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Randy Cassingham's True Stella Awards #83                 16 January 2008

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SECULAR INFANTILISM
by Jeffrey Anbinder

   Stephen Dunne had a dream -- he wanted to be a lawyer. It's a dream
many of us have shared; whether out of ambition, a desire to help people
who cannot help themselves, or simple indecision over the next stage of
their lives, thousands of people set out each year on the journey to
become an attorney. Those of us who have made the journey know what
obstacles Dunne was to find along the way: increasingly competitive law
school admissions, cutthroat classmates and curved grading, an
oppressively selective interview process...

   ...and then, finally, the Bar Examination. It's not an endeavor for
the faint of heart. It's difficult for a reason: each state Bar wants to
ensure that anybody practicing law in their state is prepared for the
intellectual challenge and the pressure. Plus, as you're no doubt aware
as a reader of this newsletter, there are already an awful lot of lawyers
around -- maybe even too many. Some states have gone so far as to raise
the passing score in recent years to keep numbers down. Smart, hard-
working people fail the Bar exam all the time.

   Dunne sat for the Massachusetts Bar exam in February 2007, and came
awfully close to passing. But he left an essay question blank -- a
question involving a married lesbian couple, which he claims had the
effect of "purposely advancing Secular Humanism's homosexual agenda," and
was thus "morally repugnant and patently offensive." When he learned a
few months later that he had failed the exam -- with a score of 268.866
points (270 was required) -- he filed a federal lawsuit against the Bar
examiners and Massachusetts's highest court for violating his civil
rights. As damages, he sought $9.75 million, an injunction preventing the
question from counting toward his score, and even a determination that
gay marriage in Massachusetts violated the United States Constitution.
Unsurprisingly, Dunne represented himself.

   He might have had a valid point -- if, say, the exam had asked,
"Should same-sex marriage be legal?" and "Yes" was the required answer.
That would certainly be against many exam-takers' religious beliefs, and
a religious test for Bar admission is unconstitutional. But nobody was
required to offer such an opinion in order to answer the question, which
was a fairly standard one about an impending divorce. The divorce just
happened to involve two women. You see, same-sex marriage is legal in
Massachusetts, and has been since 2003 when that state's Supreme Judicial
Court ruled on Goodridge v. Dept. of Public Health. This essay question
required analysis about property division and child custody in light of a
prenuptial agreement, and nothing more; change it to a male-female couple
and the analysis would remain exactly the same.

   But to Dunne, the question was "invasive and burdensome" -- a
"disguised mechanism to screen applicants according to their political
ideology" with a "discriminatory impact of persecuting and oppressing"
his "sincere religious practices and beliefs." Let's be clear: We do not
doubt the sincerity of his religious practices and beliefs, nor do we
take issue with their content. But they have nothing to do with his
ability to understand what was expected of him on the Bar exam, and what
would be expected of him every day as a licensed, practicing attorney.

   Reaction to the lawsuit was swift: It was "idiotic," said David Yas,
editor of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. "Knowing the law has nothing to
do with agreeing with the law," Yas continued, and if Dunne believed gay
marriage was improper, he should "answer the question correctly, get
[his] law degree and use it to argue" against the laws he opposes.

   Bloggers were also quick to comment. "Keeping Up With Jonas: The World
According to Karp" pointed out that Dunne was demanding the option to
pick and choose which questions he had to answer on the Bar exam. The
implied irony here was that a frequent argument against the "homosexual
agenda" which Dunne loathes is that gays are demanding not equal rights,
but special rights -- and now, Dunne was demanding a special right of his
own because of his beliefs.

   But there's a far more fundamental problem with the logic of Dunne's
lawsuit. Religious convictions vary as much as the people who hold them.
If he had the right to skip a question as a Catholic because it involved
a same-sex marriage, should another Catholic have the right to skip a
question about the legality of abortion, or a question that peripherally
mentions legal abortion? For heaven's sake, as a Jewish aspiring
attorney, should I have had the right to skip a corporate law question
involving a restaurant chain that serves bacon cheeseburgers?! Where
would it end -- and who would have the authority to determine which
questions are optional?

