The American Legal Profession




Read the text about people who are in legal profession to understand what information is new for you.

LEGAL PROFESSION(ALS)

The legal profession is changing and responding positively to the outside world. The future demands greater professional responsibility and self-management skills to succeed. The better and informed future lawyers — judges, prosecutors, notaries, investigators in Belarus; barristers and solicitors in the United Kingdom — are, the more aware they are of their strengths and ambitions, the more they will be able to manage future career opportunities.

The legal profession is driven both by the changing needs of its clients and by government policy and new legislative frameworks. Lawyers need to ensure that services and standards are properly regulated, maintained and enhanced.

The legal profession is increasingly international — global economy, the European Union influences different aspects of lives of a European lawyer. Many lawyers deal with international business and clients now. In the UK, it tends to be solicitors who work for international law firms, but barristers may also be representing international clients. Increased competition is a growing aspect of the legal profession. Clients look for high-quality specialist services. Within the legal profession in the UK there is a healthy competition between solicitors and barristers. Information technology is an inescapable fact of modern life. You can’t get away from IT — you ought to be, and need to be, computer literate. You have to depend on relevant IT solutions — the legal profession here is no exception. Expect to make good use of specialist software packages and other IT services for research and client support as part of your everyday job.

As a prospective lawyer you will need to consider your options carefully:

– where do I train

— what is the best course and training opportunity for me?

– what branch of the profession and areas of law do I eventually want to practice in and what are the opportunities?

You should be starting to ask yourself these questions now. Remember that as well as academic excellence, employers place a premium on good communication and teamwork skills combined with professional awareness.

 

 

Mark the statements T/F (true/ false). Use your knowledge and the information from the texts ABOVE.

1. A barrister and a solicitor are both qualified lawyers in the UK.

2. If you have any kind of legal question you should consult a barrister.

3. A solicitor cannot speak in a higher court.

4. A barrister in the UK is an independent qualified lawyer.

5. There are more solicitors than barristers.

6. A barrister may become a judge, but solicitor can not.

7. If you want to work for a law company and receive a regular salary you should become a solicitor.

Vocabulary Check

Task 1. Fill in the gaps with the correct prepositions.

1. The legal profession is divided … two branches.

2. Both barristers and solicitors are professions held … high regard.

3. The training and career structures … the two kinds of lawyers are quite separate.

4. If a person has a legal problem she or he is … trouble or concerned … a question of inheritance or transfer … property he will go to a solicitor.

5. Solicitors deal … all the day-to-day work of preparing legal documents … buying and selling houses, they do the legal work involved … conveyancing, probate, divorce.

6. Solicitors work … court cases for their clients outside the court.

7. Solicitors have the right to speak … the lowest Courts.

8. When Solicitors have passed all the necessary exams they may apply … the Law Society to be “admitted”, then they can start business … their own.

9. Barristers are experts … the interpretation of the law.

10. Barristers advise … really difficult matters.

11. Solicitors engage a barrister to whom they hand … the task of representing the client … the court.

12. Barristers spend a lot of time … paper work apart from their actual appearances … court where they wear wigs and gowns in keeping … the extreme formalities of the proceeding.

13. District judges are responsible … procedural steps in court proceedings.

14. District judges’ administrative functions have now been transferred … substantial staffs of clerks and bailiffs.

15. Judges themselves are not a separate profession: they are barristers who have demonstrated competence … litigation.

16. Closely related … judicial independence is the doctrine of judicial immunity.

17. A federal magistrate judge is a full-time judicial office, although in some courts it is filled … a part-time basis

18. A number of reforms have been suggested: solicitors could be given a full right … audience in all courts, all barristers could be permitted to form partnership … solicitors.

Task 2. Produce the whole sentence in English.

1. (Юридическая профессия) in England is divided into two branches: barristers and solicitors.

