.TH lawyer humor \n(mo/\n(dy/\n(yr "Lawyer Humor" .ce L A W Y E R H U M O R .po 0 .in 0i .nf .pl 12i -----cut-here--------8[--------cut-here--------8[--------cut-here--------8[----- Canonical List Of Lawyer Humor (Court Jester) Archive-Name: lawyer [plain text version] lawyer.html [HTML Web version] Last-Modified: 95/03/02 Version: 3.01 Total-Joke-Count: 377 Send additions, corrections, comments to hjiwa@nor.chevron.com E-mail contributors get the next new issue e-mailed back to them with credits to their entry noted. If posting additions to this list, do not include the entire list again in your post. Send all flames to sue_you@/dev/null :-) Friendly chitchat will be replied to in kind. Flamers will be heartily flame broiled. Disclaimer: This humor does not reflect the thoughts or opinions of either myself, my company, my friends, or my cat; don't quote me on that; don't quote me on anything; © Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Joker's Wild; all rights reserved; this document is distribution copyrighted to the extent that you may distribute this posting and all its associated parts freely but you may not make a profit from it or include the article or parts of it in commercial publications, or as part of any fee-based services or products; further redistributions only allowed unedited and in its entirety by electronic transfer (anonymous FTP, Gopher, WWW and mail servers), storage media, and printed copy as long as this notice is included and no monetary fee is charged; jokes subject to change without notice; text is slightly enlarged to show detail; resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is unintentional and coincidental; all models are over 18 years of age; dry clean only; do not bend, fold, or mutilate; anchovies or jalapenos added to jokes upon request; your mileage may vary; no substitutions are allowed; for a limited time only while supplies last; offer void where prohibited; humor is provided "as is" without any warranties expressed or implied; user assumes full liabilities; not liable for damages due to use or misuse; equal opportunity joke employer; no shoes, no shirt, no jokes; caveat emptor; read at your own risk; jokes may contain material some readers find objectionable; parental advisory: explicit lyrics; keep away from pets and small children; limit one-per-family please; no money down; no purchase necessary; ask us about our guns-for-jokes trade-in plan; you need not be present to win; some assembly required; batteries not included; action figures sold separately; jokes were packed full, contents may have settled during mailing; sanitized and sealed for your protection; do not use if safety seal is broken; do not use while operating a motor vehicle or heavy equipment; safety goggles may be required during use; call before you dig; use only with proper ventilation; for external use only; if a swelling, redness, rash, or irritation develops, discontinue use; do not place near a flammable or magnetic source; keep away from open flames; avoid inhaling fumes or contact with mucous membranes; joke contents under pressure, may explode if incinerated; smoking these jokes may be hazardous to your health; the best safeguard, second only to abstinence, is the use of a good laugh; text is made from 100% recycled electrons and magnetic particles; no animals were used to test the hilarity of these jokes; no salt, MSG, preservatives, artificial color or flavor added; if ingested, do not induce vomiting, if symptoms persist, consult a comedian; jokes are ribbed for your pleasure; slippery when wet; must be 18 to enter; possible penalties for early withdrawal; one size fits all; joke offer is valid only at participating Internet sites; slightly higher west of the Rockies; allow four to six weeks for delivery; if defects are found, do not try to fix them yourself, but return to an authorized joke service center; please remain seated until the jokes have come to a complete stop; jokes in the mirror may be funnier than they appear; this disclaimer does not cover hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, and other Acts of God, sonic boom vibrations, electromagnetic radiation from nuclear blasts, unauthorized repair, improper installation, misuse, typos, misspelled words, missing or altered signatures, and incidents owing to computer or disk failure, accidental file deletions, or milk coming out of your nose due to laughing while drinking; other restrictions may apply. If something offends you, lighten up, get a life, and move on. Note: To keep this as a plain text file, remove all "cut-here" lines and the Unix nroff format commands present above the first "cut-here" above. To convert this document to Unix man page format, remove all "cut-here" lines and feed the entire file into the command `nroff -Tlp -man thisfile`. To search for the main subject headings, `grep "^== " thisfile` To search for the new entries made since the last version, find ">NEW[". To search for additions or improvements to existing entries, find ">IMPROVED[". CONTENTS RIDDLES COURTROOM HUMOR LAW HUMOR LAWYER HUMOR ================================================================================ == RIDDLES ===================================================================== -= riddles =-= 1 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you call a lawyer with an I. Q. of 50? Your honor. -= riddles =-= 2 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you call a lawyer whose gone bad? Senator. -= riddles =-= 3 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a trampoline? You take off your shoes to jump on a trampoline! -= riddles =-= 4 =----------------------------------------------------------- In front of you stand four men: Adolf Hitler, Idi Amin, Saddam Hussein and a lawyer. You are holding a gun which contains only three bullets. Who do you shoot? Use all three bullets on the lawyer. -= riddles =-= 5 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a hooker and a lawyer? A hooker will stop fucking you when you're dead. -= riddles =-= 6 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a tick and a lawyer? The tick stops draining you and drops off after you're dead. -= riddles =-= 7 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you call 5000 dead lawyers at the bottom