Impartiality must be built through open societies that share
information. When there is information, there is enlightenment. When there is
debate, there are solutions. When there is no sharing of power, no rule of law,
no accountability, there is abuse, corruption, subjugation, and indignation.
Anywhere, anytime ordinary people are given the chance to choose, the choice is
the same: freedom, not tyranny; democracy, not dictatorship; the rule of law,
not the rule of the surreptitious forces. The legal profession is the one
profession where there is no shortcut to success. You will have to work hard to
climb the stairs of success and fame. It will not be a cakewalk, but if you can
endure the initial struggle, there is no profession as pleasing as the legal
profession.
The legal ‘profession’ refers to lawyers, their training,
licensure, ethical responsibilities, client obligations, and other
practice-related matters. The profession is about the zealous, ethical representation
of individual clients. Lawyers also enter into a social compact to represent
society by defending the rule of law. Legal practice is the differentiated
legal expertise, judgment, and skills possessed by some but not all lawyers.
Parameter of the profession should ensure adherence to ethical and practice
canons on behalf of individual clients and society at large. Legal practice was
once synonymous with legal delivery. Law was about legal expertise and nothing
else, so lawyers were well-suited to define and enforce practice standards. The
global financial crisis and remarkable advances in technology changed the way
goods and services are bought and sold. Even the insular, staid, conservative,
self-regulated legal industry could not immunize itself from these powerful
socio-economic forces. The post-crash, tech-enabled business community engaged
in serious belt-synching and adopted a more with less mantra.
This impacted the delivery of legal services in several ways.
Technology has played a significant role in altering legal delivery. Machines
are not replacing lawyers, but technology is casting a bright light on what
tasks require licensed attorneys, the expertise and level of experience needed,
the appropriate provider, the resources, human and/or machine, they collaborate
with, and the price. Many legal services have morphed into products, and
delivery is about efficiency and measurable outcome, not labor intensity and
hours billed or origination.
American Jurist and Judge Benjamin Cardozo in his lectures on
The Nature of the Judicial Process observed that “The judge even when he is
free, is still not wholly free. He is not to innovate at pleasure. He is not a
knight-errant roaming at will in pursuit of his own ideal of beauty or of
goodness. He is to draw his inspiration from consecrated principles.” As anyone
who has been unexpectedly served with notice of a lawsuit can attest, dealing
with a legal matter can be confusing, frustrating, and perhaps a bit scary. The
practice of law requires attorneys to listen to the problems their clients are
experiencing. Problems must be analyzed in light of the applicable legal
principles, so the attorney can explain the client’s options going forward. A
significant portion of the practice of law is dedicated to this exercise of
providing legal advice, or “client counseling” as it is often called. Contract
disputes, automobile accidents, medical malpractice, and other such cases often
result in litigation, meaning the parties file a lawsuit and use the court system
to settle their differences.
These matters are handled by attorneys who specialize in
adversarial legal proceedings. Professional litigators are skilled at putting
pressure on the opposing party as a means of achieving their client’s goals.
They also know how to deliver persuasive arguments to trial judges, and how to
win over juries by using the evidence to create empathy for their client and
disdain for the other party. A large majority of the attorneys who appear in
court on a regular basis are involved in the practice of criminal law.
Prosecutors work on behalf of the government, pursuing justice against people
who break the law. On the other side, criminal defense attorneys represent the
accused. They work to protect the constitutional rights of their clients and to
make sure the police do not overstep their bounds as they investigate
wrongdoing. Much like civil litigators, criminal defense attorneys identify and
attack weaknesses in the opposing side’s case, using the law to obtain the best
result possible for their clients. The history of law is the working out of how
the law has progressed and why it transformed. Legal antiquity is meticulously
allied to the expansion of elaborations and is set in the wider framework of
social antiquity.
Among definite jurists and historians of legal course, it has
been seen as the recording of the evolution of laws and the methodological
enlightenment of how these laws have evolved with the view of better
understanding the origins of various legal concepts, some consider it a branch
of intellectual history. Twentieth-century historians have viewed legal
antiquity in a more contextualized manner more in line with the thinking of
societal historians. They have beheld at legal institutions as complex systems
of rules, players, and symbols and have seen these elements interact with
society to change, adapt, resist or promote certain aspects of civic culture.
Such legal historians have tended to analyze case histories from the
constraints of social science inquiry, using statistical methods, analyzing
class distinctions among litigants, petitioners, and other players in various
legal processes. By scrutinizing case outcomes, transaction costs, number of
settled cases they have begun an analysis of legal institutions, practices,
procedures, and briefs that give us a more complex picture of law and society
than the study of jurisprudence, case law and civil code can achieve. The
development of the legal profession has received a lot of devotion from eminent
scholars. This can be seen in Paul Brand’s “The Origins of the English Legal
Profession”, and J.H. Baker ’ s “The Legal Profession and The Common Law –
Historical Essays”. In Peter Coss, Thomas Wright’s Political Songs of England,
the following verse occurs: “Attorneys in-country, they get silver for naught; they
make men begin what they never had thought; and when they come to the ring,
they hope if they can.
