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Learning to “Think Like a Lawyer” ( PDFDrive )

Transcript 6.1 [4/32/14–15]
Prof.:
[ . . . ]
 But of course it does put Ever-Tite Roofing in an excellent
situation. They draft the terms of the offer and they decide whether to
accept it or not, you know. They’re like, “You want a deal? Sure. Maybe
not.” They- they’re playing both sides. Now, um, how long after the
offer is given from the Greens to Ever-Tite Roofing, uh, do we get the
commencement of performance in the case? I think it’s nine days, right?
Mr. M.:
Right.
Prof.:
Then nine days later, Ever-Tite Roofing packs up the truck and heads for
the Greens. But what happens when they get there?
Ms. L.:
Someone else is there ().
Prof.:
Someone else is already on the job. Okay? The Greens’ arguments are
really two, it seems to me. One: “Our offer expired. It lapsed. There’s
nothing out there to accept anymore. You waited too long.” The court
doesn’t buy that one. Uh, two: “The offer’s still valid, but you haven’t
accepted yet.” That second argument, Ms. L., was really an argument
about what that phrase means in the offer, “commencement of perfor-
mance,” isn’t it? According to the Greens, what would commencement
of performance have been?
Ms. L.:
Um, well, after showing up at the house, saying, “Okay, you can
start” --
Prof.:
--and actually nailing some nails, you know, or pulling out some
asbestos. Right? Actually commencing the roof. What they did looks an
awful lot like what the carpenter, builder, did in the 
White
 case, 
White
against Corlies
. The owner in this case, the Greens, would certainly argue
that’s true. They argue that there’s been no commencement of perfor-
mance. But the court doesn’t agree with that, right? The court construes
commencement of performance as including loading up the truck with
the material and heading out there. Okay? 
[ . . . ]
Notice that in this excerpt, both professor and student put words in the mouths of
the characters in the story. The professor first discusses Ever-Tite Roofing’s role
as drafter, or author, of key terms in this contract. Thus, Ever-Tite already occu-
pies one crucial linguistically defined place: it is the producer of written language
that has a great deal of legal salience. The professor then presents this corporate
protagonist’s thinking, explaining that it is “playing both sides,” and represents
this strategic thinking in terms of reported speech: “They’re like, ‘You want a deal?
Sure. Maybe not.’” Ever-Tite’s ability to occupy two powerful discursive spaces—


On Becoming a Legal Person
103
drafter and “accepter”—with an accompanying power to choose whichever out-
come it wants (deal/contract or no deal/no contract), is dramatized through this
imagined reported locution. It does not appear to matter that this is a company
rather than a person; legal personae are most importantly interlocutors occupying
various positions in a legally defined discursive interaction. When characterized
in this way, corporations become exchangeable with human beings, for both are
capable of speaking in the legal argument that is under way. Ever-Tite emerges,
then, as a character in the story who can speak, whose speech reveals the domi-
nance of strategic thinking, and whose position vis-à-vis written and spoken lan-
guage gave it a good location from which to strategize.
Immediately switching sides, the professor proceeds to consider the thoughts
of the people on the other side of this conflict, the Greens: “The Greens’ arguments
are really two, it seems to me. One: ‘Our offer expired. It lapsed. There’s nothing
out there to accept anymore. You waited too long.’ The court doesn’t buy that one.
Uh, two: ‘The offer’s still valid, but you haven’t accepted yet.’” Just as in the folk
ideology that equates legal education with learning to think like a lawyer, thought
and speech are here vividly intertwined, and thought is transparently enacted in
dialogic speech. This structure allows the professor to speak in the voices of the
Greens, imaginatively enacting now the opposite side of the conflict-laden dialogue
that he began in a previous turn. The student in this exchange (which occurs in
mid-November, after several months of classes) adopts a similar discursive strat-
egy: “Um, well, after showing up at the house, saying, ‘Okay, you can start.’” We
see that the student, as she imbibes the guidelines for making legal arguments, is
also adopting this feature of the form used by her professor; instead of simply de-
scribing what might have counted as commencement of performance (which in
this particular instance would probably have been the preferable response), she
attempts to enact it through reported speech.
On the one hand, direct quotation gives the semblance of reproducing speech
verbatim, as it actually occurred. A direct quotation purports to repeat an utter-
ance precisely as it would have been uttered, using the same verb tense, pronouns,
and other spatiotemporal (or, more technically, “deictic”) markers. Compare a
direct quotation, “She said, ‘I’m leaving now,’” with the equivalent indirect quo-
tation, “She said that she was leaving then.” In the indirect quotation, the speaker
changes the tense from present to past, the pronoun from “I” to “she,” and the
temporal adverb “now” to “then.” Linguistic scholars such as Bakhtin have ana-
lyzed this difference in terms of the relative penetration of the reporting speaker’s
speech framework into the reported speech.
10
 It is certainly the case that the shift
to direct quotation carries with it a metalinguistic signal: the very maintenance of
tense, pronouns, and other deictics seems to tell the listener that the reported speech
is being reproduced precisely as it was spoken. This is obviously a more vivid ren-
dition, more dramatic and immediate, bringing the speaker and hearer imagina-
tively into the reported context itself. Conversely, the shifting of these same features
in indirect quotation overtly reminds the listener that this piece of speech is being
reported by someone who is not the same person (shift in pronoun), not speaking
at the same time (shift of verb tense and adverb), and perhaps not standing in the
same place (e.g., if there is a shift of spatial deictics).