of the ocean? A good start! -= riddles =-= 8 =----------------------------------------------------------- How can you tell when a lawyer is lying? His lips are moving. -= riddles =-= 9 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a dead dog in the road and a dead lawyer in the road? There are skid marks in front of the dog. -= riddles =-= 10 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a dead lawyer and a squished skunk in the road? The vultures will eat the skunk. -= riddles =-= 11 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a skunk? Nobody wants to hit a skunk. -= riddles =-= 12 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why won't vultures eat dead lawyers? There are some things that would gag even a vulture. -= riddles =-= 13 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a vulture? The lawyer gets frequent flyer miles. or Vultures can't take their wing tips off. -= riddles =-= 14 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you do if you run over a lawyer? Back over him to make sure. Then, make another notch on the steering wheel. -= lawyer humor =-= 15 =------------------------------------------------------ Why do behavioral scientists prefer lawyers to rats for their experiments? 1) there are more of the lawyers to work with, 2) lawyers are more expendable, 3) lawyers do more harm to society than rats, 4) lab assistants are less likely to develop a bond or feel sympathy for them, 5) rats arouse more feelings of compassion and humanity, 6) they multiply faster, 7) rats have an inate right to life and liberty, 8) animal rights groups will not object to their torture, 9) rats have more dignity, and 10) there are some things even a rat won't do. What is the only disadvantage to using lawyers instead of rats in laboratory experiments? It's harder to extrapolate the test results to human beings. -= riddles =-= 16 =----------------------------------------------------------- How many lawyers does it take to roof a house? Depends on how thin you slice them. -= riddles =-= 17 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why won't sharks attack lawyers? Professional courtesy. -= riddles =-= 18 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do have when a lawyer is buried up to his neck in sand? Not enough sand. -= riddles =-= 19 =----------------------------------------------------------- When lawyers die, why are they buried in a hole 24 feet deep? Because deep down, they are all nice guys! -= riddles =-= 20 =----------------------------------------------------------- What are lawyers good for? They make used car salesmen look good. -= riddles =-= 21 =----------------------------------------------------------- How can you tell there's an afterlife for lawyers? Because after they die, they lie still. -= riddles =-= 22 =----------------------------------------------------------- How do you get a lawyer out of a tree? Cut the rope. -= riddles =-= 23 =----------------------------------------------------------- Do you know how to save a drowning lawyer? A1: Take your foot off his head. A2: No. Good! -= riddles =-= 24 =----------------------------------------------------------- How do you stop a lawyer from drowning? Shoot him before he hits the water. -= riddles =-= 25 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a bucket of shit? The bucket. -= riddles =-= 26 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the definition of a shame (as in "that's a shame")? When a busload of lawyers goes off a cliff. What is the definition of a "crying shame"? There was an empty seat. -= riddles =-= 27 =----------------------------------------------------------- How do you kill 4000 lawyers? You build a new Titanic and declare it cannot sink. -= riddles =-= 28 =----------------------------------------------------------- What's the strongest argument against both theories of origin? Politicians and lawyers. Who in their right mind would create (or evolve into) these species? -= riddles =-= 29 =----------------------------------------------------------- If a lawyer and an IRS agent were both drowning, and you could only save one of them, would you go to lunch or read the paper? -= riddles =-= 30 =----------------------------------------------------------- How many lawyers does it take to stop a moving bus? Never enough. -= riddles =-= 31 =----------------------------------------------------------- Have you heard about the lawyers' word processor? No matter what font you select, everything come out in fine print. -= riddles =-= 32 =----------------------------------------------------------- What can a goose do, a duck can't, and a lawyer should? Stick his bill up his ass. -= riddles =-= 33 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you get when you cross the Godfather with a lawyer? An offer you can't understand. -= riddles =-= 34 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a porcupine and two lawyers in a Porsche? With a porcupine, the pricks are on the outside! -= riddles =-= 35 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between God and a lawyer? God doesn't think he's a lawyer. -= riddles =-= 36 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you buy a friend graduating from Law School? A lobotomy. -= riddles =-= 37 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a catfish and a lawyer? One's a bottom-crawling scum sucker and the other's just a fish. -= riddles =-= 38 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a female lawyer and a catfish? One's slimey and has whiskers, and the other one lives in the water. -= riddles =-= 39 =----------------------------------------------------------- How do you know when your divorce is getting ugly? When your lawyer doesn't seem like a bloodsucking leech anymore. -= riddles =-= 40 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a leech? A leech will let go and drop off when its victim dies. -= riddles =-= 41 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a dalmation? A dalmation knows when to stop chasing the ambulance. -= riddles =-= 42 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do slime molds have more of than lawyers? Respect. -= riddles =-= 43 =----------------------------------------------------------- What does molds, ooze, and lawyers have in