Teaching from a Core of Passion
A Tribute to Yale Kamisar
Jeffrey S. Lehman
December 5, 1992
There are a lot of things I would like to say about
Yale, but I thought that tonight I should say a few words about Yale as teacher
-- about his influence on students here at Michigan.
I first heard Yale's name in the spring of 1977, when
I was deciding where to go to law school.
Roger Martindale, who was then Dean of Admissions, suggested I speak
with a U of M alum who practicing law near me -- in a town close to Ithaca, New
York. I chatted with this guy for
about fifteen minutes, and he was really quite eloquent about why I should go
to Michigan. But what impressed me
the most was his statement, "When you go to Michigan you must be sure to
take a course from a professor named Yale Kamisar. That course changed the way I thought about law. Every day we'd go to class and talk
about interesting cases and I was always confused. But at the very end of the course, when I was studying for
exams, I figured it out. Professor
Kamisar thought all those cases were wrongly decided!"
Now today I wonder why it took that student until the
end of the course to reach that conclusion, but when I was just a college
senior the statement impressed me, and I next heard about Yale when I was
enrolled here as a first year student.
I had someone else for criminal law, but a friend of mine had Yale. My friend was more ambivalent than the
alum from Ithaca had been. He
thought Yale was entertaining, but he was very concerned about whether Yale was
really a good teacher. He
used to complain about how Yale was obsessed with some marginal, relatively
unimportant issues like "intent" and "causation." My roommate would say, "I'm
worried that we're going to end up with a perfect understanding of easy stuff
like lifeboats and never even get to the difference between embezzlement
and larceny by trick!"
I reached my third year without having taken a course
from Yale, so that fall Diane and I both signed up for Yale's criminal
procedure course. I learned a lot
about the Fourth Amendment and Miranda and Messiah in that
course. But what I really learned
had much more to do with teaching and with advocacy.
I think that much of what we teach our students in
class is not substance but a skill -- a particular style of advocacy. Most of us implicitly suggest that
effective, ethical legal argument involves a certain pose. The pose is that of the thoughtful,
reflective scholar. One who sees
the difficulty of a problem, its complexity, the nuances, the play of
competition among worthy social values.
One who then struggles to make the close judgment that one position is
better than its opposite.
During my first two years of law school, I am quite
sure that I came to believe that the pose was the way lawyers should
advocate. It was instrumentally
effective. And it was morally
worthy.
Well, in that criminal procedure class, Yale offered
us a different model. Of course,
it was obvious that he knew how criminal procedure is riddled with the same
close balanced judgments between respectable concerns as any field of law. From time to time he would even talk
about the area as reflecting a difficult choice between, on the one hand,
responding to citizens' concerns about the very real menace of state power or,
on the other hand, kowtowing to a few citizens' crazed, irrational fears of one
another.
Of course, any of us who knows Yale outside the
classroom knows how deeply he feels that the Bill of Rights embodies a special
concern with the dangers of concentrated state power. What made Yale's class so special was that he did not park
his passion at the door. It
infused every hour of every day we met.
I had other professors in law school who held passionate
commitments. But none of them
brought their passion to the classroom the way Yale did. Indeed, until I studied with Yale, I
daresay I had somehow gotten the idea that hot-tempered passionate argument was
at best counterproductive and at worst a kind of unprincipled bullying.
Yet Yale's example showed us otherwise. In that class, he combined passion with
nuance. It was quite effective;
Yale picked up a lot of converts in that class, and even those who remained
unpersuaded were not unmoved. And
he showed us that lawyers could exercise their craft in the fully engaged
service of profound personal commitments.
I wish I could say that I emulate Yale's teaching style in my own classroom, but I don't have that in me. By temperament I am more comfortable with the pose. But I do tell every student I can that before they leave Ann Arbor they should take a course from Yale Kamisar. They will learn a lot about the Bill of Rights. More importantly, they will see how a lawyer can blend genuine passion into an effective, indeed compelling form of argument.