   Luckily, we will never find out. This all might have made for a much
longer and more ridiculous story, but a few months after filing his
lawsuit, Dunne -- quietly and with little fanfare -- voluntarily withdrew
it. He claimed he had been vindicated by the essay question's absence on
the July 2007 Bar exam, which he took as "corrective action," and as
"assurance that all future examinees...will not be forced to accept,
support or promote a liberal ideology on a professional licensing
examination." But since most aspiring lawyers are fully aware that the
questions are different every time the test is administered, this
reasoning rings fairly hollow. It's far more likely that he simply saw
the writing on the wall, and had come to understand how groundless and
bitter his crusade appeared.

   Massachusetts confirmed this shortly thereafter; the Bar examiners
said they had "not agreed to limit the content of any future bar
examinations." The state attorney general, Martha Coakley, reiterated
that the essay "was a legitimate question regarding the current state of
the law in the Commonwealth," and that the Board "maintains its right to
test bar applicants on that same subject matter in future examinations."

   As for Mr. Dunne, he recently made a statement to Bay Windows, a
newspaper serving Boston-area gay and lesbian readers, claiming to be
"embarrassed" for being an "instrument of bigotry and prejudice," and
apologizing for what he called his "lashing out" as a result of failing
the Bar exam. "By filing a misguided federal lawsuit...in respect to the
legitimacy of same-sex marriage," Dunne said, "I have regrettably
perpetuated intolerance and animosity towards my fellow Americans. My
religiously based discrimination of gay people was callous and
diametrically opposed to America's core principles of freedom and
equality." Dunne continued, "I am particularly regretful of my actions
towards those gay and lesbian friends that I befriended and studied
alongside during my three years of law school."

   It's an admirable statement, though it has little to do with the
merits of his lawsuit. But we do think it's interesting to hear someone
admit, finally, that his frivolous lawsuit was a form of "lashing out,"
and not the result of measured contemplation of his rights under the law.
If only all of our actual, already-licensed attorneys would ask their
clients to consider their motivations in advance as deeply as Mr. Dunne
seems to have considered his in retrospect, perhaps there would be fewer
cases for the True Stella Awards.


THE QUESTION IN QUESTION

   Here is the text of the disputed Bar exam question:

   Mary and Jane, both attorneys, were married two years ago in
   Massachusetts. The day before their marriage, Mary and Jane each fully
   disclosed their assets to the other and signed an antenuptial
   agreement (the "Agreement") in which each of them agreed that if they
   were ever divorced (i) they would divide any joint marital property
   evenly, (ii) they would not seek or accept any property that the other
   brought into the marriage, and (iii) they would not seek or accept
   child support or alimony from the other. The Agreement was drafted and
   reviewed by an attorney representing Jane. Mary did not hire an
   attorney to review the Agreement as she "trusted Jane."

   At the time of the marriage Jane had a two year old adopted child,
   Philip, and Mary was three months pregnant. When Mary gave birth in
   Boston six months later to Charles, Mary and Jane were listed on his
   birth certificate as his parents. Mary has treated and referred to
   Philip as her son, although she did not adopt him. Mary, Jane, Philip
   and Charles lived in a house in Boston owned by both Mary and Jane.
   The down payment for this house came only from Mary. Jane was the sole
   supporter of the family, while Mary stayed at home taking care of
   Philip and Charles. Mary had no savings, while Jane had over a million
   dollars in savings from an inheritance that she received when her
   mother died three years ago. Yesterday Jane got drunk and hit Mary
   with a baseball bat, breaking Mary's leg, when she learned that Mary
   was having an affair with Lisa. As a result, Mary decided to end her
   marriage with Jane in order to live in her house with Philip, Charles,
   and Lisa. What are the rights of Mary and Jane?


SOURCES

1) "Boston Man Sues Over Gay Marriage Question on Bar Exam", AP via
   Boston Globe, 6 July 2007
   http://StellaAwards.com/cgi-bin/redirect5.pl?83a

2) Original complaint, Dunne v. Massachusetts Board of Bar Examiners, et
   al. U.S. District Court, District of Massachusetts, 25 June 2007
   http://StellaAwards.com/cases/dunne-v-massbar.pdf (PDF file, 1.32 MB)

3) "Plaintiff Withdraws Complaint Over Bar Exam's Gay Marriage Question",
   The National Law Journal, 11 October 2007
   http://StellaAwards.com/cgi-bin/redirect5.pl?83b

