|The Green Bag.|}}
OVERCROWDING THE PROFESSION.
IN an article on " Lawyers," the " Scottish
Law Review " indulges in a few re
marks on the overcrowded condition of the
profession, which apply with equal force to
the state of legal affairs in our own country.
The writer says : —
"The Board of Examiners hold quarterly diets
in Edinburgh, in January, April, July, and October,
and on an average they admit about thirty new
practitioners at each diet. Unless the mortality is
greater amongst lawyers than amongst their fellowcountrymen, it is plain as the proverbial pikestaff
that Scotland is in danger of becoming lawyer-rid
den if she does not do one of two things, — make
fewer lawyers, or starve them out after she makes
them. The humaner course is non-production;
and if it is neglected the other course will be
automatic, — with a variation on the popular ex
amples of the principle. These move when the
coin is put into the slot; the starving-out automa
ton will move from want of the coin. This will
be a still higher development of the device hith
erto thought to be very ingenious, but now seen
to be perfectly simple. The prevention of over
production lies in the hands of those who destine
their young men to the law, and of lawyers them
selves who, perhaps too freely, and without a due
regard to consequences, apprentice as many welleducated youths as they can find work for in their
offices. The lawyer's clerk who neither aims at
being nor is qualified to be a lawyer, is becoming
rarer and rarer, and as he was not a person whose
lot was to be envied, this is not an unmixed evil.
Still, as his place is being filled by young men
with qualifications which beget and justify hopes
and expectations that in the majority of cases
are doomed to disappointment, it seems that
we are having a change rather than making an
improvement.
The results of the over-supply affect the profes
sion by thinning down profits. The new practi
tioners always get some business, however little;
and what they attract is taken from the established
lawyers, though these may not be conscious of the
encroachment. Carry this process far enough, and
the law, though it will remain a learned profession,
will cease to be lucrative; and when its unprofit
ableness becomes known it will no longer attract in excess, perhaps not even up to the measure, of its requirements. There s a good time coming yet, Wait a littll longer. This cheerful couplet may encourage the profes sion "as such," to use the terse if not very elegant phrase familiar in certain of our legal documents, but its assurance can bring little comfort to the individual kept from entering the ranks by reason of their overcrowded condition, or undergoing in the ranks the process of starving out. The oversupply affects the public in a way the public has no means of measuring. The lawyer in large and good (/. e. profitable) practice probably pre vents as much litigation as he conducts. In other words, he serves his clients as often by keeping them out of litigation as by attending to their interests in actions at law. Now, without ques tioning the prudence or honesty of newly licensed and not too well employed practitioners, we may be allowed to state the fact that they are depend ent in their earlier years chiefly on court work, which they cannot afford therefore to discourage, but must cultivate. The effect of this on the clients is so obvious that we do not need to set it forth. By way of illustration of the keenness with which employment in contentious business is sought, we may mention that (it is said) certain law agents write or call and offer their services to persons who sustain injury at their employment, — if there is an employer, and especially if the em ployer is possessed of means. It is no doubt proper that justice should be brought to the door of the people; but justice is one thing and litiga tion is another. Perhaps free trade in law, in the sense of abolishing all monopolies in its practice, is for the benefit of the people; and beyond all doubt the Acts of 1865 and 1873 have increased the number of practitioners enormously as well as raised the standard of qualification and made it uniform throughout the country. Curiously, how ever, any alteration on the table of fees has been the reverse of what the public would have wel comed, and, had it been consulted, would have demanded. In one view the increase in the quan tity of the article ' lawyer ' might have had the ef-