All they can get that way, they think all is won for them with
skill. No man should trust them, so false are they in the bile.” A law endorsed
in 204BC barred Roman advocates from taking fees, but the law was widely
overlooked. The ban on fees was eliminated by Emperor Claudius, who legalized
advocacy as a profession and allowed the Roman advocates to become the first
lawyers who could practice openly, but he also imposed a fee ceiling of 10,000
sesterces. This was deceptively not much money; the Satires of Juvenal
complained that there was no money in working as an advocate. Like their Greek
contemporaries, early Roman advocates were trained in rhetoric, not law, and
the judges before whom they argued were also not law-trained. But very early
on, unlike Athens, Rome developed a class of authorities who were learned in
the law, known as jurisconsults. Jurisconsults were wealthy proletarians who
dabbled in law as an intellectual hobby; they did not make their Principal
living from it. They gave legal opinions on legal issues to all comers. Roman
judges and governors would routinely consult with an advisory panel of jurisconsults
before rendering a decision, and advocates and ordinary people also went to
jurisconsults for legal opinions. Thus, the Romans were the first to have a
class of people who spent their days thinking about legal problems, and this is
why their law became so “precise, detailed, and technical.”
During the Roman Republic and the early Roman Empire,
jurisconsults and advocates were unregulated, since the former were
proletarians and the latter were technically illegal. Any resident could call
himself an advocate or a legal expert, though whether people believed him would
depend upon his personal reputation. This changed once Claudius legalized the
legal profession. By the surprise of the Byzantine Empire, the legal profession
had become well-established, heavily regulated, and highly stratified. The
centralization and bureaucratization of the profession were deceptively gradual
at first but accelerated during the reign of Emperor Hadrian.
At the same time, the jurisconsults went into decline during the
imperial period. In the words of Fritz Schulz, “by the fourth century, things
had changed in the eastern Empire: advocates now were really lawyers.” For
example, by the fourth century, advocates had to be enrolled on the bar of a
court to argue before it, they could only be attached to one court at a time,
and there were restrictions (which came and went depending upon who was
emperor) on how many advocates could be enrolled at a particular court. By the
380s, advocates were studying law in addition to rhetoric in 460, Emperor Leo
enforced a compulsion that new advocates seeking admission had to produce
testimonials from their instructors; and by the sixth century, a regular course
of legal study perpetual about four years was compulsory for admission.
Claudius’s fee ceiling lasted all the way into the Byzantine
period, though by then it was measured at 100 solidi. Of course, it was broadly
evaded, either concluded demands for maintenance and expenses or a sub rosa
barter transaction. The latter was cause for expulsion. The notaries
(tabelliones) appeared in the late Roman Empire. Like their modern-day
descendants, the civil law notaries, they were responsible for drafting wills,
conveyances, and contracts. They were ubiquitous and most townships had one. In
Roman times, notaries were broadly considered to be inferior to advocates and
jurisconsults. After the fall of the western Empire and the onset of the Dark
Ages, the legal profession of Western Europe collapsed. As James Brundage has
explained: “no one in Western Europe could properly be described as a
professional lawyer or professional canonists in anything like the modern sense
of the term ‘professional.” However, from 1150 onward, a small but increasing
number of men became experts in canon law but only in furtherance of other
occupational goals, such as serving the Roman Catholic Church as priests.
From 1190 to 1230, however, there was a conclusive shift in
which some men began to practice canon law as a lifelong profession in itself.
The legal profession’s return was marked by the renewed pains of church and
state to regulate it. In 1231 two French councils mandated that lawyers had to
swear an oath of admission before practicing before the bishop’s courts in
their regions, and a similar oath was promulgated by the papal legate in London
in 1237. During the same decade, Frederick II, the emperor of the Kingdom of
Sicily, imposed a similar oath in his civil courts. By 1250 the nucleus of a
new legal profession had clearly formed. The new trend towards
professionalization culminated in a controversial proposal at the Second
Council of Lyon in 1275 that all ecclesiastical courts should require an oath
of admission. Although not adopted by the council, it was highly influential in
many such courts throughout Europe. The civil courts in England also joined the
trend towards professionalization; in 1275 a statute was enacted that
prescribed punishment for professional lawyers guilty of deceit, and in 1280
the mayor’s court of the city of London promulgated regulations concerning
admission procedures, including the administering of an oath. In England, the
charge at the door of lawyers has been regulated since the middle of the 13th
century.
