011 - Comparative Law and Legal Education PDF
011 - Comparative Law and Legal Education PDF
011 - Comparative Law and Legal Education PDF
General
The objections to the inclusion of comparative law in law schoo],
curricula range from the practical difficulty of overloading an already loaded
syllabus to the man-of-the-world's aversion to such "cultural" subjects.
Any answer to this outwardly reasonable objection will have to take into
account the system of legal education that obtains in a country and the
goals it strives to achieve. It also entails, to be fair, an enquiry into the
successes and failures, stresses and strains of such a system-which is quite
obviously outside the scope of the present work.
The methods and institutions pertaining to legal education differ from
country to country in accordance with professional and academic needs.'
The organization of the legal profession in England makes a sharp distinc-
tion between two kinds of practitioners, viz., barristers and solicitors or
notaries. Since the functions of these practitioners are different so are the
requirements of their professional qualifications. Judges and magistrates
are appointed from the ranks of senior practicing advocates. In other
legal systems, Frenph for instance, the magistracy is a separate career which
a man enters upon at a comparatively early age and for which he requires
special training and qualification.
The professional training and other educational qualifications vary to
suit the organization and conception of the legal profession. In France, law
schools organize courses in cooperation with magistrates, advocates, and
practicing advocates and award three kinds of degrees: licencielen droit
(which qualifies the holder for legal practice as well as for entry into
administrative service); dip/orne de capacitaire en droit (which also has pro-
fessional value, though Jess than that of the licence); certificat d' aptitude t{
fa profession d'avocat (meant only for intending advocates). In Jermany
after a three years course ending with a state examination a title of Refer-
ender is awarded. But the candidate is expected to undergo a further three
year's course of systematic practical train ing in courts and legal ofhces before
he presents himself for the second state examination (Assessor-examem to
qualify himself fOI professional examination.
The procedure in England is different. The formal requirements for
admission to the English bar involve no compulsory theoretical training,
practical apprenticeship or institutional attendance. One who intends to
practce needs only to enroll in one of the ancient societies of barristers (Inns
of Court), dine in the hall of his Inn on the required occasions, and pass
two examinations of no particular difficulty. However, he cannot take a
case, directly from a litigant. The solicitor comes in between. The pro-
fessional and academic requirements for a solicitor are more exacting: three
years of apprenticeship in a solicitor's office, after graduation; success in
three professional examinations; attendance for a year in a law school.
The point has been laboured at some length to show that the organi-
zational structures ensuring legal education in the above countries try to
make a distinction between the lawyer-jurist, the lawyer-notary, the lawyer-
philosopher, the lawyer-academecian, the lawyer-administrator, etc. Evi-
dently the primary concern for a jurist and a legislator is ensuring justice.
The notary does not require to speculate profoundly on the problem of
justice as does the legal philosopher. The legal philosopher need not have
a mastery of detailed rules regarding attestation and stamping of documents.
The lawyer-administrator requires more than purely legal knowledge. And
so 011.
3. See Milton Katz, "International Legal Studies: A New Vista for the Legal Pro-
fession", 42 A.B.A.J. 53-56, 91-92 (1956).
4. See J. H. Stevenson, "Comparative and Foreign Law in American Law Schools",
.sO Col. L. Rev 613-28 (1950); also R. H. Graveson, "The Teaching of Compara-
tive Law in U.S.A.", 32 J. Cump; LeI!. Int'l L. (3d Ser.) 31-6 (1950).
S. See". B. Schlesinger, "Comparative Law: The Reaction of the Customer," 3
Am. J. Com. L. 492 (1954).
36 An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Law
paratively new discipline can penhaps be attributed to the not very cons-
picuous atmosphere of the above nature in India. But it would Le wrong
to underestimate the potentialities of the "interchange of person /, goods,
and ideas" of our country. India is on the threshhold of large-scale inter-
national economic cooperation. It would not be long before the demand
for experts on foreign law will be made. It would not be surprising if
already some leading law firms in metropolitan cities are feeling the pinch.
