"The
First Thing We Do, Let's Kill All the Lawyers"
Shakespeare's Tribute to Trial Lawyers
By
Howard L. Nations
The
great trial lawyer Daniel Webster said: "Justice is the
greatest concern of man on earth." There is no greater
professional calling than to stand as a lawyer at the bar
of justice and breathe life into the Constitution, the
Bill of Rights, the statutory law and common law by
defining, asserting and defending the rights of citizens.
Lawyers play many vital roles on the world's stage but
none more important than preserving, protecting and
perpetuating the rights of citizens, both individual and
business. Since lawyers play such a vital role in our
democracy, why has lawyer-bashing increased exponentially
in recent years and how should we respond to it?
One of
the many enigmas to arise out of the corporate dominated
decade of the eighties is the advent of lawyer bashing.
The adversaries of our proud and noble profession
continue to misquote the law, distort case results and
unjustly attack judges and juries in a mass media
onslaught designed to silence the victim's voice - the
trial lawyers of America.
Ironically,
the rallying cry of the lawyer bashers has become
Shakespeare's quote from Henry VI: "THE FIRST THING WE
DO, LET'S KILL ALL THE LAWYERS."
Those
who use this phrase pejoratively against lawyers are as
miserably misguided about their Shakespeare as they are
about the judicial system which they disdain so
freely.
Even a
cursory reading of the context in which the lawyer
killing statement is made in King Henry VI, Part II, (Act
IV), Scene 2, reveals that Shakespeare was paying great
and deserved homage to our venerable profession as the
front line defenders of democracy.
The
accolade is spoken by Dick the Butcher, a follower of
anarchist Jack Cade, whom Shakespeare depicts as "the
head of an army of rabble and a demagogue pandering to
the ignorant," who sought to overthrow the government.
Shakespeare's acknowledgment that the first thing any
potential tyrant must do to eliminate freedom is to "kill
all the lawyers" is, indeed, a classic and well-deserved
compliment to our distinguished profession.
Today's
Jack Cades can readily be found throughout the insurance
industry and in manufacturing, pharmaceutical, and
chemical companies. They want to dismantle the tort
system. They want to disrupt the judiciary and abrogate
the common law, to the detriment of the rights of
individual citizens, consumers, and injured persons who
deserve competent representation and adequate redress for
harm done to them.
Over
the centuries tyrants and demagogues have come in many
forms. In today's context, it is not the "army of rabble
and a demagogue pandering to the ignorant" who cry for
the demise of the lawyers, but rather modern demagogues
who manipulate our governmental institutions to their own
ends. Why? Because trial lawyers are the first line of
defense to prevent irresponsible elements within the
insurance, manufacturing, and chemical companies from
dismantling the tort system, disrupting the judiciary and
abrogating the common law to the detriment of the rights
of individual citizens, consumers and tort
victims.
Doubtless,
if Shakespeare could put quill to parchment to script
analogous phrases for modern corporate tyrants, he could
couch their refrain thusly:
- If
America's democratic institutions of right to trial by
jury and election of judges are to be abolished, first
let's discredit all the lawyers;
- If
American citizens' common law rights to full recovery
of legal damages are to be abrogated for the benefit
of profit-motivated corporations, first let's defame
all the lawyers; and
- If
America's judicial system of tort reparations is to be
remolded into a profit mechanism for the insurance
industry, first let's degrade all the lawyers.
The
adversarial nature of the judicial system of which we are
an integral part, dictates that we will never be loved by
the public, due to the high level of misunderstanding of
the advocacy system. Our protection of individual rights
often postures us as the foe of government and business
with resulting enmity against us from those quarters. If
enduring lawyer bashing is the price we pay for
protecting individual freedoms, then so be it. It is a
small price to pay as long as we do not allow the
degrading of lawyers to interfere with the performance of
our professional obligations by poisoning professional
pride or reducing the zeal with which we represent our
clients.
One
major danger of lawyer-bashing to our profession is the
effect which it can have on us, individually and
collectively, as lawyers and as a profession. If we lose
our professional self-respect, America loses far more
because our effectiveness in the democratic process will
be damaged.
The
seminal point in maintaining our self respect when
confronting lawyer bashing is for those of us in the
profession to review our historical precedence in order
to understand the role which our legal ancestors played
in establishing and defending America's democratic
institutions. Through this historical perspective we can
better understand our position as the primary defenders
of democracy.
As
lawyers, we are the beneficiaries of a rich and
unparalleled heritage from the past, the bearers of a
huge mantle of responsibility in the present and the
preservers and protectors of the individual rights of
American citizens for the future. Reduction of that
effectiveness is a major goal of our detractors since the
power of the people has always been tied inextricably to
the influence of lawyers. As Alexis de Tocqueville stated
in Democracy in America in 1835: "I cannot believe that a
republic could subsist at the present time if the
influence of lawyers in public business did not increase
in proportion to the power of the people".