common? They're all slime. -= riddles =-= 44 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why did the lawyer cross the road? To get to the car accident on the other side. -= riddles =-= 45 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why do lawyers carry their certification on their dashboard? So they can park in the handicapped parking; it's proof of a moral disability. -= riddles =-= 46 =----------------------------------------------------------- What are some of the requirements in becoming a lawyer? You must be able to get muggers, rapists, and pope abusers off the hook, and must have at least one relative who works at IBM. -= riddles =-= 47 =----------------------------------------------------------- What kind of lure must you use if you want to attract lawyers so as to shoot them? You may use any as long as it yells every once in a while "I'm gonna sue!" or "Help, I've fallen and I can't get up!" -= riddles =-= 48 =----------------------------------------------------------- What would happen if you lock a cannibal in a room full of lawyers? He would starve to death. -= riddles =-= 49 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why don't hyenas eat lawyers? Even hyenas has some dignity. -= riddles =-= 50 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you call an honest lawyer? An impossibility. -= riddles =-= 51 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you get when you cross a lawyer with another lawyer? Nothing. There are some things that not even nature can permit. -= riddles =-= 52 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why didn't the circus clown feel so bad about his career? At least he wasn't a lawyer. -= riddles =-= 53 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between pigs and lawyers. You can learn to respect a pig. -= riddles =-= 54 =----------------------------------------------------------- What happens when you cross a pig with a lawyer? Nothing. There are some things a pig won't do. -= riddles =-= 55 =----------------------------------------------------------- How can you tell if your lawyer is worthless? Ask him if he's a member of the bar. -= riddles =-= 56 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between baseball and law? In baseball, if you're caught stealing, you're out. -= riddles =-= 57 =----------------------------------------------------------- Did you hear about the terrorist that hijacked a 747 full of lawyers? He threatened to release one every hour if his demands weren't met. -= riddles =-= 58 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why didn't the doctor (any other profession) pay the rent on his outhouse? He didn't like the lawyer living downstairs. -= riddles =-= 59 =----------------------------------------------------------- Who do lawyers never take their cats to the beach? Their cats keep trying to bury them with sand. -= riddles =-= 60 =----------------------------------------------------------- What does a lawyer and a sperm have in common? Both have about a one in 3 million chance of becoming a human being. -= riddles =-= 61 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why is it that many lawyers have broken noses? From chasing parked ambulances. -= riddles =-= 62 =----------------------------------------------------------- Where can you find a good lawyer? In the cemetery. -= riddles =-= 63 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a gigolo? A gigolo only screws one person at a time. -= riddles =-= 64 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do lawyers use as contraceptives? Their personalities. -= riddles =-= 65 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why are lawyers great in bed? They get so much practice screwing people. -= riddles =-= 66 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a herd of buffalo? The lawyer charges more. -= riddles =-= 67 =----------------------------------------------------------- Hear about the lady lawyer that dropped her briefs and became a solicitor? -= riddles =-= 68 =----------------------------------------------------------- What happened to the lawyer who was thrown out of a saloon? He was disbarred. -= riddles =-= 69 =----------------------------------------------------------- What did the lawyer name his daughter? Sue. -= riddles =-= 70 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a vampire? A vampire only sucks blood at night. -= riddles =-= 71 =----------------------------------------------------------- If a vampire bites a lawyer, isn't that cannibalism? -= riddles =-= 72 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why to lawyers wear neckties? To keep the foreskin from crawling up their chins. -= riddles =-= 73 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is brown and black and looks good on a lawyer? A doberman. -= riddles =-= 74 =----------------------------------------------------------- How many lawyers does it take to shingle a roof? About 3 1/2 if you slice them thin enough. -= riddles =-= 75 =----------------------------------------------------------- What's eighteen inches long and hangs in front of an asshole? The tie around a lawyer's neck. -= riddles =-= 76 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between a lawyer and a rooster? When a rooster wakes up in the morning, its primal urge is to cluck defiance. -= riddles =-= 77 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the difference between yogurt and the American Bar Association? Yogurt has culture. -= riddles =-= 78 =----------------------------------------------------------- How many law professors does it take to change a light bulb? Hell, you need 250 just to lobby for the research grant. -= riddles =-= 79 =----------------------------------------------------------- If you see a lawyer on a bicycle, why don't you swerve to hit him? It might be your bicycle. -= riddles =-= 80 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why does California have so many lawyers and New Jersey have so many toxic waste dumps? New Jersey got to pick first. -= riddles =-= 81 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why did the post office recall the new lawyer stamps? Because people could not tell which side to spit on. -= riddles =-= 82 =----------------------------------------------------------- Did