The justification for teaching comparative law, however, does not
entirely lie in the demands of the business community reflected through the
legal profession. Moreover, how many of our law students enter the legal
profession? It lies essentialJy in the aesthetic need of turning out lawyers
who have a better understanding of their own law. One cannot attain such
an understanding unless one takes an objective view. And to have an
objective view one must view it as an outsider and in comparison with other
legal systems. The situation has often been compared to that of learning
foreign languages. A man, it is said. who knows no language except his
own is far less able to appreciate its beauty and to understand its structure
than he who can compare it with the languages of other nations. The
strength and weakness of one's own law can be better seen by those who
knew something about foreign law than by those who knew nothing about
it. It is only such a student who can shift essential rules from the ones
which are accidental products of history and tradition. The rationale has
been ably expressed by Gutteridge in these words:
"An adequate foundation for legal reasoning is not laid only when the
principles of one system of law are taught. The student does not
have sufficient relative criteria from which to reason and exercise his
imagination ... (Comparison) would also enrich the cultural values of a
legal education. A well-trained lawyer should be more than a tech-
nician. He must be a resourceful social engineer in working out the
pacific adjustment of controversies in a world which is growing smaller
daily due to the rapidity of communications and transport."!
Course-content
Surveying the comparative law curricula of twenty six American law
schools Stevenson made a five-fold classification in 1950 of the course-
content;" (1) courses in Anglo-American law into which comparative
materials are introduced wherever appropriate; (2) comparative law courses
in which both Anglo-American and foreign materials are assigned on an
approximately equal basis; (3) comparative law courses in which only
foreign materials are assigned; (4) pure foreign law courses; (5) coufses in
comparative jurisprudence. We will have a good deal of comment to
classroom to the dissection of cases. While the cases are still considered useful
as the best vehicle for stimulating active student participation, they do not pre-
clude such doses of systematic lectures as the instructor thinks necessary.
14. See Schroeder, Comparative Law: Teaching Lawyers (paper prepared for the
Fourth International Congress of Comparative Law).
IS. J must repeat here, with special emphasis, the caveat in n, 19 supra.
16. J. H. Stevenson, "Comparative and Foreign Law in American Law ~hools," SO
Col. L. Rev. 613-28 (1950).
Comparative Law and Legal Education 39
mde on tile above methods in the ensuing pages, but one particular no-
tion needs. to be clarified here at this stage, namely, the propriety of offer-
ing pure fo~ign law as a comparative law course.
Stevenson in the above survey points out that except for Roman law
no American law school offers courses in which only foreign law is taught
without employing the comparative method. Even the Harvard and
Columbia Universities which trained specially selected reachers'" to master
Civil and Soviet law respectively by sending them on prolonged field
research offer courses in those legal systems only comparatively. That is
as it should be. For, as Rheinstein affirmed, comparative law "should
not be used to denominate the studies of foreign law carried on by juristic
ley people," however useful such studies might be for the understanding of
the "peculiar genius of a particular people;" it could be assimilated to the
study of their poetry, pottery, philosophy, or religion." At another place
Rheinstein elaborated the idea further:
Comparison presupposes knowledge of the phenomena to be compar-
ed and our students cannot be expected to know any law other than
their own. Before they can start to compare they must thus be made
acquainted with the foreign law, and probably no course in compara-
tive law, as taught at present, is long enough to provide extensive
knowledge of foreign law. Indeed, what do we mean by foreign law?
Obviously not the totality of all the laws presently in force in all
countries of the world. We must pick and choose... le .
Roman Law, for historical and cultural reasons, has not ceased to attract
the modern Anglo-Saxon mind. In England, especially, the sway of Roman
Law is far from diminished. Witness, for instance, Gutteridge's preference.
"So far as English law students are concerned the writers before preference
is for the comparative study of a selected topic, complete in itself and not
too wide, which could be studied as it emerges from not more than two
systems, i.e., English Law in comparison with Roman Law or the French
Civil Code."20 True to the tradition, his successor to the chair of com-
parative law at Cambridge, Hamson, teaches a particular topic entitled
"English and French Methods" comparatively with English and French
Legal systems as models. Picking up Gutteridge's strand of thought it
might be mentioned that he listed a number of books>' that were available
if one chose to concentrate on Roman Law for comparison with the
Common Law. The list was as follows:
Buckland & McNair, Roman Law and Common Law. A Comparison in
Outline. London: Cambridge University Press
(1936).
Buckland, A Text-book of Roman Law (2nd ed.) London:
Cambridge University Press (l932).
17. See for details, R. H. Graveson, "The Teaching of Comparative Law in U.S.A .",
32 J. Compo Legislation and Int'/ L (3rd ser.) 33 (1950).
18. Max Rheinstein, "Teaching Comparative Law," S U. ot c« L. Rev. 617 (1938).
19. Max Rheinstain, "Teaching Tools in Comparative Law: A Book Survey". I Am.
J. Compo L. 103 (1952).
20. H. C. Gutteridge, "The Teaching of International and Comparative Law", 28 Jr.
Comp."egis/a/ion and Im'/ L. 61 (1941).
21. Ibid .• 63-64.
40 An Introduction to the Study of Comparative Law