Materials for South Carolina Bar lecture
For the past 25 years, I have–imperfectly, fitfully and on a very ad hoc basis–developed strategies intended to preserve my sanity and maintain and increase my satisfaction in practicing law—specifically family law. For the past 15 years, I have informally mentored scores of younger attorneys. The past eight years I have formally mentored ten attorneys. During this mentoring process, I have tried to impart some of my experience and ideas to preserve sanity and improve job satisfaction, and have watched these young attorneys implement these ideas.
Some of these ideas are universal (e.g., get regular exercise; develop hobbies). Some of these ideas probably seem tangential to maintaining sanity (learn to appeal; develop your own roster of attorneys to mentor). And some obvious ways to maintain sanity are too obvious for me to include here: I hope no one needs to point out that getting proper sleep or being moderate in one’s alcohol use is vital to maintaining sanity. However, the methods I will discuss have proven useful for me and the attorneys I have mentored in increasing their job satisfaction and maintaining their sanity. No one told me these things when I opened my law practice over two decades ago but I wish someone had. The goal of this material is to shorten a newly licensed attorney’s learning curve. The list is surely not complete: if I revisit this material in 25 years there will be things my 80 year old self wished my 55 year old self knew.
Barry Knobel says there are 5 stages in an attorney’s professional life: 1) Optimist – right out of law school; 2) Realist – after 10 years of practice; 3) Pessimist – from the 10th to the 20th year (maybe much sooner); 4) Cynic – anytime after the 10th year; and finally, 5) Hypocrite – the worst of the lot. Hopefully following these recommendations this will slow your advance through the stages.
Supreme Court holds temporary domestic agreements do not waive elective share
The December 18, 2024, South Carolina Supreme Court opinion in Weeks v. Weeks, affirms that a temporary domestic agreement addressing marital property issues
No more unilateral remote mediations
A December 6, 2024 Supreme Court order rescinds a March 19, 2021 Supreme Court order that authorized remote mediations during the COVID-19 pandemic.
For second time in under two years, Court of Appeals affirms divided legal custody
The refiled October 21, 2024, Court of Appeals opinion in Abbas-Ghaleb v. Ghaleb, 444 S.C. 245, 907 S.E.2d 105 (Ct. App. 2024), stems