors, Mary Catherine Fons, chair

    Response: It is important to view in context the Board of Governors' decision to direct the Bar's officers to obtain counsel for a legal opinion about the legality of the Wisconsin Supreme Court Order approving the WisTAF petition (Petition 04-05) to impose an annual $50 mandatory assessment on every active State Bar member. The legal opinion also is to consider the potential impact of the mandatory assessment on the status of the Bar. The State Bar position before the supreme court was an acknowledgement of the unmet legal needs and a request that the $50 assessment be placed on the dues statement with the ability for individual lawyers to remove the assessment if he or she was already contributing time or money. Seeking a legal opinion is not tantamount to an unwillingness to be a part of the solution. In fact, the State Bar is committing resources to fund and conduct a comprehensive study of the civil legal needs of poor people in Wisconsin.

    Michelle A. Behnke, president
    State Bar of Wisconsin

    Judiciary Should Defend Against Assault on Legal System

    With the assault being made on our legal system by luminaries no less than that of the President of the United States, I write to inquire why officials within Wisconsin's judicial system remain silent. Critics of our courts decry a panoply of ills ranging from out-of-control juries handing out exorbitant awards to a mountain of frivolous lawsuits that are used to extort millions of dollars from nonculpable defendants. If that is the case, why is our judiciary not standing up and offering concrete solutions to these terrible problems? On the other hand, if these accusations are false or misleading, why is our judiciary not standing up and telling the public and legislature that they are being hornswoggled? I submit that the judiciary's silence is generally regarded as an admission of the charges being leveled.

    As the guardians of our legal system that has come under excoriating attack, the judiciary has the obligation to either assist in fixing the problems that are asserted, or to take to the podium and pick up the pen and defend the system that has worked so well for so many for so long.

    John B. Edmondson, Appleton

    [Editor's Note: The underlined text was inadvertently omitted from Mr. Edmondson's letter as published in the April 2005 issue. We apologize for the error.]

    Reward Pro Bono Work with Free CLE Programs

    I write in regard to the letter by Tom Kiefer in the February Wisconsin Lawyer and the response by State Bar CLE Director Thomas Dixon. Like Mr. Dixon, I commend Mr. Kiefer for raising the issues and proposing changes to the current system. The arguments by Mr. Dixon are precisely the arguments I would have made. As a recovering "private practice" attorney, I have moved into a highly focalized area of corporate law. On a regular basis, I struggle to find "meaningful" CLE credits that will further my knowledge in the field I am practicing. And whether it is in-state or out-of-state, I am always able to find something on point, and it advances my knowledge in the field. There is no doubt in my mind that each attorney needs to view a CLE program as something other than "wasted hours." (I found it ironic that at the first Ethics CLE that I took in my career, I witnessed another attorney reading the Wall Street Journal throughout the three-hour video seminar.)

    Perhaps the solution is somewhere in-between. There are a lot of practice areas where pro bono work is desperately needed. Attorneys ought to be given free tuition (or at the minimum a deep discount) on the CLE in exchange for doing pro bono work. If the attorney does not fulfill the required pro bono work by the end of the two-year reporting period, he or she would have to reimburse the actual cost of the CLE. This would allow the attorney to attend the CLE of his or her choice and be able to use knowledge gained to assist paying clients and pro bono clients alike.

    This may make CLE a losing enterprise for the State Bar of Wisconsin, but it potentially has a two-fold effect: encouraging attorneys to attend CLE programs at which they will pay attention to what is being presented and putting more attorneys in the ranks of those providing pro bono services.

    It is clear that pro bono reform needs to take place. I hope that a solution can be reached.

    Mark A. Daspit, Madison

    Response: It is encouraging to receive letters recognizing the need and value both in CLE and in providing pro bono services to those who cannot afford legal services. In fact, attorney Jeff Brown - the Bar's pro bono coordinator, the Legal Assistance Committee he works with, and I have been struggling to find a variety of solutions to this dilemma. We will be attempting a small test program of CLE cost reduction, somewhat as Mr. Daspit suggests, later this year. Of course, if money were no object, solutions would be readily forthcoming. And there lies the rub.

    The State Bar of Wisconsin CLE Department provides a wide number and variety of seminars and books using an array of regular and technological delivery vehicles. The CLE Department is entirely self-supporting and brings in approximately half of the Bar's budget every year. Some of our seminars and books are not cheap, but they are generally below the market price charged by outside providers and typically of much higher quality. Were we to significantly undercut the income that comes to the Bar from that production, to paraphrase Woody Hayes, three things could happen and two of them are bad.

    First, free (or reduced cost) CLE could draw attorneys to serve the indigent in greater numbers. This would be good. Now the other two. Assuming that we were successful and drew even one seventh of our attendees to taking a pro bono case, the quality and number of books and seminars would soon be drastically reduced as a result of reduced revenues. Unless we found other sources of income, CLE and other staff would have to be reduced, which will have a domino effect on staff support for Bar programs overall. This would be bad. Finally, either seminar and book prices or dues would have to go up substantially to cover some of that shortfall or a significant reduction in the services now provided by the Bar would have to occur. I believe most of the membership would also think this is bad.

    From public information to moot court to assistance to lawyers to assisting local bars to the extensive connectivity provided by the State Bar Web site, for example, the State Bar provides a myriad of services for lawyers and the public. These services would be greatly missed if they diminished or disappeared.

    Mr. Daspit's suggestions and expressions of concern are well taken, and we will continue to look for solutions, including some kind of discount program, within the Bar. However, my personal opinion is that society has to step up and take some responsibility for providing access to our justice system. Lawyers cannot, and should not, be asked to bear this burden by themselves. As a profession we should do our part - and many of us do. But if the system of justice is to be meaningful in our democracy, the public and the legislature must join the supreme court and the Bar to recognize and act on solutions for providing access to those who cannot afford it.

    Thomas E. Dixon Jr., director,
    State Bar CLE Department


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