you hear about the new sushi bar that caters exclusively to lawyers? It's called Sosumi. -= riddles =-= 83 =----------------------------------------------------------- Did you hear about the lawyer from Texas who was so big when he died that they couldn't find a coffin big enough to hold the body? They gave him an enema and buried him in a shoebox. -= riddles =-= 84 =----------------------------------------------------------- Did you hear that the post office had to recall its series of stamps depicting famous lawyers? People couldn't decide which side to spit on. -= riddles =-= 85 =----------------------------------------------------------- Did you hear about the two Indian lawyers who formed a partnership, Cachem and Sioux? -= riddles =-= 86 =----------------------------------------------------------- How do you know if a lawyer is well hung? You can't fit a finger between the rope and his neck. -= riddles =-= 87 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why should lawyers wear lots of sunscreen when vacationing at a beach resort? Because they're used to doing all of their lying indoors. -= riddles =-= 88 =----------------------------------------------------------- What do you call a person who assists a criminal in breaking the law before the criminal gets arrested? An accomplice. What do you call a person who assists a criminal in breaking the law after the criminal gets arrested? A lawyer. -= riddles =-= 89 =----------------------------------------------------------- Santa Claus, the tooth fairy, an honest lawyer and an old drunk are walking down the street together when they simultaneously spot a hundred dollar bill. Who gets it? The old drunk, of course, the other three are mythological creatures. -= riddles =-= 90 =----------------------------------------------------------- Did you hear about the new microwave lawyer? You spend eight minutes in his office and get billed as if you'd been there eight hours. -= riddles =-= 91 =----------------------------------------------------------- How many lawyers does it take to change a light bulb? A1: It only takes one lawyer to change your light bulb to his light bulb. A2: None, lawyers only screw us. A3: You won't find a lawyer who can change a light bulb. Now, if you're looking for a lawyer to screw a light bulb... A4: How many can you afford? A5: Three. One to change it and two to keep interrupting by standing up and shouting "Objection!" A6: 65. 42 to sue the power company for insufficiently supplying power, or negligent failure to prevent the surge that made the bulb burn out in the first place, 14 to sue the electrician who wired the house, and 9 to sue the bulb manufacturers. A7: Fifty four. Eight to argue, one to get a continuance, one to object one to demur, two to research precedents, one to dictate a letter, one to stipulate, five to turn in their time cards, one to depose, one to write interrogatories, two to settle, one to order a secretary to change the bulb, and twenty-eight to bill for professional services. A8: Such number as may be deemed necessary to perform the stated task in a timely and efficient manner within the strictures of the following agreement: Whereas the party of the first part, also known as "Lawyer", and the party of the second part, also known as "Light Bulb", do hereby and forthwith agree to a transaction wherein the party of the second part (Light Bulb) shall be removed from the current position as a result of failure to perform previously agreed upon duties, i. e., the lighting, elucidation, and otherwise illumination of the area ranging from the front (north) door, through the entryway, terminating at an area just inside the primary living area, demarcated by the beginning of the carpet, any spillover illumination being at the option of the party of the second part (Light Bulb) and not required by the aforementioned agreement between the parties. The aforementioned removal transaction shall include, but not be limited to, the following steps: 1.) The party of the first part (Lawyer) shall, with or without elevation at his option, by means of a chair, stepstool, ladder or any other means of elevation, grasp the party of the second part (Light Bulb) and rotate the party of the second part (Light Bulb) in a counter-clockwise direction, this point being non-negotiable. 2.) Upon reaching a point where the party of the second part (Light Bulb) becomes separated from the party of the third part ("Receptacle"), the party of the first part (Lawyer) shall have the option of disposing of the party of the second part (Light Bulb) in a manner consistent with all applicable state, local and federal statutes. 3.) Once separation and disposal have been achieved, the party of the first part (Lawyer) shall have the option of beginning installation of the party of the fourth part ("New Light Bulb"). This installation shall occur in a manner consistent with the reverse of the procedures described in step one of this self-same document, being careful to note that the rotation should occur in a clockwise direction, this point also being non-negotiable. Note: The above described steps may be performed, at the option of the party of the first part (Lawyer), by any or all persons authorized by him, the objective being to produce the most possible revenue for the party of the fifth part, also known as "Partnership." A9: None, he'll have the paralegal do it. But, you'll get the following bill: Item Light bulb Charge $2185 (Itemization of bill charges) Lawyer's time (1 hr. minimum) $ 400 Connectivity charge $ 100 Staff charge $ 250 Secretary prepared bill $ 2 Research fee $ 422 Consulting fee $ 431 Paralegal processing fees $ 25 Specialized equipment $ 122 Bought bulb $ 5 Overnight express delivery $ 34 Rule 453.957(B)(1) charge $ 394 A10: Three. One to climb the ladder, one to shake the ladder, and one to sue the ladder company. -= riddles =-= 92 =----------------------------------------------------------- What is the ideal weight of a lawyer? About three pounds, including the urn. -= riddles =-= 93 =----------------------------------------------------------- Why has the Baptist church quit baptizing lawyers? Because they can't get the ring out of the baptismal tub. (Baptism in the Baptist church involves complete immersion in what