TY - JOUR
T1 - The Lawyer’s Professional Duty to Encourage Respect for—And to Improve—the Administration of Justice: Lessons from Failures by Attorneys General
AU - Martin, Andrew Flavelle
N1 - Andrew Flavelle Martin, "The Lawyer’s Professional Duty to Encourage Respect for—And to Improve—the Administration of Justice: Lessons from Failures by Attorneys General" (2023) 54:2 Ottawa L Rev 247.
PY - 2023/10/1
Y1 - 2023/10/1
N2 - The lawyer’s duty to encourage respect for the administration of justice remains largely amorphous and abstract. In this article, I draw lessons about this duty from historical instances in which Attorneys General inappropriately criticized judges. Not only are Attorneys General some of the highest-profile lawyers in the country, but they also face unique tensions and pressures that bring their duties as lawyers into stark relief. I focus on the two instances where law societies sought to discipline Attorneys General for such criticism of judges, as well as a more recent instance in which no discipline proceedings were pursued. I also consider the obligations of Attorneys General when other Ministers inappropriately criticize judges. I conclude that a lawyer must take all reasonable steps in the circumstances to confirm the factual and legal accuracy of any criticism of the judiciary; that law societies should allow reasonable but defined latitude for public criticism of judges; and that, where a client inappropriately criticizes the judiciary, their lawyer must make good-faith efforts to urge the client to discontinue and apologize for such criticism—and if those efforts are unsuccessful, the lawyer must repudiate that criticism themselves or withdraw.
AB - The lawyer’s duty to encourage respect for the administration of justice remains largely amorphous and abstract. In this article, I draw lessons about this duty from historical instances in which Attorneys General inappropriately criticized judges. Not only are Attorneys General some of the highest-profile lawyers in the country, but they also face unique tensions and pressures that bring their duties as lawyers into stark relief. I focus on the two instances where law societies sought to discipline Attorneys General for such criticism of judges, as well as a more recent instance in which no discipline proceedings were pursued. I also consider the obligations of Attorneys General when other Ministers inappropriately criticize judges. I conclude that a lawyer must take all reasonable steps in the circumstances to confirm the factual and legal accuracy of any criticism of the judiciary; that law societies should allow reasonable but defined latitude for public criticism of judges; and that, where a client inappropriately criticizes the judiciary, their lawyer must make good-faith efforts to urge the client to discontinue and apologize for such criticism—and if those efforts are unsuccessful, the lawyer must repudiate that criticism themselves or withdraw.
KW - Administration of justice
KW - Attorneys General
KW - professional duty
KW - professional responsibility
KW - legal ethics
UR - https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/1992
M3 - Article
VL - 54
JO - Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
JF - Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
IS - 2
ER -