We are
currently engaged in a major power struggle over whether
power in America shall remain with the people, through
the exercise of individual freedoms, or whether power
will continue the shift to government, corporations and
the judiciary and away from the people. Therefore, if
power is to be transferred from the people to governments
and corporations, it is necessary to reduce the powers of
lawyers. As part of this power struggle we confront an
exponential growth in a well orchestrated regimen of
lawyer-bashing which is designed to silence our voices
and reduce our ability to stand between the abuse of
governmental power and the individual, the abuse of
corporate power and the individual and the abuse of
judicial power and the individual. The effects of this
well designed and carefully implemented campaign of
lawyer bashing resound in the legislative halls, the jury
box and the voting booth.
While
we are fighting this battle daily in the legislative
halls and our public relations efforts are directed
toward those who occupy the jury box and the voting
booth, we must not allow the lawyer bashing to reduce our
own self esteem, either as individual lawyers or as a
profession.
The
idea of silencing lawyers in order to destroy individual
freedom has been around for centuries. But it has been
raised to a new art form by corporations without
consciences. Heedlessly they compound their wrongs
against consumers and workers with assaults on lawyers
and crass distortions aimed at the mass media. Trial
lawyers are the first--and perhaps only--defense against
such perfidy, and history tells us we will
prevail.
In
seventeenth century England, Oliver Cromwell, in an
effort to thwart individual freedoms, decreed that no
more than three barristers could congregate outside of
court. He recognized that the greatest threat to his own
tyrannical dictates was the collective commitment of the
London Society of Barristers to the principles of freedom
expressed in the Magna Carta.
In
eighteenth century France, the Revolution altered the
political face of the world by moving the focus of
government from the rights of royalty, tyrants, and
dictators to the rights of individuals. Three major
political principles emerged--liberty, equality, and
fraternity. From these evolved the social and political
systems we know today as democracy, socialism, and
communism. Only one of these, democracy, granted the
individual freedoms now under attack. Paradoxically, the
assault on individual rights in the United States is
recurring at the same time that a tidal wave of
individual democratic freedom is sweeping through Eastern
Europe. The ascendancy of democratic institutions abroad
enjoins us to guard our own individual freedoms more
closely against assault from within.
In
twentieth century Europe, Adolf Hitler, the
quintessential despot, asserted "I shall not rest until
every German sees that it is a shameful thing to be a
lawyer." In the entire history of this planet, individual
rights were never more threatened. Hitler's mantle of
destroying lawyers as a predicate to destroying rights of
individuals is carried forward today by a carefully
calculated campaign of libelous tyranny against lawyers
and the rights of American citizens. Hence, the concept
of silencing lawyers by those who seek to subjugate
freedom of individuals has been attempted for centuries
but has been successfully resisted in America by strong
willed citizens represented by the legions of lawyers who
have successfully preserved and protected the
Constitution and Bill of Rights against such attacks.
After each tyrannical attack, our legal ancestors have
emerged like the Phoenix from the ashes, to redefine
individual rights and freedoms. We too must prevail,
because we are right, our cause is just and the
perpetuation of freedom is inextricably interwoven with
our continued protection of individual rights.
If tort
deformers prevail, American citizens will suffer the
ultimate irony as England has, that at the same time the
world is attempting to emulate America and its democratic
institutions, American citizens, in the name of
international business competitiveness and insurance
profits, will lose those same institutions which make us
the exemplar of freedom for the world. This must not be
allowed to occur and occur it shall not as long as the
legal profession stands guard at the gates of democracy,
accompanied by judges and legislators who respect the
cornerstone of American democracy: the rights of
individual citizens.
But,
lest our adversaries underestimate us, and we forget our
own heritage, we must all recall that before there was an
insurance industry, lawyers were defining the rights of
free citizens under the Magna Carta.
When
the Robber Barons of nineteenth-century America
sacrificed the lives of their employees in unsafe
workplaces throughout the country, lawyers and judges in
courtrooms across America were breathing life into the
Constitution and gradually and painstakingly protecting,
on a case-by-case basis, the individual rights of
American citizens. Therefore, as we carry forward the
mantle of responsibility for protecting those hard-won
rights, we must not shirk from the media and legislative
attacks on our noble profession. Just as elements of
modern corporate America perpetuate the principles of its
forefathers, the nineteenth-century Robber Barons, so
must we follow our legal ancestors, Jefferson, Madison
and Lincoln, in preserving the freedoms which lawyers
have defined and have defended for centuries.
Both as
professionals and as individual attorneys, we must never
lose sight of the respect which we deserve for the role
we play in society, a role which extends far beyond the
courtroom. We must bring our individual and collective
talents to bear to defend freedom with pro bono work for
the disadvantaged, consumer protection advocacy for those
not yet killed or maimed by defective products,
protection of the civil liberties of every individual
whose rights are threatened, and legislative advocacy,
both offensive and defensive in state and federal
legislative halls.
