Professor sentences archaic legal waffle to be banished
By Rachel Browne
April 23, 2006
IF crimes against language were a punishable offence, most lawyers would be serving life sentences.
As it is, the only lengthy sentences legal profession members are serving are written on paper and delivered to increasingly frustrated clients.
Sydney University law professor Peter Butt has responded to this frustration with his new book, Modern Legal Drafting, which encourages simplicity in legal writing.
"Lawyers write in a very wordy and pompous style," he said.
"There is no justification for that nowadays. Lawyers should consider that the way they write is important for their clients. They can write in simple, modern English if they tried."
While big corporations such as insurance companies and financial institutions are embracing plain English in legal documents, many lawyers continue to cling to old school legalese.
At best, this means clients have to translate archaic language while, at worst, it forces them to wade through hundreds of words of waffle.
"Lawyers use humungous sentences," Professor Butt said. "I have seen one of 1299 words. I've seen judges use sentences of well over 100 words in their judgements.
"Even if the content is fairly straightforward, the sheer length of the sentence makes it impenetrable."
And if you think some legislation sounds like it was written in Shakespeare's time, that's probably because it was. The property laws still used in most Australian states were originally drafted in the 1600s.
"I've found words dating back to the 1660s, although it's more common to find words from the 1800s still being used in legal documents," Professor Butt said.
Having redrafted legal documents for groups such as the Business Council of Australia, the Board of Taxation and the Office of Film and Literature Classification, Professor Butt said the legal profession resisted change.
"Historically, lawyers were paid by length which is why they use four words where one will do," he said. "It says no more but justifies a larger fee, perhaps.
"Also, the role models that students follow are judges and judges, with all due respect, don't write very well. The other role models are academics and they're not good writers either."
Fear of professional negligence also makes lawyers averse to simplifying legislation.
While the profession has improved over the past 20 years, Professor Butt hopes his book, to be released in June, will encourage greater clarity.