4) "Failed Bar Exam-Taker Apologizes to Gays", Boston Herald, 10 January
   2008
   http://StellaAwards.com/cgi-bin/redirect5.pl?83c

5) "New Insight on Stephen 'I Demand Special Rights' Dunne", The World
   According to Karp (blog), 6 July 2007
   http://StellaAwards.com/cgi-bin/redirect5.pl?83d

6) "'The Gay Dog Ate My Bar Exam,' Cries Aspiring Lawyer", Good As You
   (blog), 2 July 2007
   http://StellaAwards.com/cgi-bin/redirect5.pl?83e


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

   Jeffrey Anbinder is an attorney and freelance writer in New York City.
He is a regular contributor to the True Stella Awards, and is hard at
work on his first novel. He has never been so relieved as the day he
learned he had passed the New York State Bar Exam on his first try.


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COMMENTS AND LETTERS
by Randy Cassingham, Publisher

   PLEASE STOP POSTING TSA CASES TO WEB SITES! That includes blogs and
forums. If I wanted them posted to web sites, I'd do it. (And I'm
considering it.) But meanwhile, the case write-ups are copyrighted, which
is the legal RIGHT to COPY. Those rights are mine, and as owner I ask you
to please stop making "copies" of my work. If you've posted cases to web
sites, blogs or forums in the past, please DELETE them. The only portions
I've given blanket permission to repost are the annual "Award Summaries",
and even then they must be posted in a certain format. If you want the
legal system to do things right, you have to lead the way and do things
right too. Thank you.

   Speaking of the annual awards, the 2007 awards are NOT out yet! Those
that you see posted are bogus, and are the SAME bogus awards that were
posted by thousands of people in 2006, and 2005, and 2004, and.... See
http://www.thisistrue.com/bogus.html for more. If you see bogus awards
posted, reply with that URL, or with the URL of where the actual awards
WILL be posted: http://www.StellaAwards.com/2007.html . If the premise is
there's a problem with our legal system, there's no point in using made-
up evidence to illustrate the problem! As we've seen with the True Stella
Awards, there are *plenty* of REAL cases of legal abuse to help drive the
debate.

                                    -v-

   OK, enough whining; on to reader comments on TSA #82, which you can
still catch at http://www.StellaAwards.com/previousissue.html until #84
comes out. In that case, a "Meals on Wheels" delivery driver dropping off
a hot meal for an elderly client slipped on her driveway, even though it
had been cleared of snow. But the MoW driver didn't sue; rather, the
worker's comp insurance company that paid her medical bills did. The
issue also had *several* updates on popular previous cases.

   Brian, a doctor in Washington: "I am a Forensic Psychiatrist, as well
as the founder and medical director of [a medical consultation firm],
which typically is involved in evaluating injury and disability claims at
the request of the defense, employer or insurance carrier. I personally
have seen my share of ridiculous claims. I enjoy reading Stella Awards
and generally see your articles and conclusions as spot-on. However I was
baffled at the inclusion of the article about the meal delivery driver
whose workers' compensation carrier sued the homeowner. You suggested
that there is something wrong with this. There is nothing remarkable or
outrageous described in this business practice. It is what I believe not
only expected but in some cases required by statute. What you describe is
subrogation. In a nutshell, there are often multiple coverages and
potentially responsible parties that may apply to a given situation. In
the case of the injured employee, she hurt herself on the job. She was
covered by workers compensation. As a matter of law, stupidity or
carelessness is generally not a defense in workers compensation claims.
In exchange for employers being generally immune from suits for employee
injuries, workers comp is a no-fault system where one takes the worker as
they are, warts and all. In this case, she was wearing the wrong shoes,
but she is covered nonetheless under workers' compensation. The workers
compensation carrier has the right to seek reimbursement from another
responsible party. Thus the suit against the homeowner. The homeowner can
certainly raise contributory negligence as a defense in her claim.
Carriers have responsibility to their insured and to their shareholders
to pay claims properly and to seek reimbursement from other sources when
appropriate. That appears to be the case here."