While
the insurance industry and other powerful interests aim
to discredit lawyers, only America's legislators can
effectively silence them. Before legislators silence
America's voices of freedom, intellectual integrity
dictates that they examine the cultures that have no
independent lawyers and determine how these lawyerless
societies have fared. Today it is American trial lawyers
who are pouring into the Eastern European countries to
spread democracy and establish the right to trial by
jury, ironically a right which is under corporate attack
in our own country.
Since
the past is prologue, every trial lawyer should examine
the antecedents of our great profession in order to
better understand our role in society today and our
obligations to the citizens of tomorrow.
When we
think of those who preceded us in this noble profession,
we become imbued with the spirit, the virtues and the
values which we are called upon to preserve, protect and
perpetuate. A review of our antecedents, whether gestalt
or collage, establishes that greatness was the hallmark
of our legal ancestors, and the mantle which they passed
is worthy of nothing less than our best efforts to bear
it, in all its glory, improve it with devotion and
dedication to its principles, and pass it to our
successors, draped in greater dignity than when we
received it.
Even a
cursory review of the vital role that lawyers have played
in America's history reveals a discernible common thread:
our legal predecessors have steadfastly refused to stand
silent in earlier power struggles which threatened
individual liberties, regardless of the enormity or the
source of the threat.
The
self esteem of our profession increases when we consider
who are the forefathers of today's American lawyers and
how did they respond to attempts to silence lawyers and
thereby stifle individual freedoms:
We see
lawyers in the philosophical forefront of our great
country: we see him with quill in hand in Monticello and
Philadelphia and in Washington as he defined in writing
the rights of American citizens. His name was Thomas
Jefferson and he was a lawyer.
We see
him at that miracle in Philadelphia, the Constitutional
Convention of 1787, fighting for the Bill of Rights which
became the credo of American freedom, and at his desk
drafting the Federalist Papers to lead the land he loved
in the right direction, towards individual freedom. His
name was James Madison and he was a lawyer.
We see
him addressing the delegates of the Second Virginia
Convention, exhorting the battle cry of the republic, "Is
life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at
the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God!
I know not what course others may take; but as for me,
give me liberty or give me death!" His name was Patrick
Henry and he was a lawyer.
Where
would America be today if these lawyers had been
successfully silenced?
We see
them at the birth of America: defying the tyrannical
dictates of King George III at the risk of their lives as
they lead the revolution against the Stamp Act of 1764;
we see twenty-five lawyers among the fifty-six signers of
the Declaration of Independence; we see them drafting the
Articles of Confederation and as leaders of the
Constitutional conventions of the new states. Their
legions include John Jay, Alexander Hamilton and John
Marshall and they were lawyers.
Where
would America be today if these lawyers had been
successfully silenced?
We see
them occupying the Presidency, leading America through
the crucial formative years of our Republic as thirteen
of our first sixteen Presidents from Washington through
Lincoln were lawyers. In addition to Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison, their numbers include such shapers of
America's destiny as John Adams, James Monroe, John
Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson. As the forty-second
President occupies the White House today, he is the
twenty-seventh member of our distinguished profession,
which makes it all the more ironic that much of the
recent lawyer bashing emanated directly from the White
House.
We see
lawyers leading the country in wartime: at Gettysburg
with tears in his eyes rededicating our country to the
principles of equal justice for all. His name was Abraham
Lincoln and he was a lawyer.
And
speaking to us from his wheelchair, lifting our spirits,
making us stronger with his inspirational philosophy,
"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." His name
was Franklin Delano Roosevelt and he was a lawyer. Where
would America be today if these lawyers had been
successfully silenced?
We see
lawyers in the Criminal Courts of twentieth century
America: at the bar of justice from Chicago to Dayton,
Tennessee, breathing life into the Constitution and
helping define and defend individual rights. His name was
Clarence Darrow and he was a lawyer.
We see
lawyers crying out for the civil rights of their black
brethren, demanding equal justice for all: as we see her
addressing the Democratic National Convention as its
keynote speaker and capturing the hearts and minds of
those who heard her extolling the virtues of democracy
and individual freedom in the halls of Congress. Her name
was Barbara Jordan and she was a lawyer.
And we
see him at the Bar of justice of this great land and
finally, on our highest bench, reminding us all that
justice is colorblind and that all citizens of this great
country, regardless of race, creed or color, are equal
under the law. His name was Justice Thurgood Marshall and
he was a lawyer.
Where
would America be today if these lawyers had been
successfully silenced?
We see
lawyers in recent years at the helm of the Association of
Trial Lawyers of America: we see him in the courtrooms
and classrooms of Connecticut and at lectern after
lectern across the land, lecturing to the lawyers he
loved. His name was Teddy Koskoff and he was a lawyer.
