The Scotsman

Conference calls may limit theatrics of natural orators, but they do have benefits

Whilst the telephone may often be maligned as a medium for conducting litigation let us not disregard its benefits, writes Andrew Stevenson

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Many good lawyers are not natural orators. Some find a courtroom intimidati­ng, especially one packed with their peers. They dislike the antagonist­ic environmen­t engendered by our adversaria­l system.

However, they may nonetheles­s be intelligen­t, engaged and diligent and well able to advance an argument in writing. The precovid system did not lend itself to this form of presentati­on. We have all observed colleagues narrating a script clutched in a trembling hand. It often tends to sound rather halting and artificial, and some of us would wonder why the written submission­s should not just be lodged in advance, to save time and to avoid stress. Court lawyers deploy such papers as a precaution, of course, to minimise the human errors of blundering or forgetting to say something in the heat and pressure of the courtroom. This is fair enough.

On the other hand, a good few court speeches may aim for the triumph of style over content. The wealthy in ancient Rome would employ profession­al thespians to appear in court to deliver submission­s written by lawyers. True, the skill with which some Scottish solicitors can present an otherwise flimsy submission with persuasion and passion can be impressive to behold, but it is not always conducivet­o the administra­tion of justice. A telephone conference call lessens those opportunit­ies for the theatrical.

Litigation by telephone would have thwarted the antics of a Glasgow lawyer who habitually brought to court hearings a textbook on time bar or one on jurisdicti­on.this was never intended for use in submission­s since the case would invariably have been raised within the correct time and in the correct place. Instead, the book, conspicuou­sly displayed, was there solely as a tactic to rattle and distract his opponents, who would fret and wonder where they had gone wrong, expecting a mighty blow that never in fact landed.

At the risk of murmuring judges, it must be said that telephone conference calls may also help to rein in those few on the bench who fall short of the high standards reasonably to be expected of and almost always encountere­d in our judiciary.

In the early 1990s a friend of mine wished to be a civil court practition­er. She was bright and keen. Unfortunat­ely for her and a great many other court solicitors, there was at that time a sheriff who had a tendency to pick on young female solicitors. Like many bullies, he liked to show off. often he would play to the gallery at the early stage of a court, when his captive audience was at its greatest. Of him it could be said that whilst some brought joy wherever they would go, he would do so whenever he would go. to the great relief of practition­ers he eventually did, leaving the bench for good. Alas, long before this time the intimidati­on that my friend felt had persuaded her to become a conveyance­r instead.

Telephone callings, devoid of any audience or bystanders, do also dampen the sometimes ill-judged attempts by sheriff s to be humorous. just as it is said that her majesty assumes that everywhere smells of fresh paint, many sheriffs must feel that they are masters of wit and hilarity. It stands to reason, since most solicitors appearing in their court laugh at all their jokes. However, as Justice Pearce of the Utah State Supreme Court put it in 2019: “If someone laugh sat a judge’ s joke, there is a decent chance that the laughter was dictated by the courtroom’s power dynamic and not by a genuine belief that the joke was funny.”

In that instance the remark was directed at the late Michael Kwan, a judge in Salt Lake City, who had joked (to use the term generously) in open court about President Trump and his Mexican border wall. So whilst the telephone may often be maligned as a medium for conducting litigation let us not disregard its benefits.

Andrew Stevenson is Secretary, Scottish Law Agents Society

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