2. Barristers and solicitors have their own (характерные функции и от- дельный аппарат управления).

3. The solicitor is (юрист широкого профиля).

4. Solicitors deal with all the day-to-day work of (подготовка юридических документов) for buying and selling houses, (составление завещаний).

5. Solicitors work on court cases of (развод, супружеские вопросы, возврат долгов, незначительные преступления).

6. In a civil action the solicitor has the right (выступать в низших судах).

7. Most barristers are (профессиональные адвокаты) but it is a mistake (считать барристера только адвокатом).

8. A student must pass a group of examinations (чтобы получить юридическую степень) and then to proceed to a vocational course.

9. Federal magistrate judges are (назначаются) by the court.

10. Barristers (консультируют) really difficult legal matters.

11. (Статусом королевского советника награждаются) about 30 counsellors a year by the Queen.

12. The judge is (председательствующий чиновник в суде).

13. The traditional function of judges is (применять существующие нормы права) to the case before them.

14. (После того, как все доказательства представлены) the judge summarizes the case for the jury.

15. Closely related to (судейской независимости) is the doctrine of (судейской неприкосновенности).

16. Federal magistrate judges (занимают должность) for eight years.

17. The magistrate judge is (уполномочен) to decide the case and (вынести окончательное судебное решение) in the name of the district court.

18. When you are your own boss you can (отказаться от дел или клиентов) when you disagree morally with the legal principles expensed by the clients.

19. Federal magistrate judges (выполняют) two kinds of functions.

20. During the apprenticeship students are taught how (ведутся предварительные расследования, составляются документы, осуществляется подготовка к слушанию дела

Task 4. Choose the correct item.

1. England is almost unique in having two different kinds of ….

a) barristers b) lawyers c) legal executives

2. If a person has a legal problem he will go to a ….

a) judge b) solicitor c) barrister

3. In a civil action solicitors have the right to speak in ….

a) the lowest Court b) the highest Court c) any court in between

4. … is a governing body of barristers.

a) Law Society b) The Bar c) The Institute of Legal Executives

5. Barristers are experts in … of the Law.

a) examining b) creating c) interpretation

7. The judges … new laws.

a) create b) summarize c) criticize

8. Magistrates are … by special committees.

a) appointed b) selected c) voted

9. All federal judges hold office during ….

a) good manners b) good studies c) good behaviour

10. Judges in the United States initially come to the bench after a … of professional

experience.

a) substantial number of years b) year c) vocational course

11. Most of the professional bodies who gave evidence including the Senate and the Law Society … fusion.

a) adopted b) opposed c) delayed

12. Each lawyer could … his own practice to the needs of his clients.

a) fit b) adjust c) correct

Task 1. Read the text “The American Legal Profession” and try to understand

its contents without consulting a dictionary.

The American Legal Profession

Technically there is no such thing as an “American lawyer”: every state admits its own, and a lawyer licensed to practice in Florida is strictly speaking a layperson in Alabama or Alaska.

The profession is, and always has been, quite diverse. There are many legal worlds. To begin with, there is the world of the big firm. These big firms recruit their lawyers from the “national” law schools – with big reputations and long traditions, like Harvard and Yale. We know in general what the work is: it includes securities law, antitrust law, bond issues, mergers, tax work, international trade. In both big and little firms, up to half the work could be described as “litigation”.

Another law practice is real estate: buying and selling houses or concluding elaborate deals for shopping centers, suburban developments, and office buildings. Estate work is also common to big firms and little firms alike. Big firms handle these affairs for captains of industry and for great old families. Middle-sized do the same for the medium-rich – manufacturers of plastic novelties, owners of restaurants, car-wash companies, apartment buildings. Small-town lawyers and solo practitioners handle farm estates. And so on.

