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SUMMARY
Joseph W Planck refutes the statement that the Law is a jealous mistress, which was a
popular proverb among the Anglo-American law fraternity. He believed that the
statement was a libellous one on a great profession like law and was utterly false or a
fallacy. He put forward the views of lawyers and litterateurs who were eminent
authorities in their respective fields, who agreed to and disagreed to the fundamentals
of this statement/proverb.
He believed that the Lady Common Law does not like to lie alone, as believed by a
few eminent professionals. Instead he proposed that this venerable ghost be laid to
rest. He believed that law cannot be mastered in isolation. He said that the Lady
Common Law requires a host of bedfellows. Some of them are decidedly practical.
He was driving home the point that ultimately the purpose of law is to attain social
justice and therefore, it must be mastered along with other disciplines such as History,
Anthropology, Natural Science, Social Science, Political Science, Economics,
Psychology, and the like, which will help a student of law integrate the philosophy of
learning and life with practising law. Merely memorizing statues and law reports
without paying attention to the subject of Jurisprudence or Literature or Science is to
give a poverty stricken meaning to the subject of law. A lawyer must not merely store
the precedents of law in his knowledge bank but must possess the width of
comprehension, the serenity of a broad overall outlook of life and the catholicity of
compassion, which can be attained by gaining an overall knowledge of all aspects by
interacting with subject matter experts from all fields like Philosophy, Economics or
History to name a few.
In this chapter, he put forward the thoughts and views expressed by many eminent
lawyers and specialists from Juvenal4, a powerful Roman poet to Dean Leon Green5
of North-western University of the US to Sir Fredrick Macmillan6, a British Publisher,
widely respected names in the literary circles and among the fraternity of lawyers. He
concluded by saying that it is time for the law fraternity to bury the popular fallacy
1
An American state in mid-west America
2
Capital state of the US State of Michigan
3
The theory of philosophy of Law
4
Decimus Junius Juvenalis (Roman poet) (60?-140?), who specialised in the genre of satire
5
American legal realist (1888 – 1979)
6
Sir Fredrick Macmillan, British Publisher (1855 - 1936)
Question 1: Which sentence would you pick up if you were asked to name one
sentence from the text, best summing up the author’s intent?
Answer 1: Let us prepare a grave both wide and deep and respectfully inter this hoary
proverb, that, ‘ The Law Is a Jealous Mistress,’ to which we have so long paid lip
service. In the same sepulture belongs Thackeray’s7 lawyer. ‘Requiescat in pace8’. In
other words, he believed that it was time to bury the old proverb that the law is a
jealous mistress in a deep grave and give it a respectful burial, a proverb to which a
lot of allegiance has been paid in the past. In the same tomb he wanted that
Thackeray’s thoughts about this fallacy be also buried.
Question 2: Why does the author conclude that modern lawyers must be radical
scientist, economists and sociologists?
Answer 2: Joseph Planck feels that law as a subject cannot be learnt in isolation. He
agrees with the Dean Leon Green of the Northwest University Law School, who was
of the opinion that a student of Law cannot give little importance to his own language
and its literature because these are the subjects that have helped him to think and
articulate, and express an idea which is a primary requirement. If one is not adept in
the basic language required to communicate, how can an idea be brought forward? A
student needs to first have a command over the basics, that is in the subjects of
Government, economics and history for him to have a better understanding of law.
The natural sciences can help him understand the world in which he lives, in a better
way. This can give him radical powers to change his thinking process and help him
take up the cudgels of archaic thinking and break free from the prejudices thereof,
which will enable him to come out of his narrow vision of life. Psychology,
anthropology and sociology are other significant fields that would help a student of
law understand the importance of human behaviour and human welfare. Both these
are very important for a student to understand the complexities of practising law.
When one strives to acquire knowledge in governance, economics, sociology, one
understands the relations between human behaviour and the social justice much better.
Thus, the primary function of their profession, that is, human welfare, is engraved in
their purpose of practising law, which is understood once the philosophy of
integrating all the basics of all the core principles of life is learnt through the
knowledge gained thereof from studying natural sciences, psychology, sociology,
history and the like.
A student who learns law in isolation will end up gaining a myopic vision and will
not be able to keep pace with the changes of a society and thus would probably fail in
his profession. Lawyers today must be political scientists, economists and sociologists,
like Hamilton, Jay and Madison, who were eminent statesmen, practised law and
were the founding fathers of the USA.
7
William Makepeace Thackeray, an English novelist. (1811-1863)
8
Rest in peace
Question 4: Comment on the tone of the author at the end of the text.
Answer 4: Jospeh Planck completely opposes the popular saying among the
Anglo-American law fraternity that the Law is a jealous mistress and that law as a
subject likes to lie alone without any bedfellows. He gives many convincing
arguments put forward by eminent jurists and litterateurs to prove his point. He says
that a lip service has been paid to this proverb long enough and one should allow
this fallacy to die forever. At the end he logically and emphatically concludes by
saying that a wide and deep grave must be dug to bury the popular fallacy with an
epitaph on the tombstone that reads, ‘Requiescat in pace’ or Rest in Peace! He wants
to bury this fallacy and once and for all wants to put an end to this debate.
Reference:
1. Bhatnagar. R.P. (2016). . Law and Language. “In the Court”. ISBN:
978-93-5138-012-2. Bangalore. M.P.P House. pp.211-213
2. History.com Staff. (2009). “James Madison”. History.com. A&E Networks.
Retrieved on June 2, 2018 from
https://www.history.com/topics/us-presidents/james-madison
3. N. ( last updated on April 27, 2015). “Alexander Hamilton Biography” The
Biography.com website. A & E Television Networks. Retrieved on June2, 2018
from https://www.biography.com/people/alexander-hamilton-9326481
4. Planck, Joesph, W. (1938). The Law Is a Jelous Mistress: A Popular Fallacy.
A.B.A. J. 24 pp 166 Retrieved on June 2, 2018
fromhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/25713570?read-now=1&refreqid=excelsior%3
A3bff1864c99bd85ad23de6fa41cbc2b8&seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
14
An Irish barrister, Solicitor-General, Attorney-General and a judge for over 40 years (1831- 1920)
15
One among the works of English Jurist Charles Fearne published in 1772
16
Mr Paulus Pleydell, an advocate from Edinburgh in the novel Guy Mannering, who is an advocate representing
Colonel Mannering, who help Harry Bertram to get back the Scottish estate of Ellangowan
17
Scottish poet and historical novelist (1771 - 1832)
18
A novel by Sir Walter Scott. The plot concerns the attempt of a criminal lawyer, Glossin, to deprive Harry
Bertram, the heir to Scottish estate of Ellangowan, office property