looks like a very large bathtub.) -= riddles =-= 94 =----------------------------------------------------------- What did the disgruntled laywer say? Get off my case! ================================================================================ == COURTROOM HUMOR ============================================================= -= courtroom humor =-= 1 =--------------------------------------------------- Jury: Twelve men and women trying to decide which party has the best lawyer. Justice: A decision in your favor. -= courtroom humor =-= 2 =--------------------------------------------------- Between the pigeons and the politicians, it's hard to keep the courthouse clean. -= courtroom humor =-= 3 =--------------------------------------------------- A judge in a semi-small city was hearing a drunk-driving case and the defendant, who had both a record and a reputation for driving under the influence, demanded a jury trial. It was nearly 4 P. M. And getting a jury would take time, so the judge called a recess and went out in the hall looking to impanel anyone available for jury duty. He found a dozen lawyers in the main lobby and told them that they were a jury. The lawyers thought this would be a novel experience and so followed the judge back to the courtroom. The trial was over in about 10 minutes and it was very clear that the defendant was guilty. The jury went into the jury room, the judge started getting ready to go home, and everyone waited. After nearly three hours, the judge was totally out of patience and sent the bailiff into the jury-room to see what was holding up the verdict. When the bailiff returned, the judge said, "Well have they got a verdict yet?" The bailiff shook his head and said, "Verdict? Hell, they're still doing nominating speeches for the foreman's position!" -= courtroom humor =-= 4 =--------------------------------------------------- It had to happen sooner or later. Lawyer Dobbins was wheeled into the emergency room on a stretcher, rolling his head in agony. Doctor Green came over to see him. "Dobbins," he said, "What an honor. The last time I saw you was in court when you accused me of malpractice." "Doc. Doc. My side is on fire. The pain is right here. What could it be?" "How would I know? You told the jury I wasn't fit to be a doctor." "I was only kidding, Doc. When you represent a client you don't know what you're saying. Could I be passing a kidney stone?" "Your diagnosis is as good as mine." "What are you talking about?" "When you questioned me on the stand you indicated you knew everything there was to know about the practice of medicine." "Doc, I'm climbing the wall. Give me something." "Let's say I give you something for a kidney stone and it turns out to be a gallstone. Who is going to pay for my court costs?" "I'll sign a paper that I won't sue." "Can I read to you from the transcript of the trial? Lawyer Dobbins: 'Why were you so sure that my client had tennis elbow?' Dr. Green: 'I've treated hundreds of people with tennis elbow and I know it when I see it.' Dobbins: 'It never occurred to you my client could have an Excedrin headache?' Green: 'No, there were no signs of an Excedrin headache.' Dobbins: 'You and your ilk make me sick.' " "Why are you reading that to me?" "Because, Dobbins, since the trial I've lost confidence in making a diagnosis. A lady cane in the other day limping ..." "Please, Doc, I don't want to hear it now. Give me some Demerol." "You said during the suit that I dispensed drugs like a drunken sailor. I've changed my ways, Dobbins. I don't prescribe drugs anymore." "Then get me another doctor." "There are no other doctors on duty. The reason I'm here is that after the malpractice suit the sheriff seized everything in my office. This is the only place that I can practice." "If you give me something to relieve the pain I will personally appeal your case to a higher court." "You know, Dobbins, I was sure that you were a prime candidate for a kidney stone." "You can't tell a man is a candidate for a kidney stone just by looking at him." "That's what you think, Dobbins. You had so much acid in you when you addressed the jury I knew some of it eventually had to crystallize into stones. Remember on the third day day when you called me the 'Butcher of Operating Room 6'? That afternoon I said to my wife, "That man is going to be in a lot of pain.' " "Okay, Doc, you've had your ounce of flesh. Can I now have my ounce of Demerol?" "I better check you out first." "Don't check me out, just give the dope." "But in court the first question you asked me was if I had examined the patient completely. It would be negligent of me if I didn't do it now. Do you mind getting up on the scale?" "What for?" "To find out your height. I have to be prepared in case I get sued and the lawyer asks me if I knew how tall you were." "I'm not going to sue you." "You say that now. But how can I be sure you won't file a writ after you pass the kidney stone?" -= courtroom humor =-= 5 =--------------------------------------------------- One evening, after attending the theater, two gentlemen were walking down the avenue when they observed a rather well dressed and attractive young lady walking ahead of them. One of them turned to the other and remarked, "I'd give $50.00 to spend the night with that woman." Much to their surprise, the young lady overheard the remark, turned around, and replied, "I'll take you up on that." She had a neat appearance and a pleasant voice, so after bidding his companion good night, the man accompanied the young lady to her apartment. The following morning, the man presented her with $25. 