Some branches of practice do tend toward specialization. There are lawyers who work on port trade, on chartering ships, on show business (“entertainment law”), on trademarks and copyrights. However, few lawyers are totally specialized. Big-firm lawyers cover many fields and many problems. But there are areas they definitely do not touch. One is divorce. It is the lawyers in smallish firms and in law clinics, and the solos, who handle “one-shot” clients – couples who want a divorce, victims of car crashes, people arrested for drunk driving. Some lawyers with one-shot clients struggle to make ends meet; others earn heaps of money.

Since the early nineteenth century, law has been a prominent way “to get ahead” in the society. For much of American history, a lawyer meant “white male.” Black lawyers were rare birds in American history. Not a single woman was admitted to the bar before the 1870s. Indeed, when women tried to break into this all-male club, they met resistance and reluctance, to say the least.

Opinions changed, but slowly and grudgingly. Equality of opportunity is not an easy goal to achieve, especially with regard to barriers of class. The cost of legal education is one of these barriers. Lawyers tend to come from the families of businessmen, teachers, professionals; they are not sons of grocery clerks or coal miners’ daughters. Over 73 percent of the practicing lawyers in Chicago came from “solidly middle-class or upper-middle-class-homes,” far more than if lawyers were selected from Chicago families at random. Many came from lawyerly or professional backgrounds not from working-class backgrounds.

There are law schools in every major city and in almost every state, These law schools are both different from each other and much the same. They are remarkably similar in curriculum and method. They also tend to impose the same general requirements: a college degree, and the Law School Admission Test (LSAT). But law schools are quite different in prestige, money and power – and in quality of faculty and students. The stronger older schools are able to “skim off the cream”. Harvard, Yale, Berkley, and Chicago can afford huge research libraries; small schools cannot.

Lawyers, like Americans in general, are joiners. They are united into a strong, permanent organization – the American Bar Association, the ABA, in short. There are also state, county, and city bar associations. But the ABA is still not an association of all American lawyers. No one has to join it though it has a huge membership.

Law and lawyers are expensive. Many people who want or need a lawyer have trouble paying the price. But the state provides a lawyer, free of charge “public defenders”, to anyone accused of a serious crime who cannot afford to pay on his own. For civil cases, the situation is more complicated. A few lawyers have always made it a practice to do some work free for poor clients.

 

Task 2. Mark the statements which are true.

1. An “American lawyer” is licensed to practice in any state of the country.

2. The number of people working in legal field is great

3. Big law firms prefer to employ specialists from the well-known law schools.

4. Most big firms do not deal with litigation.

5. Lawyers’ work includes antitrust law, international trade, tax work, bond issues, etc.

6. Real estate practice is the work which doesn’t interest big firms.

7. The social position of a client defines the firm which will handle the affair.

8. Nobody wants to deal with farm estates.

9. Specialization among lawyers is not very popular.

10. Practically there are no fields which big-firm lawyers do not touch upon.

11. The profession of a lawyer has always been a prestigious one and only for the white.

12. Not all lawyers are members of the American Bar Association.

 

Task 3. Complete the following sentences.

1. Big firms handle estate work for ….

2. Middle-sized firms do the work for the medium-rich – ….

3. Some lawyers specialize in ….

4. Small-firm lawyers and solos deal with ….

5. For many years of American history a lawyer meant ….

6. Women were not admitted ….

7. Equality of opportunity is not ….

8. Lawyers tend to come from ….

9. Law schools are similar in ….

10. But law schools are quite different in ….

11. American lawyers are united into ….

12. The state provides a lawyer, free of charge “public defenders”, to ….

 

Task 4. Write down the questions to which the words in italics are the answers.

1. A solicitor in Britain belongs to the profession of lawyers.

2. A solicitor prepares cases and submits them to barristers.

3. The Courts Act of 1971 opened a way for solicitors to become circuit judges in the Crown Court.

4. The division of the legal profession into solicitors and barristers is the result of a development which began in 1873 with the Judicature Act and was concluded in 1922 by the Solicitors Act which transferred disciplinary powers to the Law Society.

