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Are Lawyers Getting Dumber?

Last week, BloombergBusiness' Natalie Kitroeff had a piece with a title sure to grab your attention: "Are Lawyers Getting Dumber?" However, the piece is really about a stupendous drop in the rate of law school graduates who are passing the bar exam. For example, bar passage rates dropped by 9 percentage points or more in Delaware, Iowa, Minnesota, Oregon, Tennessee and Texas in 2014.

National Conference of Bar Examiners' Erica Moeser says the student body that sat for the July 2014 exam were less prepared than the body that sat for the July 2013 exam. She told Kitroeff "underqualified law grads don’t deserve to pass the bar just because they earned a J.D. Her role, she says, is to protect consumers."

However, some critics point to the glitch in the ExamSoft software that cause thousands of test takers to get error messages when trying to upload their exams in 2014. Yet pass rates were down across the board in states that used ExamSoft and those that didn't, Kitroeff reports.

Moeser also argues that law schools have lowered their standards to admit students who aren't going to qualify for the bar: "''You’ve got this underclass in law schools who are really keeping the lights on but not reaping the benefit.'"

Judge Orders Lawyer to Pay $236,000 Law School Debt

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 06/16/2015 - 17:54

Here's a piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about a lawyer's law school debt:

Law school students learn how to argue over contracts. But that doesn't necessarily mean they can litigate their way out of a contract to pay their law school loans. One Branford-based attorney is facing this reality after a federal judge ruled that, more than two decades after receiving his law degree, he owes the federal government more than $236,000 for his legal education.

Gregory P. Cohan went to the University of Bridgeport Law School—now the Quinnipiac School of Law—and got his Connecticut bar license in 1993. But he hasn't made a payment on his law school loans since 2001. A few years before that, he consolidated his federal law school loans under the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program, which ties monthly repayment amounts to an individual's income. After 25 years, any balance left on loans is forgiven.

According to Cohan's calculations, his payment should have been about $100 a month. But the government puts the number at $300.

Cohan argued in court papers that because the federal Department of Education incorrectly calculated his monthly repayment, the government materially breached his student-loan agreement, made it impossible for him to pay back his loans and thus discharged his duty to perform under the contract.

"The defendant, the non-breaching party, is entitled to the benefit of the bargain," Cohan wrote. "The plaintiff agreed to reasonable, affordable payments for [a] period of 25 years, then forgiveness of any unpaid balance. The parties agreed that defendant would not be charged more than he could afford to pay, and that he would not have an unmanageable debt hanging over his head for the rest of his life."

The disagreement stems from how Cohan's income was calculated. Cohan reported that his 2001 income was $14,605. But Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Sciarrino, who handled the case for the federal government, took issue with Cohan's calculations. Because income tax filings actually reflect the previous year's income, Sciarrino said Cohan couldn't officially compute his 2001 salary in December of that year. She said he should have used his adjusted gross income from 2000, which was $26,960. That would have put his loan repayment burden at $310.17 per month, she said.

U.S. District Judge Jeffrey A. Meyer acknowledged that it was within the government's discretion to use the alternative documentation Cohan submitted for his annual income instead of his actual tax returns. But there isn't any evidence in the record, Meyer said, that Cohan even tried to pay the $100 a month that he believed he actually owed beginning in 2002.

"Defendant has presented no evidence to support his statement at oral argument that the government 'made it impossible for [him] to make the payments' or that he was unable to calculate his payments because he lacked access to the Federal Register," Meyer said. "Defendant is and was a practicing attorney. In fact, this debt arises directly as a result of his legal training. … He has provided no reason why he could not have done his research and mailed payments many years ago."

When Cohan consolidated his loans in August 1999, he owed $97,658.55. Now he has been ordered to pay $236,535. That's because while the case has been pending, the unpaid principal balance has been accruing at 8.25 percent every year.

The federal government declared that Cohan was in default on Sept. 17, 2002, and his entire loan balance became due 270 days after payment was due at the end of 2001. The government did not file to collect on Cohan's loans until May 2011.

Sciarrino noted that Cohan was required to pay under the income contingent repayment plan because direct consolidation loans must be repaid that way if a borrower has defaulted on the underlying loans. Cohan defaulted on his underlying loans in the 1990s, according to the opinion.

Cohan did not respond to a request for comment. The U.S. Attorney's Office declined to comment.

Fewer Graduates Pass California Bar Exam

Less than half of law school graduates who took the July 2014 bar exam in California passed, the Los Angeles Times' Jason Song reports: "The 48.6% pass rate in California is a drop of nearly 7 percentage points from the previous year; nearly 8,500 people took the test in July. The last time the passage rate dipped below half was in 2005." Brian Z. Tamanaha, a critic of legal education and a law professor at the Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, said that the decrease in successful bar-exam test-takers could because the number of applicants to law school have decreased and schools are accepting a higher percentage of applicants. Passage rates have fallen in other states too, Song further reports.

Iowa Considers Eliminating Bar Exam For Bar Admission

The Iowa Supreme Court is considering removing the bar examination as a requirement for bar admission for graduates of the two law schools in Iowa, the Des Moines Register reports. One of the arguments in favor of the elimination of the bar exam is that graduates wouldn't have to wait months in order to start working as a lawyer. One law-school official told the Register that, by his calculation, graduates would reduce their debt level by 30 percent by avoiding the delay of their entry into their profession as well as avoiding the need to borrow the costs of studying for the bar exam.

Justice Kagan: 'Not a Good Thing' For Supreme Court To All Hail From Harvard, Yale

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan, speaking at the University of Alabama School of Law last week, said the nation's highest court is a "'very coastal, urban and elite law school court,' alluding to the Yale and Harvard pedigrees of most of the jurists, who are also predominantly from communities on the East or West coasts. 'That seems kind of crazy to me and not a good thing,' she said," according to The Tuscaloosa News.

Many have suggested that Supreme Court nominees should be graduates of law schools other than Harvard and Yale.

Law School Loses Defamation Claim Against Plaintiffs Lawyers

Thomas M. Cooley Law School has lost its claims of defamation, tortious interference with business relations, breach of contract and false light at the summary judgment stage against plaintiffs lawyers who posted on-line to solicit law-school clients and suggested in their proposed complaint that the law school used "'Enron-style'" accounting techniques, according to the opinion.

U.S. District Judge Robet J. Jonker of the Western District of Michigan said in his opinion that the law school is a limited purpose public figure involved in a public controversy about the value of a legal education for students. Even President Obama has weighed in on the future of legal education, the judge said in his opinion. A reasonable jury could not find by clear and convincing evidence that the defendants acted with actual malice, or reckless disregard for the truth of their statements, the judge said.

According to the opinion, the judge also found that many of the statements are protected exaggeration: "At least two statements fall within the protected category of exaggeration or hyperbole. These statements include the speculation that 'most likely schools like Thomas Cooley will continue to defraud unwitting
students unless held civilly accountable' and that Cooley 'blatantly misrepresents and manipulates its employment statistics ... employing the type of ‘Enron-style’ accounting techniques that would leave
most for-profit companies facing the long barrel of a government indictment and the prospect of paying a
substantial criminal fine,'" the judge said. "Further, the statement that 'Cooley grossly inflates its graduates’
reported mean salaries' may not merely be protected hyperbole, but actually substantially true."

Read the full opinion here: http://www.abajournal.com/files/Opinion_Granting_SJ_Motion.pdf

One blog notes "plaintiffs losing defamation law suits tend to look a lot worse coming out of the suit than they did going in": http://kevin.lexblog.com/2013/09/30/defamation-suits-versus-social-media...

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