Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2010
Abstract
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary morality. This essay criticizes three prominent strands of discussion: one drawing on the moral philosophy of personal virtue, one drawing on legal philosophy, and a third drawing on utilitarianism of the law-and-economics variety. The essay uses as a central reference point the "Mistake-of-Law" scenario in which a lawyer must decide whether to rescue an opposing party from the unjust consequences of his own lawyer's error I argue that academic efforts to shore up the professional inclination against rescue are not plausible. I conclude by recommending an older jurisprudential tradition in which legal ethics is more convergent with ordinary morality.
Disciplines
Law | Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility
Recommended Citation
William H. Simon,
Role Differentiation and Lawyer's Ethics: A Critique of Some Academic Perspectives,
23
Geo. J. Legal Ethics
987
(2010).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/858