Law is a Jealous Mistress: Time Commitment for Lawyers. - YouTube

Channel: Learn Law Better

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Wondering if law school and the practice of law is for you?
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Want to learn more about the time commitment needed to practice law?
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Today I have collaborated with Michael Hackard, a successful attorney who has practiced law
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for over 40 years.
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Hello lawlings, this is Professor Beau Baez.
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Today I am sharing a video created by Michael Hackard, who is going to talk about the dedication
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needed to practice law—I will place his bio and description below,
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along with a link to his YouTube channel.
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After his message, today’s bonus law fact is about the extreme British lawyer,
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who studied law 16 hours a day and gave up all entertainment.
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Hi, I'm Mike Hackard.
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Our legal careers have series of firsts.
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First job, first meeting with a client, first day in court, and of course, the first of the first:
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our first day in law school.
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Before I go on, don't forget to the like button if you enjoy this episode, and click the subscribe button
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and the bell if you don't want to miss any future episodes.
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Lawyers remember their first day at law school.
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We remember emotional things.
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And whether conscious or subliminal, that first day was emotional.
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So, I'll go back into my own memory. It's a day of firsts.
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It's our first day of class.
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We're sitting in our law school's largest auditorium.
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We two hundred first-year law students await the first words from our first law professors.
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The opening act to our chosen profession.
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I look around, and recognize only one person, the Dean of the law school.
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His reputation proceeds him.
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Presiding judge of our local superior court while only in his mid-thirties.
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Bar teacher to some of California's most famous luminaries.
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Best friend to America's most famous attorney actor.
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Legal advisor to our state's rich and powerful.
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Mentor to a future United States Supreme Court Justice.
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And now, on that first day, a legal sage.
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Sharing the foundation of his legal career with a few hundred first year law students.
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The law is a jealous mistress.
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The Dean said it. He didn't tell us to remember it, but I did.
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I was twenty-three years old and newly married.
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I couldn't say much about a jealous mistress then, and after forty-eight years of marriage I still can't.
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Still, I got the point, and later learned the source of the quotation, Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story.
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Justice Story's quote, made long before any of us sitting there were born, was a little longer than the Dean's.
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"The law is a jealous mistress, and requires long and constant courtship.
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It is not to be won by trifling favors but by lavish homage."
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The mistress described by judge Story is pretty demanding.
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The Dean's wisdom, or warning, however you take it, proved true early in my law school career.
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And it's still holds true many decades later.
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The decision to have a long and constant courtship is a choice.
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It's a choice not made by all law students, lawyers, or even judges.
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And it might simply be a question of lessening life's tensions between professional and personal life.
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Or, waning exuberance for an early career choice.
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It might even be a frustration, that conquering a particular subject matter, can allude us.
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The, what we know, know what we don't know, and don't know what we don't know
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present challenges to exercising good counsel to those whom we serve.
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Particularly the don't know what we don't know, part of the trilogy.
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That's the part that can bite us.
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This is like our best laid 2020 plans that evaporate in a world pandemic.
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We didn't expect to be working from home, seeing our court houses closed.
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Seeing cases timed for resolution kicked into an unknown future.
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When crises present themselves, our personal aspirations to be better, to do better, are critical.
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The quest for knowledge and for good judgment, however interrupted,
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is a continuing and meaningful journey.
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Early, even late pronouncements, of mission accomplished often boomerang.
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Proverb's wisdom, some three thousand years old:
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That pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.
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Still rings true.
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Law's demand for lavish homage doesn't disappear with age.
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So I pass on to you that which was passed on to me.
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Excellence in law and lawyering is a long and constant courtship.
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A courtship that lasts throughout our professional lives.
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Our calling, our career can be gratifying and a source for much good.
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If it is merely a job, it's rewards will be mere.
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Now, for today’s bonus law fact.
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Michael discussed Justice Joseph Story’s jealous mistress analogy.
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Let me share the first half of that quote, which deals with a more extreme dedication
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to the law than the jealous mistress:
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“I will not say with Lord Hale, that “the law will admit of no rival,
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and nothing to go even with it….”
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In other words, complete and total dedication.
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The person behind this quote was Lord Matthew Hale, a noted 17th century English jurist,
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who was completely committed to the law.
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After college, he was required to study law for two years, which he did by reading law
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for 16 hours a day.
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During that time he stopped going to any form of entertainment as he found it clouded his
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judgment.
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When he wanted entertainment, he spent time reading the histories of England in Latin.
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Thankfully, the practice of law is not that extreme today, so enjoy some entertainment
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from time to time.
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New videos every other Wednesday.
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If you liked this video please like and share it, then hit the subscribe and bell buttons
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so you can become a better student and a better lawyer.