Court Opinion

ID: 4945843
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 12:17:39.727883+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:04.887854
License: Public Domain

KERN, Associate Judge,
dissenting:
Although the issue presented by this appeal arises in a Small Claims case it has significance to both the community and the bar, as well as this court. The issue is: Whether the law students authorized by this court’s Rule 46 III to provide legal assistance to “indigent” persons in litigation in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia are engaged in the unauthorized practice of law when they represent full-time college and graduate school students without regard to the individual financial situation of these student-clients.
The record reflects that the Board of Directors of the D.C.Law Students in Court Program (LSIC) has vested discretion in its Executive Director to provide legal representation to persons who are not within the Program’s regular indigency guidelines, viz., $140 take-home pay per week (Supp. Record #2 at 156); and, that the Director in turn has adopted the policy of permitting these law student-advocates to represent in court anyone who is a full-time student. (Supp. Record #2 at 160.)
The law students in the instant case rented from appellee her home in northwest Washington for $750 a month. Appellant subsequently retained appellees’ security deposit because she alleged they had inflicted damages upon the premises during their tenancy, and appellees filed suit in the Small Claims Branch of the Civil Division. Appellees obtained representation from LSIC without presenting income statements but merely upon the certification that they were full-time students.
The impact upon the community and the bar from the LSIC policy of rendering legal *1093assistance in civil suits such as this to full-time graduate and undergraduate students is obvious: that particular segment of the community whose income is within the LSIC income-level guidelines to qualify as an indigent person under our Rule 46 III must now share the limited number of law students available under this clinical program with all of the full-time college and graduate school students in the District; and, those members of the bar who would seek to represent student-litigants in cases such as this for a fee must defer to law students in the clinical program who charge nothing for their legal representation.
Lest it be supposed that law student representation of students without charge in a small claims suit does not disadvantage the other party proceeding pro se, I refer to the statement in the record before us of appellant:
The normal process in litigation is that a plaintiff decides that whether he or she is willing to prosecute the claim, because it’s going to be costly; it’s going to be energy consuming; it’s going to be all the other things, and for these girls to just be automatically referred by their law school — by somebody at the university to free representation because they think they may have a claim and I think that in my case it’s not so important, perhaps, because I have just graduated from law school and I can cope with some of this but if just some woman was renting out her house during the winter while she was in Florida, received a letter of the sort that I had received, I think she would be hard pressed to deal with and I just — So, I mean all of these things don’t really go to the issues that I had raised in my motion to dismiss for unauthorized practice, but I think they give some of the practical problems involved in allowing this sort of thing to happen. [Supp. Record #2 at 166-67.]
The inherent unfairness caused by a clinical program which permits innovative and energetic law students to represent without charge other students against pro se parties who are apt to deal financially with students, such as landlords and storekeepers, occurs not just in the courtroom. The appellant in the instant case recounted that during the pretrial proceedings:
I was sent an informal request for discovery, which was not signed by the supervising attorney, which threatened to subpoena my mother twice, which threatened] to bring me before the Court where I could explain why my recalcitrance when I had never been even given an opportunity to even respond to a discovery request. We had telephone calls at home from the Law Students in Court to our babysitters asking — saying it was an emergency and they had to reach us at parties. I just found that the whole procedure was so — I would have been happ[y] to come in September when this case was first brought and litigated the entire matter on the merits.1 [Record at 165-66.]
The trial court despite a proffer at trial by the law student representing the six appellee-students in the instant case to have them “testify under oath as to their financial situation,” (Supp. Record #2 at 8), determined not to inquire into the indigen-cy vel non of these particular students in litigation with their landlady. The court in denying appellant’s motion,2 concluded that the presence of student counsel would facilitate the trial of the case and, further, that the “Court of Appeals and its employees have already had their attention drawn to this matter and are perfectly capable and competent to enforce their own rules.”3 (Supp. Record #2 at 168.)
*1094Now that this court, as distinguished from its staff, has been called upon here to consider the way in which its Rule 46 III is being applied in practice, I am of opinion that we should reject the exception LSIC has created from its indigency guidelines for full-time students and require a uniform application of the Program’s guidelines. Otherwise, we divert scarce legal resources from those members of this community who most need them and we risk bringing into disrepute the most laudable purpose of the law-student clinical program.
I would reverse the judgment and remand the case so that the trial court may hear the proffer made by appellees as to their financial situation.4
I respectfully dissent.

.There is nothing in the record to show or even suggest that the law student counsel in the pretrial discovery stage were also counsel at trial; these trial counsel provided highly professional (and effective) representation to appellees.

. Appellant filed a motion to dismiss appellees’ claim on the ground that their representation in court by law student counsel was improper under the applicable rule and the particular circumstances.

. During the hearing on appellant’s motion to dismiss reference was made to the fact that the *1094Clerk and Deputy Clerk of this court were made aware of the LSIC policy of representing full-time students without regard to financial status. Appellees conceded that no ruling was. issued or formal inquiry undertaken at that time. (Supp. Record #2 at 169.)

. The trial judge recalled, in refusing, to have a showing of financial need by appellees, that he had in another case in another branch of the Civil Division denied leave by college students to proceed in forma pauperis. This suggests that to make a showing of indigency under the regular LSIC guidelines by filing appropriate forms would not be unduly burdensome to the trial court.