1 The Authority and the Culture of the Attorney General: January 23, 2023 1 The Authority and the Culture of the Attorney General: January 23, 2023
This first chapter explores the both the legal authority and the culture that pervades offices of Attorneys General. These readings represent the majority view in an area of the law that is often subject to the winds of change that are sweeping our legal and political landscape.
The first assignment is to watch and “AG 101 Video” that verbally explains the entire scope what attorneys general do and how their offices are organized. https://www.stateag.org/ag-101/intro
1.1. Walter Mondale,(1928-2021) The Good Fight (2010) (Chapter 1, Edited). Thoughts on his time serving as the Attorney General of Minnesota
The opening chapter (edited) of Walter Mondale's The Good Fight, A Life in Liberal Politics (Scribner, 2010) covers Former Vice President Mondale's time as the Attorney General of Minnesota from 1960 to 1964 at which time he became a member of the United State Senate. This brief edited chapter breezily touches upon almost all of the issues that attorneys general face today, e.g. the role of the common law in the absence of statutes, statutory construction, the friction that occurs when a state “client” agency operates illegally, the outsourcing legal work, cooperation with the attorneys general from other states, U.S. Supreme Court advocacy on federal issues, the choice of when to litigate and when to settle. It also discusses the personal motivation and sacrifices that drove Mondale and shaped the culture of his time as Attorney General of Minnesota.
The chapter is testimony that for all of the changes in the legal and political world, some things remain remarkably the same.
1.2 Wilson, Paul E., A Time to Lose, Representing Kansas in Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 1954 1.2 Wilson, Paul E., A Time to Lose, Representing Kansas in Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483, 1954
In 1952, a young Kansas Assistant Attorney General by the name of Paul Wilson was ordered by his then attorney general to submit a brief on behalf of the Topeka Board of Education and the State of Kansas in Brown v Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483 (1954). He was then ordered to travel to Washington, D.C. to argue the case. It was Wilson’s first appellate argument.
Forty years later, Wilson, by then a Professor Emeritus at the University of Kansas Law School, penned a touching memoir of that experience. Entitled “A Time To Lose, Representing Kansas in Brown v. Board of Education,” he dedicated the book his wife and children “who believe I was on the wrong side.”
This edited section of the memoir stands in stark contrast to the Mondale section in that it squarely presents to today’s readers the reality that representing the government does not always mean being on the right side of history. Every student should ask herself if they would have accepted the assignment to argue a position in opposition to their personal beliefs. The section also reveals what while Morrison’s brief and litigation decisions were consistent with the holding in Plessey, they also put distance between Kansas and the harsh segregationist position argued the same day by Virginia, revealing that there are many ways to defend state government.
1.3. State of RI v. Lead Industries Ass'n (Track III, A and B) (2008)
State v. Lead Industries Association, Inc, 951 A 2d 428 (R.I. 2008) is a long and complex decision by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island that arose from the decision by the then Attorney General of Rhode Island, Sheldon Whitehouse, to utilize contingent counsel to sue the lead paint industry on a public nuisance theory. Track III (Section A and B) of that decision traces the evolution of the office of attorney general to England and then to the colonies and the states. The decision shows how this historical evolution has resulted in the modern legal institution of state attorney general that is uniquely empowered to pursue legal initiatives often alone and separate from other branches of state, local or the federal government.
The issue of the use of contingent counsel in this case is addressed in a later Chapter of this casebook.
1.4. Memorandum of Former members of the New Hampshire Attorney General Office, Amici to the NH Supreme Court on an Opinion of the Justices, May 23, 2011
In the midst of a fight between the New Hampshire legislature the then attorney general, Mike Delaney, former members of that office filed an amicus brief successfully arguing that an attorney general cannot be directed in the specifics of his litigation by the legislature.
This recurring issue is the subject of recurring litigation in states where the issue is important and the legislature for whatever reason does not trust the attorney general. See the pending case from North Carolina: NC NAACP v. Berger (4th Cir en banc, Dec. 20, 2020),
https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/192273A.P.pdf
Memorandum of Former members of the New Hampshire Attorney General Office on HB 89, Docket No. 2011-0319, May 23, 2011