Share This Episode
Our American Stories Lee Habeeb Logo

The Best Lawyer In a One-Lawyer Town

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
May 19, 2023 3:01 am

The Best Lawyer In a One-Lawyer Town

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1966 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


May 19, 2023 3:01 am

On this episode of Our American Stories, Bill Bryk knows when to start a case on behalf of others... and has learned when to rest.

Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Our American Stories
Lee Habeeb
Our American Stories
Lee Habeeb
Our American Stories
Lee Habeeb

Get ready. Xfinity Flex has unlocked shows and movies from all over the globe and you can watch for free right from your couch. Journey to Japan with shows from Anime Network. Go back to the wild west with Billy the Kid and other MGM Plus picks.

Celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month with hits from Kokawa and Haya. And break out your dance moves with iHeartRadio's K-Pop Hits playlist. Find new entertainment on Xfinity Flex.

All for free, no strings attached. Stay free this week into your Xfinity voice remote. Stay farm is committed to being your top choice when ensuring the things that matter to you. My cultura podcast host, Dramos, also believes in the power of financial knowledge. That's why he makes sure to share his financial tips on his podcast, Life as a Gringo.

Financial freedom usually means having enough savings, financial investments, and cash on hand to afford the kind of life we desire for ourselves and our families. Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. Learn more at es.statefarm.com. State Farm is a proud partner of the Michael Tura Podcast Network. This is our American stories and up next, a story from one of our regular contributors who also happens to be a lawyer, Bill Bright. Some people don't have the highest view of lawyers, well lots of people don't, but not every lawyer is an ambulance chaser. Let's listen to Bill Bright. I understand I'm the only active practicing lawyer in rural and from New Hampshire.

That may make me the best lawyer in a one lawyer town. I was writing one Saturday morning when a neighbor telephoned with a problem. Her 17-year-old daughter had received a speeding ticket a little after 3 p.m. on December 4th, 2017. She'd been driving a friend to a medical appointment in Concord, New Hampshire. She was more concerned for her passenger than the speed limit. She didn't notice the speed limit had dropped from 65 to 50.

She was barreling along at 75 anyway. She was stopped in Henniker, a small town on Route 202, the main road between Antrim and Concord. The traffic stop was just bad luck.

An acquaintance that lives in my town is a self-confessed leadfoot. Antrim's constabulary had stopped him twice during the last two years. Each time he was cautioned to slow down and sent on his way without a ticket.

The Henniker police apparently exercised their discretion differently. She paid the fine. There were two things she didn't know about New Hampshire traffic law, which I too didn't know until it became my business to know. First, paying the fine is in admission of guilt.

Game over. Second, drivers under the age of 20 who plead guilty to a traffic violation risk a 20-day suspension of their licenses. The daughter had received a notice of hearing from the New Hampshire Department of Safety's Bureau of Hearings. Her parents sent me a PDF of the notice.

Email and PDF images are good things. And I began reviewing the relevant statutes and the Bureau's rules of procedure. If she defaulted, didn't show up, her license would be suspended for 20 days. If she appeared, she could present evidence in mitigation of penalty.

The notice of hearing and the legal materials agreed that a respondent may make a plea in mitigation of penalty. In her case, by presenting evidence of an otherwise spotless driving record and the effects of a suspension on her education and employment. Her parents emailed me more documents. Their daughter's in her senior year of high school with a 3.5 index and an internship she's working for college credit. Her parents emailed me more documents. Her daughter got credit. She's been accepted to six colleges in New Hampshire and Massachusetts and has applications out to as many more outside the Granite State. She drives to school and the internship. She also drives to outstate colleges for interviews as part of the application process. All these things are important both now and in her future.

Both parents work. Suspending her license would inconvenience the entire family. So I took the case. Learning a new area of law is part of the lawyer's trade. I'd spent eight years prosecuting employee disciplinary cases before administrative law judges. I'd presided over a couple of dozen proceedings as a hearing officer. I've represented hundreds of clients at bankruptcy hearings. This kind of work wasn't wholly unfamiliar, but a few years had gone by since my last trial and I'd never been counsel for the defense. I was retained on Saturday. The hearing was on Wednesday.

Time to work. Preparation is everything at a trial. On Sunday after mass, I drove through Henniker along Route 202 from border to border to see whether any of the signage was defective. It wasn't.