In the late 13th century, three critical regulations were
adopted – (a) the Statute of Westminster I, chapter 29 (1275); (b) The London
Ordinance of 1280; and (c) the Ordinance of 1292. During the medieval period,
additional regulations were enacted, called the Statute. In addition, judges
have always used their inherent power to control the admission of lawyers and
check their misconduct which was appreciated on a higher scale. Now, one of the
twisting circumstances, The lawyers were disqualified from the principal Inns
of Court in the 16th century, and in 1739 they formed a professional group
called “Society of Gentleman-Practicers in the Courts of Law and Equity”.
Thus, the Law Society was born, though it was not until 1986
that the Law Society formed a committee to collect and draft principles of
professional conduct. Now there exists the Guide to Professional Conduct of
Solicitors reflecting the ideals of modern solicitors as well. Both twigs of
the English legal profession had the same core duties over the centuries of
litigation: fairness, competence, loyalty, confidentiality, reasonable fees,
and service to the poor. Nicholas, in his prominent book, “Introduction to
Roman law”, stated that the Roman jurists were not paid for their work, but
were supposed to function due to a keen sense of public service. In Europe, lawyers
were under an oath, which was an essence, a condensed code of legal ethics. In
France, lawyers had to take an oath which included a pledge of care, diligence,
and an agreement to support only just causes.
In France, the oaths were taken by ecclesiastical lawyers and
the French legal tradition had a lasting influence even outside France in
Switzerland and other parts of Europe. The concept of a lawyer as an “officer
of the Court” arises from the Roman idea of a lawyer being an ‘advocates, who
when called upon by the praetor to assist in the cause of a client, was
solemnly reprimanded to “avoid artifice and circumlocution”.
The Legal Profession is an important limb of the equipment for
the administration of justice. Without a well-organized profession of law, the
courts would not be in a position to administer justice effectively as the
indication in favor or against the parties to a suit cannot be properly marshalled,
facts cannot be properly articulated and the best legal arguments in support or
against the case of the parties cannot be put forth before the court. A
well-organized system of judicial administration assumes a properly equipped
and efficient Bar. As far as the Republic of India is concerned, the history of
the legal profession in India can be outlined back to the formation of the
First British Court in Bombay in 1672 by then Governor Aungier. The admission
of attorneys was placed in the hands of the Governor-in-Council and not with
the Court. Prior to the establishment of the Mayor’s Courts in 1726 in Madras
and Calcutta, there were no legal practitioners. In the Charter of 1726, which
established the Mayor’s Courts at the three Presidency Towns, no specific
facility was made laying down any particular qualifications for the persons who
would be entitled to act or plead as legal practitioners in these courts.
Presumably, it was left to these courts to regulate this matter by rules of
practice which these courts were authorized to frame. No change was effected in
this position when a fresh Charter was issued in 1753. No systematized legal
profession came into being in the Presidency Towns during the period of the
mayor’s Courts. Those who practiced law were bereft of any legal training or
any knowledge of the law. They had embraced the profession in the absence of
whatever better to do. Quite a few of these so-called lawyers were the
dismissed retainers of the Company.
The first concrete step in the direction of organizing a legal
profession in India was taken in 1774 when the Supreme Court was established at
Calcutta. The Regulating Act of 1773, empowered the Supreme Court to frame
rules of procedure as it thought necessary for the administration of justice
and due execution of its powers. Under CI.11 of its Charter, the Supreme Court
was permitted to approve, admit and enrol such and so many Advocates and
Attorneys-at-law, as to the Court shall deem fit. Attorneys of record were to
be authorized to appear and plead and act for the suitors in the Supreme Court.
The court was to have the power to remove any Advocate or Attorney on a
reasonable cause. No other person whatever, but Advocates or Attorneys so
admitted and enrolled, were to be permissible to appear and plead, or act in
the Court for or on behalf of such suitors.
Thus the persons eligible to practice before the Supreme Court
could be Advocates and Attorneys. The term “Advocate” at the time extended only
to the English and the Irish barristers and the members of the faculty of
Advocates in Scotland. The expression “Attorneys” then meant only British
Attorneys or Solicitors. As CI.11 of the Charter prohibited any other person
whatsoever to appear and plead or act, it would appear that the Calcutta
Supreme Court was, from its very inception, a completely exclusive preserve for
members of the British legal profession, namely, the British Barristers,
Advocates, and Attorneys. The home-grown Indian legal practitioner had no entry
in this Court. The Charter of 1774 introduced the British system of legal
practice in Calcutta. The parallel position obtained in the two other Supreme
Courts at Bombay and Madras. Thus, in the three Supreme Courts, the only
persons who were entitled to practice were the British Barristers, Advocates,
and Attorneys. The Indians had no right to appear before these Courts. This
continued to be the position all through the existence of these Courts. Thus,
the two grades of the legal practice became separate and detached as they were
in England. Remarking on the position prevailing at this time, the Supreme
Court of India observed in Aswini Kumar Ghosh vs Arbind Bose: “Though the
Supreme Court was given by the Charter Acts and the Letters Patent establishing
them, the power to enroll advocates who could be authorized by the rules to act
as well as to plead in the Supreme Courts, Rules were made empowering advocates
only to appear and plead and not to act, while attorneys were enrolled and
authorized to act and not to plead.