104
Similarity
However, as a number of scholars have noted, it is also possible for the report-
ing speaker to infiltrate the reported speech even using direct quotation.
11
 When
this is achieved the process is arguably somewhat covert, because the overt
metapragmatic signal that accompanies direct quotation does not alert us to this
process of infiltration. As Greg Matoesian has noted in his analysis of discourse in
rape trials, use of direct quotation is a powerful and complicated tool in creating
changes of discursive frame and footing:
Although direct quotes purport to represent an exact wording of speech, they func-
tion more accurately as a way of constructing drama in talk, as a method of marking
the speaker’s emotional involvement with an issue, and as an evidential device for
gauging, or better still constructing, the authenticity of the statement. . . . Thus, they
index the reporting speaker’s footing and moral agenda through stylistic variation in
talk, while appearing to maintain a strict separation between quoting voice and quoted
utterance.
12
As we have seen, the way reported speech functions to construct “drama in talk” is
quite evident in law school teaching, where frequently the quoted speech is clearly
fictional. In these cases, the direct quotation obviously functions as a vivid device
for representing general arguments, thoughts, or positions rather than as a pur-
portedly accurate rendition of actually occurring speech.
Matoesian draws on work by Erving Goffman, which examines the different
kinds of footing that a person may occupy in any given segment of speech.
13
 For
example, Goffman distinguishes among a number of distinct positions occupied
by producers of language: the person doing the actual speaking is the “animator,”
the person who composed the words spoken is the “author,” the person ultimately
responsible for the position expressed by the utterance is the “principal.” This
concept of footing permits us to analyze the way speech contains signals about
speakers’ positions, relationships, and social power. Goffman refers to a shift in
footing as “a change in our frame for events.”
14
What, then, can we make of the way direct quotation is used in law school
classes? In Transcript 6.1 above, we could view both professor and student as oc-
cupying the footing of mere animators; that is, by using direct quotation, they give
the semblance of merely speaking the words that were actually authored by char-
acters in the story.
15
 However, it is also relatively clear that both professor and stu-
dent are putting words into these characters’ mouths, and thus are in fact authors
as well as animators. On the other hand, this authorship is hidden (albeit thinly)
by the metalinguistic signals that accompany direct quotation. As we have seen,
direct quotation retains the deictic markers of an original speech setting: of a re-
ported speech setting that is distinct from the current, reporting context. There
are a number of subtle ideological messages conveyed by the ubiquitous use of this
kind of fictionalized reported speech in law school classrooms:
(1) First, the effortless elision of animator and author footings through
the use of reported speech in this setting conveys a subtle message about the
power of legal discourse to put words in people’s mouths—indeed, to literally
create reality through discourse. As we saw in previous chapters, the rendi-
tion of events as facts in legal narratives actually creates an authoritative ac-