5. The judge takes no part in the jury’s decision as to guilt or innocence.

6. The number of judges is steadily increasing in Britain.

7. Law magistrates not professional judges generally preside over in the Magistrates’ Courts.

8. In the USA today there are more than 350.000 lawyers, two-thirds of them in private practice.

9. The main requirement for lawyers in Britain is to pass the Bar Final examination (for barristers) or the Law Society Final examination (for solicitors).

10. Barristers defend or prosecute in the English higher courts.

11. The highest level of barristers have the title QC (Queen’s Counsel).

12. Magistrates judge cases in lower courts. – ___________? – Yes, they do.

Task 5. Read the text below and think of the word which best fits each space.

Even lawyers with the same (1) ___ and professional title may (2) ___ doing very different kinds of work. Most towns in the United States, for example, have small (3) ___ of attorneys who are in daily contact (4) ___ ordinary people, giving advice and acting (5) ___ matters such as consumer affairs, traffic accident disputes and contracts for the (6) ___ of land. Some may also prepare defences for clients (7) ___ of crimes. However, in (8) ___ the United

States and other industrialized countries, lawyers are becoming more and (9) ___ specialized. Working in small firms lawyers now tend (10) ___ restrict themselves to certain kinds of work, and lawyers (11) ___ in large law firms or (12) ___ in the law department of a large commercial enterprise work on highly specific areas (13) ___ law. One lawyer may be employed (14) ___ a mining company just to (15) ___ contracts for the supply of coal. Another may work (16) ___ a newspaper advising the editors on libel matters. Another may

(17) ___ part of a Wall Street firm of over a hundred (18) ___ who specialize (19) ___ advising stockbrokers (20) ___ share transactions.

Task 6. Complete the newspaper article and the letter in reply to it. Who do you agree with – the judge or the writer of the letter? Express your idea in writing.

A.

A judge (order) an 82-year old man to pay £4.000 damages to a burglar who (try) to break into his house. Jack Levis (be) asleep in his house when he (hear) noises. He (pick) up his shotgun and went downstairs where he (find) Michael Phillips in the hall with a bag full of electrical equipment. Philips (claim) that because he (be) unarmed, he (put) the goods down and (raise) his hands when he (see) the shotgun. Levis, said Philips, (turn) to run out of the open front door, so he (shoot) him. Phillips (suffer) minor wounds to the legs. In the trial, the judge said despite the fact that Levis (defend) his own property, the shotgun (be) unlicensed and in any case, it (be) not acceptable for people to take the law into their own hands.

B.

Sir, I (write) in disbelief at the judgement passed on Jack Levies yesterday. In my opinion, it (be) absolutely unfair to make him pay for his act of self defence. In theory he (commit) an offence by firing an unlicensed shotgun and he should be prosecuted for this. But in practice the law should be more flexible. As far as I’m concerned, for a criminal to receive compensation for an injury sustained while carrying out a crime (be) quite outrageous.

Yours faithfully

Brian Forbes.

Task 7 Translate the following questions into English and give answers to them in writing.

1. Как давно профессия юриста разделена на две ветви: солиситоры и барристеры?

2. Какое общество регулирует работу юристов в Англии?

3. Почему количество юристов так быстро растет в стране?

4. Увеличивается или снижается стоимость юридических услуг в соответствии с инфляцией?

5. Изменилось ли что-нибудь в работе солиситоров и барристеров в Англии в последнее время?

6. Солиситоры или барристеры являются экспертами в толковании права?

7. Я хотел бы знать, носят ли женщины–барристеры парики в суде в соответствии с традицией?

8. Защищают или обвиняют английские барристеры людей в суде?

9. Интересно, существует ли специальная подготовка судей в Англии?

10. Кто получает звание Королевского адвоката?

11. Часто ли адвокат обсуждает возможность проиграть дело со своими клиентами?

12. Будет ли устранено разделение юристов Англии на две ветви? Когда это произойдет?

13. Вы когда-либо присутствовали на судебном заседании? Когда это было?



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