Thought For the Day—Mentors and Sponsors for Young Women Lawyers

There is a difference between mentors and sponsors in your law career.  Make sure you have both!

Career Counselors, Law Students, Young Lawyer | Comment

JUDGES GIVE ADVICE TO LAWYERS—WOMEN LAWYERS AND LAW STUDENTS CAN LEARN A THING OR TWO

Here is some very good advice from judges that I want to pass on to you.  If you are a young woman trial lawyer, pay attention.  If you are a young woman law student who is taking trial practice or involved in practice clinics, pay attention.  And if you are a young woman lawyer who has any contact with judges and courtrooms, pay attention.  Rarely are judges this candid.

The judges in this case happen to be Virginia judges.  That is no coincidence for me.  I am a Virginia lawyer, and I spent all of my litigation years in Virginia firms.  I am also a DC lawyer, but that is truly a horse of another color.  The practices, even in the local courts, are very different, and I have to say that I learned most of my best lawyering skills in Virginia.

I was reminded of these things when I read the most recent edition of the Virginia Lawyers Weekly and the article captioned “Tips from the bench at the VTLA meeting”.  The VTLA is the Virginia Trial Lawyers Association, a well-respected group that has a similar counterpart in most other states.  I want to share some of it with you because it is just good common sense for trial lawyers.

Virginia judges can be tough.  They are of the “in and out” ilk, and you can find yourself involuntarily out of court in a heartbeat if you do not heed their warnings about efficient practice.  The federal courts in Virginia that I practiced in were similar, and my days of practice before one notorious Federal Judge in the Eastern District of Virginia were instructive and interesting, at best.  I became used to being addressed as “little girl” and “woman” while fighting for my professional life in his courtroom.  However, it was the early 1980’s, and all has been forgiven.

Virginia can be a challenging jurisdiction for courtroom procedure.  We learned early and hard that law and equity were not properly presented in the same action in Virginia—although, thankfully, that has changed since.  We also learned that all contracts in the day had to be “under seal”—which was not really a seal at all but a statement and somehow reminiscent of King John and the Magna Carta and Jolly Old England.  That, too, is a thing of the past but a reminder of the dedication to formality in the courts of the Commonwealth.

However, there is a lot of good that stems from formality, and Virginia judges have discovered the best of it, I think.  Even today, many an “interloper” Virginia attorney—one who has a license to practice law in Virginia but does not practice much in the Commonwealth—can find himself or herself caught up in the formalities of local practice that can prove embarrassing and costly in the end.
CONTINUE READING >

Law Students, Uncategorized, Young Lawyer | Comment

Thought For the Day—Young Women Lawyers Define Themselves

No one defines you but YOU!

Law Students, Young Lawyer | Comment