In Re Stephenson

511 P.2d 136, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 303
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1973
Docket1740
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 511 P.2d 136 (In Re Stephenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Stephenson, 511 P.2d 136, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 303 (Ala. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

This appeal has been taken from a decision of the Board of Governors (the Board) denying Clem Harrison Stephenson’s application for admission to the Alaska Bar Association under reciprocity *138 provisions. 1 Initially Stephenson’s application was denied for failure to meet the character requirements, as well as his alleged failure to have graduated from a law school. After a subsequent hearing, a hearing officer made findings that applicant was of good moral character and concluded that he was entitled to admission. The Board of Governors approved the hearing officer’s findings of fact but concluded that Stephenson was not entitled to be certified for admission to practice law in Alaska for the reason that

he does not satisfy all of the requirements of Alaska Bar Rule II, section 2(f) for admission without examination, in that he is not a graduate of a law school accredited by the American Bar Association, or a graduate of any accredited law school.

Stephenson attended Oklahoma State University for two semesters and studied law under a “tutorship program” in his father’s law office in Okemah, Oklahoma, from June 1931 to June 1934. As a “registered law student” he undertook the program as approved by the Oklahoma Bar Association. In applying to the Oklahoma bar he was required to list the subjects he had studied and the periods of time he had devoted to each. In 1934 he passed the Oklahoma bar examination and was admitted to practice in that state. He continued to practice law in Oklahoma until February 1969. Since March 1969 he has been a resident of Alaska.

Under the statutory requirements for admission to practice law in Alaska, Stephenson would be qualified for admission by reciprocity as AS 08.08.140(3) eliminates the requirement of graduation from a law school if the applicant “has been engaged in the active practice of the law for at least 10 years”. 2 Alaska Bar Rule II, section 2(f) 3 differed from the statute in re *139 quiring that the applicant “is a graduate of a law school accredited by the American Bar Association, or is a graduate of any accredited law school if he has been engaged in the active practice of law for at least ten years. . . Thus, even as to a 10-year practitioner, the bar rules require graduation from an “accredited law school”.

Stephenson contends that his clerkship in his father’s law office undertaken with the approval of the Oklahoma Bar Association, was tantamount to graduation from a law school accredited by the State of Oklahoma. While the term “accredited law school” which is undefined by the rules is vague, it is clear that a clerkship course of study could not be construed as coming within its definition. In fact, a principal reason for requiring graduation from an accredited law school would seem to be to distinguish such a requirement from that of a clerkship. In an accredited law school a student has the benefit of direct instruction under established curricula from professional teachers, as well as day-to-day association with other students. The exchange of ideas thus engendered adds greatly to the breadth of knowledge and understanding of the law, applicable ethics and techniques.

It would appear that the intent of the rule is to insure that any applicant has an adequate education without placing the impossible burden on the Board of examining the details of each applicant’s day-today studies. By adopting the “accreditation requirement”, the court has shifted the responsibility for daily supervision to the accrediting agencies and schools. If it relaxes the rule to include office study, the responsibility shifts back to the Board and the courts with resulting disparate standards and detriment to the quality of legal practitioners. The necessity of such “shorthand” tests requiring graduation from an accredited law school to insure the quality of the practicing bar, is ably discussed in Hackin v. Lockwood, 361 F.2d 499, 503 (9th Cir. 1966):

In determining whether Arizona’s educational requirement is arbitrary, the fact that Abraham Lincoln and Dean Roscoe Pound had no, or little, formal legal schooling is interesting, but not conclusive. Prior to the time restrictions on admission to the bar became almost universal, for every successful lawyer who had had no formal legal training, there have been scores of incompetent lawyers practicing law, to the detriment of the public. No lawyer who has donated his time and effort to bar disciplinary proceedings can conclude otherwise.

Thus, while there is no evidence that Stephenson’s education was in fact substandard, the public interest in seeing that all members of the bar have an adequate education is a valid basis for an "accredited schools” test, which insures that each applicant uniformly has performed the minimum required study. To adopt the position that law office study under an approved program would meet this test would do violence to the basic intent of the rule since there is no way to control that study in each individual office.

Moreover, it has been well established that educational standards such as those contained in the Alaska bar rule have a rational connection with an applicant’s fitness to practice law. A lawyer is required to advise clients, present arguments and make representations to the court on a wide variety of subjects and it is essential that he have an adequate education in order properly to perform his functions. We cannot say that the requirement of graduation from an “accredited law school” has no rational relationship to the fitness to practice law. 4 By this means the state may be assured that attorneys have had suitable training by qualified instructors so that as lawyers they will be capable of. adequately representing members of the pub- *140 lie. The exchange of ideas between classmates and teachers, the legal knowledge, and the sense of ethics acquired through meeting requirements for graduation from an accredited law school are all reasonably related to the state’s interest in seeing that those who hold themselves out to the public as attorneys at law, and thus as officers of the court, are properly qualified. On the other hand, it is practically impossible to adequately supervise a course of law pursued under a clerkship program. The applicant does not have the benefit of studying and exchanging ideas with a group of his peers, of learning from instructors specifically prepared to teach individual subjects and of establishing his qualifications before an impartial institution. While individuals trained only as clerks may, and have performed ably as attorneys, there is much greater assurance that minimum standards will have been acquired by requiring graduation from an accredited law school. It is for this reason that educational requirements for admission to the bar have long been approved in other jurisdictions. 5

Stephenson contends, however, that the Board had no authority to promulgate a rule conflicting with the requirements of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
511 P.2d 136, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-stephenson-alaska-1973.