   I am familiar with subrogation, as is the attorney who wrote the case
for the issue. Let's get the opinion of Tom, a lawyer who is also in
Washington: "I agree that the decision to pursue a subrogation claim
against the homeowner was boneheaded, but what does the risk analysis
have to do with it?? Risk analysis is about whether there is going to be
an accident...no matter whose fault. Sure, Sentry knew that there was a
risk that the people covered by its insurance might fall on slippery
driveways in Wisconsin, and they set their rates accordingly. They also
knew that they would get a certain percentage return on the losses by
pursuing subrogation. Knowing that, they adjusted their rates
accordingly. That's all underwriting. No rational underwriter could have
ever thought that some lunatic in the subrogation division would decide
to get his stripes against some poor lady who couldn't shovel her
driveway. The real sin here is not in the risk analysis, it's in the
operational decision by a Sentry idiot to go after subrogation on this
claim."

   The brief risk analysis discussion wasn't really the point. The point
of the case write-up, as Tom realized, was indeed to say that it's being
handled improperly, not that there's something wrong with subrogation. It
was pointed out that because the elderly woman's insurance company is
separately named in the case, they may have to watch out for themselves
and sacrifice their client. Could she sue them to force them to defend
her? Sure: but she shouldn't have to. The woman's 81 years old, and
thought that she had insurance to protect her. That's all up in the air
now. At the very least, it sounds immoral to sue her, rather than simply
have one insurance company push arbitration on another and leave her out
of it.

                                    -v-

   Last, there's Matt in Connecticut, who reminds us of what this is all
about: "I am a 16-year-old high school sophomore. I was introduced to the
Stella Awards last summer when I found your book in a bookstore. I enjoy
humorous trivia books, and that is why I bought it; I figured it would be
a light-hearted, humor book. Thank goodness I was wrong! Your book has
opened me to the problems with the American legal system. I want to do
something to help the system get better, like what you are doing, but I
have no idea how. Also, because I like trivia books, that is what my
parents think your book is. They agree that the lawsuits are 'dumb', and
I have told them to read it, but they haven't yet. Another problem is
that since I am so young, I don't feel that I can have any sort of
impact, even on my family. I truly want to help in some way, but I don't
feel that anyone will listen. I really appreciate what you, Jeff, and Dan
are doing, and I hope that you can continue this for many more years. If
you have any advice, I would really appreciate it."

   As a matter of fact, I do. First, you can't force people to read. I've
tried it, and it doesn't work. But you can become informed yourself, and
you're WAY ahead of other 16-year-olds already. At some point they'll ask
"How the HECK do you know about this stuff?" and THEN you can lay the
book on them.

   There was a story in the book (in the conclusion) about a reader who
had a similar dilemma: he wondered what he could DO about all of this. He
said he had already talked two people out of filing frivolous suits, but
felt powerless to create change. He didn't realize that he was already
practicing exactly what I've been preaching! If people don't have common
sense, and they're willing to listen, TALK TO THEM. Help them see the
other side: "Do you REALLY want to sue an 81-year-old woman who depends
on 'Meals on Wheels' when she did her best to clear her driveway? And you
slipped because you were wearing slick shoes! Whose fault is THAT?!" goes
a LONG way toward bring rationality into the system.

   "Sometimes the advice will be 'Yeah: you were really wronged! I agree
that if they don't make it right, you should sue'," I said in my book's
conclusion. "And that's OK: that's what the courts are there for." -- for
*righteous* cases where the responsible party isn't making good on their
error, not ridiculous cases where people say "Hey! Maybe I can make a few
thousand bucks!" even though they're the one in the wrong. They need to
see that what they're doing is VERY wrong, and part of a HUGE problem.
And you can be one of the people who tells them.

   It's called peer pressure, and that's exactly what we need to fix this
problem. As I put it in my book (last page): "Imagine expanding that to
every reader of this book. Then expand it again, to every citizen with
common sense. Imagine all of those people telling their political
representatives that the system is broken, and we expect them to fix it
-- or we'll elect someone who will. That is when things will really start
to change. Effective reform of The People's courts is necessarily up to
us all."

   You're "only" 16; you have plenty of time to make an impact if you
simply keep at it. This is a big problem, and I've been working on it for
five years just to make a dent; it's too big to go away fast, but with
enough pressure from enough people, it WILL go away.

   Meanwhile, see http://www.StellaAwards.com/book.html if you want a
copy of my book, which is even powerful enough to inspire a 16-year-old
to want to help change the world.

                                    -v-

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Updated: May 2007