Still, the lawyer should always go to the scene of the incident to see for himself. I was finishing my draft direct examination when Mr. Boo entered the room. More formally known as Bolingbroke, our shy, gentle, and affectionate feral tabby began weaving about my ankles and ewing when he thought I wasn't paying him enough attention. I had work to do. I walked from my office. Mr. Boo followed. Once far enough down the hall, I doubled back and closed the door. My client's parents would pay me not to pay attention to Mr. Boo for a few days.

Their fee will keep me in whiskey and cigars and cat food too. My client initially wanted to default, but on learning I'd done some work, she asked her father to bring her to my office so we might talk about it. I told her that though her parents were paying my fee, she was my client, not them. I'd execute her instructions. I had an ethical duty to do that.

I couldn't guarantee success. If she didn't want to defend the case, I'd do everything I could to expedite the suspension and return of her license. We talked for a bit about her hopes and dreams of majoring in art and becoming a painter and sculptor. Then we went through my draft direct examination.

I explained my reasons for asking each question, elicited her answers, and suggested appropriate and truthful responses. James Fenimore Cooper called this practice horse shedding the witness. The phrase stemmed from the observation of attorneys who rehearsed their witnesses in carriage sheds near the courthouse in White Plains, New York.

Any resemblance to an excremental phrase was probably intentional. To me, this is legitimate witness preparation. The best client is one empowered with an understanding of the process. They become more comfortable despite a stressful situation once they understand how best to testify truthfully before they take the stand. We knew she'd already pled guilty to speeding by paying the ticket. Her arguments and medication of penalty were strong.

Great grades, a job, and acceptances to good colleges. At the end of the conversation, I asked her to talk about this with her father, left the room, gave them five minutes, and returned to find that she'd changed her mind. She wanted to fight, though understanding she might lose. Until then, I hadn't expressed an opinion on whether to fight. That had to be her decision without pressure from me. Now I told her that she'd made the correct decision. Better to fight than just rule over. I quoted Pascal, God does not require us to succeed.

He requires us to try. On Wednesday morning, I drove to my client's house and her parents drove us to the Bureau of Hearings in Concord. We went over the questions again. She admitted nervousness but felt less nervous than before.

We were second on the calendar. The hearing examiner was a pleasant, good-looking man of about 35. He was warm and friendly without being familiar.

He started on time at 9 a.m. and explained the process in clear, simple terms. He conducted the first hearing. Then he called my client's case. We went up to counsel's table. I began my direct examination. She explained why she was driving to Concord, taking a friend to a doctor. I introduced a copy of the traffic summons into evidence and moved to dismiss the state's case because of a flaw on the ticket's face.

The examiner was interested by my argument but denied the motion. I then brought in her transcript and asked about her extracurriculars. Her answers made clear that a suspension would interfere with her education and extracurriculars and affect her parents who would then have to transport her to and from school. We're in rural New Hampshire. Our regional high school is about 20 miles away by car.

There's no public transportation unless one counts a shabby school bus with some rowdy, unpleasant student riders. I was about to bring in the evidence of her internship, no money but college credit, when the examiner smiled. He waved his hand warmly saying, I've heard enough. Don't keep talking when you have won. I shut my mouth.

Over-preparing is better. The hearing examiner didn't suspend the license or levy another fine. He gave her a year's probation without another hearing. The client and her parents are happy. Now I get to send them the bill. And you've been listening to Bill Breich tell, well, a nice lawyer story.

Not an unpleasant one but a really nice one. And by the way, we all hate lawyers and still, of course, we need one. We love them and hate them. And if you're a lawyer listening, well, I'm an ex-lawyer. Well, I never actually practiced but I went to law school.

So many of my friends are and live with this, live with this their whole lives, this duality of people loving and hating. The story of Bill Breich defending a young girl in his hometown, teaching her to fight, and a judge giving the greatest lesson of all, when you've won, shut up. Bill Breich's story here on Our American Story. We're celebrating our favorite holiday, Streaming Day, on May 20. It may not be an office holiday, but we're working on it. And iHeartRadio is dedicating an entire day to streaming our favorite music and podcasts on Roku. Binge all the podcast episodes of Dear Chelsea with Chelsea Handler before the new season kicks off. Or dance in your living room to the hottest songs on the Hit Nation music channel on the Roku channel for free. So stream what you love and get endless entertainment with Roku. Happy hashtag Streaming Day. Your headphones raise your tray table and relax with iHeartRadio and Southwest Airlines. Set off your Walt Disney World experience and with a 365-day refund guarantee, there's no excuse. UndercoverTourist.com.
Whisper: medium.en / 2023-05-19 04:18:41 / 2023-05-19 04:23:18 / 5

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime