Steve Minor at SW Virginia Law Blog disrupted my lazy Sunday evening. He baited me to comment on the free-speech issues raised by the case of Indiana attorney Michael A. Wilkins, who was disciplined for stating in a footnote to a brief exactly what is said every day in lawyers’ lounges and law firms across the planet (cyberspace and universe, too). To wit, that it often seems as if a judge has started with a predetermined outcome and mangled the facts and the law to reach the desired conclusion.

Marcia Oddi at The Indiana Law Blog pointed to an Indiana Star column that mentioned the Wilkins matter this morning (July 27, 2003) and his intention to bring the free-speech issue to the U.S. Supreme Court. Marcia does a great job of linking to the history of this case, and summarizing it, so I won’t do that here, except to quote a few explanatory passages from a National Law Journal article, dated Nov. 11, 2002, by Gary Young:

In 1997, Wilkins signed on as local counsel to Michigan Mutual Insurance Co. in a dispute with an Indiana bowling alley over insurance coverage. A three-judge panel of the court of appeals ruled against Michigan Mutual in 1999, with Rucker concurring. Michigan Mutual’s lead counsel, Jeffrey R. Learned of the Southfield, Mich., firm Morrison, Mahoney & Miller, wrote a brief urging the Supreme Court to take review. In a footnote, Learned wrote that the court of appeals opinion “is so factually and legally inaccurate that one is left to wonder whether the Court of Appeals was determined to find for [Michigan Mutual’s opponent] and then said whatever was necessary to reach that conclusion.”

The Supreme Court declined to liat the case and struck the brief from the record, describing the footnote (in 1999) as “a scurrilous and intemperate attack on the integrity of the Court of Appeals.”

Wilkins was suspended under a disciplinary rule drawn from the ABA’s model code and widely adopted by state and federal courts. Indiana Professional Conduct Rule 8.2(a) states that a “lawyer shall not make a statement that the lawyer knows to be false or with reckless disregard as to the truth or falsity concerning the qualifications or integrity of a judge.” (emphases added)

Those who know me know that I have an ongoing romance and camaraderie with irreverence, sarcasm and irony. So, they might expect me to do a Patrick Henry and defend to the death (or disbarment) Wilkins’ right to put those words in the brief to the Indiana Supreme Court. However, I can’t do that, because my job here is to advocate for the client’s interests, not the lawyers’ rights.

Quite simply, I think a lawyer needs to have the good judgment to frame arguments in a manner that doesn’t unduly offend a court — precisely because being offensive is far more likely to hurt than to help the client. This isn’t a matter of the lawyer being able to forcefully advocate for the client. It comes down to whether the lawyer is able to stifle his or her need to insult the court, and instead come up with persuasive arguments to prove his point. Most of us learned before we got out of grammar school that mouthing off to the wrong person at the wrong time, or in the wrong place, is just plain stupid (as in counter-productive). (My posting a couple days ago about stifling blawggers convers a related theme.)

Having said this, the Indiana Supreme Court has demonstrated once again, by its own lack of self-discipline, that trying too hard to preserve the dignity, authority or image of any institution almost always backfires — making the institution resemble the back side of a horse, rather than the heroic rider on the statue. The publicity their disciplinary actions against Wilkins has given those few offending words — which were “tame”, but clearly attacked the integrity of the lower court — has done far more to weaken the public’s regard for the judicial system than the buried footnote every would or could have done on its own. The flipflop on the sanction to be given Wilkins didn’t help their image or authority either.