Yet another book that I had told myself at some point in law school that I would read before graduating. That obviously did not happen, but after a conversation with my Senior Defense Counsel I moved this book up on my reading list--and again, I am glad that I did so.
The Art of Cross-Examination: With the Cross-Examinations of Important Witnesses in Some Celebrated Cases by Francis L. Wellman is another legal book that should be mandatory reading for all law students in law school in order for a law school to receive accreditation from the American Bar Association. This is a book written by arguably one of the greatest lawyers in American history, on a topic that is vital to litigation, which is, regardless of if you want to practice transactional law, what you think of when you envision a lawyer. You think of someone in a suit, in a courtroom delivering opening statements, closing arguments, and direct- and cross-examining witnesses. And quite frankly, although I adore, and miss the doctrinal, conceptual, theoretical, and philosophical nature of the modern American legal education system, it is imperative that the system return some to its roots of practical application. Which I commend it for doing to some extent as clinics, field placements, and other hands-on teaching/learning mechanisms are more heavily integrated into the curriculum. With that said, I do believe that the legal profession could benefit from adopting the medical education format of academic instruction, followed by a residency. I do not believe that law school needs to be as long as the medical process of 4 and 4 (most of the time), a 2 and 2 system I think could work. Two years of law school, and then 2 years of residency where law school graduates essentially work as apprentices under barred attorneys at law firms, in in-house counsel offices, non-profits, legal aid offices, etc. This would actually hearken back to the days of old when people became lawyers simply from apprenticing with attorneys. But I digress.
The Art of Cross-Examination is a great book, you can learn a lot about the practice from the book. Additionally, it is structured superbly. The book is broken into 2 parts. Part I are the Principles of Cross-Examination, its where you learn the general rules of successful cross-examination. Part II are Some Famous Examples of Cross-Examination, where actually well executed cross-examinations of witnesses utilizing various methods are reprinted for the reader to consume and internalize themself.
If you plan to attend law school--read this book. If you are a law student--read this book. If you are a lawyer--read this book. And for the love of all that is Good and Holy, if you are a practicing litigator, and you have not read this book--read this book.