Teddy
reminded us that, if you are a lawyer, you stand between
the abuse of governmental power and the individual, the
abuse of corporate power and the individual and the abuse
of judicial power and the individual. And if you are a
lawyer, you are helping to preserve the precious freedoms
of our past, defending the individual citizen's rights
today and protecting the rights of America's citizens for
generations to come.
We see
him in the Congressional halls: testifying, cajoling and
demanding that the rights of America's consumers and
citizens not be rent asunder in the name of corporate
profit and political expediency. He is the consummate
consumer advocate, his name is Ralph Nader and he is a
lawyer.
We see
him at the Southern Poverty Law Center: we see the son of
tenant farmers as he emerges from the cotton fields in
rural Alabama to become one of the great civil rights
lawyers in history, confronting death threats to himself
and his family in order to bring the klan, skinheads and
other hate groups to the bar of justice. His name is
Morris Dees, he is a lawyer.
We see
them at the bar of justice in Texas: representing the
halt and the lame, the widow and the orphan and the
catastrophically injured whose future quality of life
rests on their immense skills and unswerving sense of
justice. We listen as they teach us how justice can best
be achieved in the face of overwhelming odds, doing
battle with corporate America. We watch in awe as they
show us how David, armed only with a stone of justice,
can bring down today's gargantuan Goliath, manufacturers
of defective and dangerous products. Their numbers are
legion but their names include Scotty Baldwin, Tommy
Jacks, David Perry and Jim Perdue, and they are lawyers.
They are our leaders, our friends, and our inspiration as
they remind us of the mantle of responsibility which we
carry as lawyers today. Where would the victims of
defective products be if these lawyers had been
successfully silenced?
We see
them as women lawyers, inspiring others as role models:
in the courtrooms, leading others through example and
exhortation in the battles for equal justice for all,
including women and minorities. The ranks of women and
minority lawyers are constantly increasing, to the great
benefit of both the public and our profession.
As has
been often proven over the centuries, Shakespeare was
right: if tyranny is to prevail, tyrants must first kill
all the lawyers. Equally relevant today, if corporate
tyranny is to prevail, corporate tyrants must defame,
degrade, and thereby discredit all the lawyers. Once
again, the timeless wisdom of Shakespeare is proven. He
would have made a great trial lawyer.
It will
serve us all, legislators, judiciary and lawyers, to
recognize that the ultimate aim of the tort deform
movement is the abrogation of those individual rights and
liberties of American citizens, consumers and tort
victims which are the bedrock of American democracy. As
Newsweek magazine stated: "The war against the lawyers is
at bottom a camouflaged aggression against the jury
system".
Fortunately,
there are multitudes in our society who recognize our
role and respect us for it. As his holiness, Pope John
Paul II, stated: As trial lawyers, you are committed to
the resolution of conflicts and the pursuit of justice
through legal and rational means. This work is
indispensable to the construction of a truly humane and
harmonious social order, as the centuries old judicial
experience of the West bears eloquent witness.
Therefore,
let us never forget the mandate which we assumed upon
taking the oath at the bar of this great country: as long
as trial lawyers continue to preserve the independence of
our judges and juries; as long as trial lawyers uphold by
due respect, daily practice and distinguished conduct the
dignity of the bench and bar, and most importantly, as
long as trial lawyers continue to vigorously and
unselfishly answer our noble calling of protecting the
inalienable rights of tort victims, abused consumers, and
the downtrodden in our society, then the profit motivated
prattlings of that unholy alliance of tort deformers will
take their proper place in the alleyways of
anonymity.
The
role of each of us is to accept the mantle of those who
led us through example and exhortation in the past, who
inspire and imbue us with a sense of our vital role in
society in the present, and to carry the mantle as the
men and women of the American trial bar who, through our
daily activities in the courts of this great land,
preserve, protect and defend the Constitution and the
rights of America's citizens for the future.
Our
obligation to America is to accept the Bard's compliment
as a challenge and so conduct ourselves as to assure
that, as long as the bench and trial bar continue to
breathe life into the common law and Constitution, those
respected and revered principles upon which our democracy
is based shall continue to carry the indelible imprimatur
of the legal profession and be closely guarded by the
true sentinels of freedom, the judiciary and the trial
lawyers of America.
I am
extremely proud to be a member of this great profession
and I urge each of you to reflect on the mantle of
responsibility which we bear, the challenges we face and
the level of complete commitment to individual rights
which has been the hallmark of our profession for
centuries. Indeed, we must conduct ourselves so that for
centuries to come the refrain of the tyrants and
demagogues must remain: "the first thing we do, let's
kill all the lawyers." Thank you, Mr. Shakespeare, for
the compliment. We shall strive to deserve it.