00 as he prepared to leave. She demanded the rest of the money, stating: "If you don't give me the other $25.00, I'll sue you for it." He laughed, saying: "I'd like to see you get it on these grounds." The next day he was surprised when he received a summons ordering his presence in court as a defendant in a lawsuit. He hurried to his lawyer and explained the details of the case. His lawyer said: "She can't possibly get a judgement against you on such grounds, but it will be interesting to see how her case will be presented." After the usual preliminaries, the lady's lawyer addressed the court as follows: "Your honor, my client, this lady, is the owner of a piece of property, a garden spot, surrounded by a profuse growth of shrubbery, which property she agreed to rent to the defendant for a specified length of time for the sum of $50.00. The defendant took possession of the property, used it extensively for the purpose for which it was rented, but upon evacuating the premises, he paid only $25.00, one-half the amount agreed upon. The rent was not excessive, since it is restricted property, and we ask judgement be granted against the defendant to assure payment of the balance." The defendant's lawyer was impressed and amused by the way his opponent had presented the case. His defense, therefore, was somewhat different from the way he originally planned to present it. "Your honor," he said, "My client agrees that the lady has a fine piece of property, that he did rent such property for a time, and a degree of pleasure was derived from the transaction. However, my client found a well on the property around which he placed his own stones, sunk a shaft, and erected a pump, all labor performed personally by him. We claim these improvements to the property were sufficient to offset the unpaid amount, and that the plaintiff was adequately compensated for rental of said property. We, therefore, ask that judgement not be granted." The young lady's lawyer answered thusly: "Your honor, my client agrees that the defendant did find a well on her property. However, had the defendant not known that the well existed, he would never have rented the property. Also, upon evacuating the premises, the defendant removed the stones, pulled out the shaft, and took the pump with him. In doing so, he not only dragged the equipment through the shrubbery, but left the hole much larger than it was prior to his occupancy, making the property much less desirable to others. We, therefore, ask that judgement be granted." And it was. She won the case... -= courtroom humor =-= 6 =--------------------------------------------------- Sam Cohen, father of 3 and faithful husband for over 40 years, unexpectedly drops dead one day. His lawyer informs his widow that Stu Schwartz, Sam's best friend since childhood, is to be executor of the will. The day comes to divide Sam's earthly possessions, over a million dollars' worth. In front of Sam's family, Stu reads the will: "Stu, if you're reading this, then I must be dead. You've were such a good friend for so long, how can I ignore you in this will? On the other hand, there are my beloved Sophie and my children to be looked after. Stu, I know you can make sure my family is taken care of properly. So Stu, give what you want to her and take the rest for yourself." Stu then looks at the survivors and tells them that, in accordance with Sam's instructions, Stu will give fifty thousand dollars to Sam's widow. The rest he is retaining for himself. The family is beside itself. "This is impossible! Forty years of marriage and then *this*?! It can't be!" So the family sues. Their day in court arrives, and after testimony from both sides, the judge gives his verdict: "To Stuart Schwartz, I award fifty thousand dollars of the contested money. The remainder shall go to Sophie Cohen, widow of the deceased." Needless to say, the family is elated, but Stu is dumbfound. "Your honor, how can you do this? The will made Sam's wishes quite clear: 'Give what you want to her and take the rest for yourself!' I wanted the lion's share! What gives?" The judge answered back, "Mr. Schwartz, Sam Cohen knew you his whole life. He wanted to give you something in gratitude. He also wanted to see his family taken care of. So he drew up his will accordingly. But you misread his instructions. You see, Sam knew just what kind of a person you are, so with his family's interest in mind, he didn't say, "give what you want to her and keep the rest for yourself.' No. What Sam said was, "Give what YOU want to HER; and keep the rest for yourself." -= courtroom humor =-= 7 =--------------------------------------------------- In a courtroom, a pursesnatcher is on trial and the victim is stating what happened. She says, "Yes, that is him. I saw him clear as day. I'd remember his face anywhere." At which point, the defendant bursts out, "You couldn't see my face, lady. I was wearing a mask!" -= courtroom humor =-= 8 =--------------------------------------------------- Matthew P. Dukes, 26, sentenced to 30 days in jail in 1989 following his sixth drunken-driving conviction, tried for 15 months (through December 1990) to get into jail in Ravenna, Ohio, but each time was turned away because the jail was full. In December, Dukes filed a lawsuit in federal court claiming that his constitutional rights are being violated by the jail's refusal to admit him. -= courtroom humor =-= 9 =--------------------------------------------------- A Norwegian friend of mine told me that a Swedish chainsaw manufacturer began marketing their product in the US, with an English language manual noticeably larger than the Swedish or Norwegian versions. News commentators explained with great humor in a report that this was because of all the additional warnings, including (they pointed out specifically) "Do not attempt to stop the chainsaw with your hand." This was made even more humorous a couple of years later, when they were saved a pile of money in a lawsuit brought by a U.S. citizen who was injured stopping the chainsaw with his hand. He was unable to collect, since the manual specifically warned against it. Rune surmised that the warnings were legally unnecessary in the Scandinavian manuals, since no Scandinavian would publicly admit to doing anything that stupid. I've always thought the problem could be solved if all products had a label on them stating: Warning: This product not intended for use by stupid people. Let this guy try to prove in court that, although he propped the ladder up on a manure heap, he is *not* stupid and didn't violate the instructions. -= courtroom humor =-= 10 =--------------------------------------------------- A man on trial in the Fourth Judicial district of Tennessee had previously pleaded "not guilty." However, once the jury, eight women and four men, had been seated and the trial was under way, the defendant switched his plea. "Why the change?" asked the judge, "Were you persuaded to plead 'guilty'?" "No Sir," the man