In the Sadder courts and the courts subordinate thereto,
pleaders who obtained a certificate from those courts were allowed both to act
and plead.” In 1861, legislation was passed by the British Parliament to
establish High Courts at Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay. At this time, there were
in existence three bodies of practitioners in the Supreme Courts and, the Sadar
Adalats-Advocates, Attorneys, and Vakils. CI9 of the Letters Patent of 1865 of
the High Court of Calcutta empowered the Court “to approve, admit and enroll
such and so many Advocates, Vakils and Attorneys as to the said High Court
shall deem fit.” These persons were “authorized to appear for the suitors of
the High Court, and to plead or to act, or to plead and act for the said
suitors, according to as High Court may by its rules and directions determine,
and subject to such rules and directions.” CI.10 of the Letters Patent ran as
follows: “the said High Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal shall
have the power to make rules for the qualification and admission of proper
persons to be advocates, Vakeels, and Attorneys-at-law of the said High Court
and shall be empowered to remove or to suspend from practice, on reasonable
cause, the said Advocates, Vakeels, or Attorneys-at-law; and no person
whatsoever, but such Advocates, Vakeels or Attornies shall be allowed to act or
to plead for on behalf of any suitor”. Similar provisions were made in the
Charters of the High Courts of Bombay and Madras.
The admission of Vakeels to practice before these High Courts
put an end to a domination which the Barristers had enjoyed in the Supreme
Courts preceding the High Courts. This very much increased the practice and
prestige of the Indian Lawyers by giving them opportunities however achieved
without some struggle. The Commissioners appointed to arrange the merger of the
Sadar Adalat and the Supreme Court had suggested that the proposed High Court
benches be exclusively British and that the bar is open only to the Barristers.
But, this suggestion was opposed by several persons on the ground that the
exclusion of Indians would nourish class antipathies and injure “at once the
state and the individual by depriving the public of the service of the ablest
men, preventing wholesome competition, and unduly exalting some without
reference to their personal merits and depressing others.” According to the
rules framed by the Chartered High Courts, speaking broadly, there were three
categories of legal practitioners: Attorneys, Advocates, and Vakils. Advocates
were mainly the Barristers of England or Iceland or the members of the faculty
of Advocates of Scotland. The Vakils were Indian Practitioners. To inaugurate
with, on the Original side of the High Courts, only Advocates were entitled to
appear and plead, on the instruction of Attorneys. On the original site of the
High Court, solicitors, and Advocates remain distinct. This diversity in the
role of legal specialists was continued under the notion that the High Courts,
in the exercise of its Ordinary original Jurisdiction, was the successor of the
Supreme Court. On the other hand, the Advocates were entitled both to act and
plead on the Appellate Side of the High Court and its subordinate courts. This
was because of the feeling that the High Court, on its appellate side,
inherited the jurisdiction and powers of the Saddar Adalats Because of these
discrepancies, the Vakils were not allowed to act or plead on the Original
Side, but they could both act and plead on the Appellate Side.
The area of legal education is one where urgent steps need to be
taken to ensure that law students receive sufficient training to deal with the
rapidly evolving practice of law in India and abroad. It is well known that
there are numerous shortcomings, including issues that are generic to the
higher education space such as a teaching resources deficit, access to
knowledge databases and accepted practices, lack of monitoring and evaluation,
etc. While the top law schools in India have surmounted some of these problems,
there is a clear divide between these law schools and the significant majority
of law schools (and law students) that are struggling to ensure a basic level
of competence in the legal profession. The law as a profession has evolved
after thousands of years which, in no denial, is flourishing. Decided the
various stages of development has it come to the place of gratitude and social
acceptance! Globalization has had its own contribution to the development of
law as a profession. But with globalization and the trend, arrival on the
international for shortcomings have come to light which immediately needs
attention and address. The immense populace growth and emerging native spheres
have added to the growth of the profession and also to irreconcilable
shortcomings. Immense walks made, there still is massive room for evolution and
expansion of the profession. What is needed is a vision based on the way of
life as elaborated by the finest Jurist of India, Nana Bhoy Ardheshir
Palakhiwala in beautiful words as, “Education is at the heart of the matter.
Literacy is not enough. It is good to have a population which is able to read,
but infinitely better to have people able to distinguish what is worth
reading.”
Views are personal.
The author is an advocate at Common High Court of Jammu
&Kashmir & Ladakh.
Email ID : mansabshafiwadoo@yahoo.in