On Becoming a Legal Person
105
count of truth (under the terms of the discursive system’s own ideology). In
the law school classroom, use of imagined direct quotation has already begun
to loosen the anchoring of reported speech from its original speaker and con-
text, substituting instead the primacy of legally relevant strategic renditions
in this kind of translation of events.
16
 In developing the background charac-
terizations of the personae who make legal arguments, it is strategic reasoning
(which locates them in terms of those arguments) that becomes most impor-
tant. The process of figuring this all out involves proceeding as if these strate-
gic considerations were already part of the characters’ internal or external
dialogue as events unfolded. In unpacking the legal story, professors in essence
move their characters around in a strategic landscape, trying them out (and
allowing them to speak) in this location or that to see how their different
positionings might affect the shape of the arguments they can make.
Interestingly, this free attribution of fictionalized locutions to characters
in the story exists side by side with a demand for great precision about what
was actually said, for certain purposes. As Matoesian has pointed out, precise
repetition of previous utterances is highly valued as a means of impeaching
witnesses who produce “inconsistent” renditions of the same events.
17
 Simi-
larly, in law school classrooms, professors will at times insist that students
reproduce with precision aspects of written or spoken language that are le-
gally crucial (e.g., to establish whether there was “acceptance” of a contract).
As noted in Chapter 4, a hallmark of legal readings is this combination of
blurred and precise boundaries, of obsessive attention to detail and yet also a
permission to generalize freely without any substantiation about some mat-
ters. Here we find another such combination, bewildering to the layperson but
entirely explicable within the bounds of legal epistemology: if the precise
wording of a document or utterance is doctrinally important, then a profi-
cient legal reader will be careful to focus on the exact phrasing involved. How-
ever, if we are developing a legal characterization of the players in the story,
moving them about to locate them strategically and in terms of possible argu-
ments they might make, we can freely imagine what they might have said. After
all, it is precisely what strategies and arguments they can or might have devel-
oped that centrally define them as characters in this story. (And it is the
attorney’s job to figure this out and put the appropriate words in the charac-
ters’ mouths.)
(2) When they employ direct quotation, law professors are also present-
ing the case through other people’s voices, just as attorneys do in court (albeit
with a somewhat different linguistic apparatus). In court, the process by which
an authoritative version of the facts is created involves presentation of com-
peting stories through the utterances of witnesses. Attorneys attempt to shape
these utterances, selecting particular witnesses and rehearsing them in an ef-
fort to present the story that is most favorable to their side.
18
 Although the
witnesses often give the appearance of being both authors and animators of
the stories they tell, the attorneys in fact share the author role, not only through
coaching witnesses, but because they actually coproduce the narrative as they
elicit testimony from witnesses through questioning. However, notice that this


106
Similarity
coproduction is somewhat covert, because overt metalinguistic signaling fre-
quently points to the witness as the main author of the narrative; the attorney’s
questions often appear as mere prompts and the answers as the “real” narra-
tive. (This is obviously much more the case with well-prepared direct exami-
nations of friendly witnesses than with overtly hostile cross-examination of
the opposing side’s witnesses.) Just as with professors’ use of direct quotation,
lawyers’ authorship is at times hidden behind a thin metalinguistic veneer. In
court, the witnesses produce their own direct locutions, which the attorney
may then repeat as direct quotations in subsequent questions, a process that
conceals the role the attorney played in producing the witnesses’ utterance in
the first place. Thus, there is a quiet linguistic ideology that emerges from
deployment of direct quotation, one that foregrounds an inauthentic author-
ship and hides the complex play of social power and discursive maneuvering
that are really involved in the utterance. This linguistic ideology surrounding
the use of direct quotation in legal settings, as Matoesian has pointed out, plays
a role in obscuring and naturalizing “how the law-in-action tacitly incorpo-
rates forms of social power, and how it constructs claims to knowledge, truth,
and facticity in the details of discursive interaction.”
19
(3) Another subtle message conveyed through use of direct quotation by
professors is the primacy of the dialogic (and/or question-answer) form in legal
discourse. Dialogue is central in courtrooms—between attorneys and witnesses
in direct and cross-examination, between judges and opposing attorneys when
attorneys make objections. Indeed, attorneys may use dialogic form to tell
competing stories in opening and closing arguments. Even in written opin-
ions, judges create dialogues between two opposing arguments or sides as a
way of tracing the steps that led to their decisions. And in law school class-
rooms, professors not only enter into dialogues with students, but also, as we
see here, create dialogues within their own speech turns through use of direct
quotation:

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