replied, "When I pleaded 'not guilty', I didn't know women would be on the jury. I can't fool one woman, so I know I can't fool eight of them." -= courtroom humor =-= 11 =--------------------------------------------------- Just remember: when you go to court, you are trusting your fate to twelve people that weren't smart enough to get out of jury duty! -= courtroom humor =-= 12 =--------------------------------------------------- A witness was called to stand to testify about a head-on automobile collision. "Whose fault was this accident?" the lawyer asked. "As near as I could tell," replied the witness, "they hit each other at about the same time." -= courtroom humor =-= 13 =--------------------------------------------------- The U. S. Attorney in Miami declined to prosecute a drug smuggling case in which the Customs Service had confiscated a half ton of marijuana because the office is overworked and won't touch cases under the 2.5 ton minimum. -= courtroom humor =-= 14 =--------------------------------------------------- There once was a young fellow who fell prey to a speed trap in a small southern town. The cop wrote him a ticket and then hauled him before the local Justice of the Peace. The Justice fined the young man $200 and collected the money on the spot. The young fellow turned to go but was called back by the Justice and handed the old ticket. The speedster said, "Just what am I supposed to do with this? I paid my fine!" Whereupon the old J. P. replied, "Keep it, when you get three, you get a bicycle!" -= courtroom humor =-= 15 =--------------------------------------------------- In 1993 in Bangladesh, Falu Mia, 60, was released from prison after 21 years. He had been locked up until his trial for theft in 1972, then found not guilty, but a lethargic bureaucracy failed to release him. He recently filed a lawsuit against the government for 21 years' back wages (about $26,000). -= courtroom humor =-= 16 =--------------------------------------------------- From "Disorderly Conduct - Verbatim Excerpts from Actual Court Cases" selected by Rodney R. Jones, Charles M. Sevilla, and Gerald F. Uelmen. The Court: In this case the request is made for the appointment of the psychologist for the performance of an IQ test. The court does not see the need for an IQ test since it appears to me that he is dumber than a fencepost. Counsel: Has the court started it in numerical terms? The Court: His IQ is less than zero. Counsel: What device do you have in your laboratory to test alcohol content? Witness: I have a dual column gas chromatograph, Hewlett-Packard 5710A with flame analyzation detectors. The Court: Can you get that with mag wheels? Witness: Only on the floor models. Counsel: Now, in your report under "Foundation" you indicated that there is a minimum of cracking and no signs of settling. Witness: Yes. Counsel: When you say there is a minimum of cracking, I take it that you did find some cracking. Witness: No. Because if I said there was no cracking, I would be in court just like this answering some stupid lawyers' questions. So I put minimum in there to cover myself, because somebody is going to find a crack somewhere. The Court: I could say I would like to shake your hand, but I won't. Counsel: Move to strike - The Court: No. We are not going to strike it. Counsel: Move to strike the word "stupid," Your Honor. The Court: The most appropriate word you want stricken? It is worth the whole trial. Defense counsel: The truth of the matter is that you are not an unbiased, objective witness, isn't it? You too were shot in the fracas? Witness: No, sir. I was shot midway between the fracas and the naval. Counsel: Are you qualified to give a urine sample? Witness: Yes, I have been since early childhood. -= courtroom humor =-= 17 =--------------------------------------------------- From "The Houston Chronicle" A defense attorney in a Northern California murder case says he believes Max the parrot may hold the answer to who smothered Jane Gill to death in her bedroom two years ago. But an attempt to get the African gray parrot's testimony into evidence last week was blocked by the judge. Max was found dehydrated and hungry in his cage two days after Gill's murder. After the parrot was coaxed back to health at a pet shop, the shop's owner said the bird began to cry out, "Richard, no, no, no!" The man charged in the case is Gill's business partner, and his name is not Richard. He says he is innocent. Gary Dixon, a private investigator working on the case, surmised that the bird is now in a witness-protection program. "Max's identity has been changed, and he is now a macaw," he said. -= courtroom humor =-= 18 =--------------------------------------------------- In December 1993, Atlanta attorney Dennis Scheib stopped by the prosecutor's office on his way to court to represent a new client in a criminal case. Just outside the office, he saw two officers chasing a man down the hall, and he joined in to help. After the three men caught the escapee and handcuffed him, Scheib learned the man was the client he had been on his way to court to represent. -= courtroom humor =-= 19 =--------------------------------------------------- From the Chicago Tribune, 6/8/90: Naples, Italy(AP): ...the claim (for damages) involves an accident in March involving a medium-sized Regatta and a tiny Panda car. The young man claimed he and his girlfriend were engaged in amorous activity in their car when the large car hit it from behind. The impact momentarily made them lose control, resulting in pregnancy. The suit demands compensation for the cost of repairing the Panda and the cost of the wedding the couple decided to have after discovering the woman was pregnant. -= courtroom humor =-= 20 =--------------------------------------------------- In February 1994, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., accused murderer Donald Leroy Evans, 38, filed a pre-trial motion asking permission to wear a Ku Klux Klan robe in the courtroom and to be referred to in legal documents by "the honorable and respected name of Hi Hitler." According to the courthouse employees interviewed by the Associated Press, Evans thought Adolf Hitler's followers were saying "Hi Hitler" rather than "Heil, Hitler." -= courtroom humor =-= 21 =--------------------------------------------------- Heard through friends: Rumor has it that the state of California, which recently enacted a "Three Strikes" crime bill (three felonies and you're jailed for life), was considering the following amendment: Three strikes and you're out, unless the judge drops the gavel on the third strike and you can run out of the courtroom before the bailiff grabs you. -= courtroom humor =-= 22 =--------------------------------------------------- Rachel Barton-Russell petitioned a court in Springfield, Ore., in February 1994 for a ruling on the meaning of the state's law against corpse abuse. Her deceased husband, Donal Eugene Russell, had declared in his will that he wanted his skin used to make book covers for a collection of his poetry, but the state Mortuary and Cemetery Board claims that carrying out that request would subject a funeral home to liability for corpse abuse. -= courtroom humor =-= 23 =--------------------------------------------------- From the Dallas Morning News: A prospective juror in a Dallas District Court was surprised by the definition of voluntary manslaughter given the panel: "an intentional killing that occurs while the defendant is under the immediate influence of sudden passion arising from an adequate cause, such as when a spouse's mate is found in a 'compromising position.'" "See, I have a problem with that passion business," responded the jury candidate. "During my first marriage, I came in and found my husband in bed with my neighbor. All I did was divorce him. I had no idea that I could have shot him." She wasn't selected for the jury. -= courtroom humor =-= 24 =--------------------------------------------------- The defense attorney was hammering away at the plaintiff. "You claim," he jeered, "that my client came at you with a broken bottle in his hand. But is it not true, that you had something in YOUR hand?" "Yes," he admitted, "his wife. Very charming, of course, but not much good in a fight." -= courtroom humor =-= 25 =--------------------------------------------------- Columbia, S.C. (AP) - A retired judge drew 1 1/2 years in prison for awarding a woman child support and custody of her child in exchange for sex. The woman's lawyer, who arranged the trysts, got a two-year sentence and a $1,500 fine from by Circuit Judge Thomas Cooper. Former Family Court Judge Sam Mendenhall, who retired in 1992, pleaded guilty Monday to misconduct. The lawyer, Samuel Fewell, pleaded guilty to conspiracy. Mendenhall, 54, and Fewell, 58, are former state legislators. Dorothy Carpenter said Mendenhall awarded her custody and child support in 1983 and 1984 in exchange for sex. Carpenter said she also had sex with Fewell in exchange for legal services but fired him in 1985 after he and the judge grew too demanding. Carpenter, who is facing unrelated arson charges, filed a complaint against Mendenhall and Fewell in 1991 with the state Supreme Court, which oversees the judicial system. She said her lawyer in the arson case urged her to file the complaint. Carpenter is charged with conspiracy in connection with a 1991 fire in her Clover home that killed two people. The case is pending. Fewell's sentence will run concurrently with a 2 1/2-year federal sentence he received in March for cocaine possession and tax evasion. -= courtroom humor =-= 26 =--------------------------------------------------- Found in the April 1992 issue of "The Working Communicator": From the Salt Lake City Deseret News: "Juvenile Court To Try Shooting Defendant" From the Jackson, Mississippi Clarion-Ledger: "Suicides Asked To Reconsider" From the Sacramento Bee: "Drug Firm Ordered To Supply Women" From the San Francisco Examiner: "New Autos To Hit 5 Million" From the Honolulu Pacific Business News: "Office Building Permits Plunge" -= courtroom humor =-= 27 =--------------------------------------------------- The lawsuit Irene Geschke, then age 55, filed against a mortgage company in 1979 in Chicago has passed its 15th anniversary without coming to trial. There have been more than 530 motions and orders, and nine dates for trial have come and gone. Geschke claims the mortgage company caused her to go out of business when it wrongly foreclosed on a loan and is now acting as her lawyer, managing the one ton of legal documents involved in the case. -= courtroom humor =-= 28 =--------------------------------------------------- Apparently weary of interfamily bickering in the federal bankruptcy case of Judith Herskowitz of Florida, Judge Jay Cristol ordered Herskowitz in March to "obtain and mail to" her sister Susan Charney, at least five days before Susan's next birthday, a card which reads "Happy Birthday, Sister" and contains the signature of Ms. Herskowitz. Further, Cristol ordered that "the card shall not contain any negative, inflammatory, or unkind remarks." -= courtroom humor =-= 29 =--------------------------------------------------- Questions Asked Of Supreme Court Nominees Have you read all the John Grisham novels? Pardon me, do you have any Grey Poupon? Jockeys or boxers? What do you like on your pizza? Asphinctersays WHAT? How 'bout that O.J. mess? Okay, let's say a long-time senator from a very famous family goes for a drive with his secretary, and kind of, ya know, drives off a bridge or something, killing the babe; he wouldn't be guilty, would he? Ever done Madonna? Should the rabbit be allowed to eat Trix? Is justice a) eagle-eyed, b) sorta near-sighted, or c) blind as a bat? Is that Regis Philbin just nuts or what? Have you ever appeared, or do you ever plan to appear in a Bruce Willis movie? How come you don't have a babe-magnet beard like Bork's? Got any naked photos of your illegal nanny? Can you give Justice Souter a lift to work when his mom's sick? How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop? -= courtroom humor =-= 30 =--------------------------------------------------- In Pittsburgh in March of 1994, Donita Jo Artis, 24, told prosecutors and the judge, after being denied custody of her 3-year-old son and sentenced to prison for beating him until he was blind, deaf, and unable to walk, "You guys are so unfair." -= courtroom humor =-= 31 =--------------------------------------------------- In June 1994 in London, lawyers for convicted murderer Stephen Young filed an appeal after learning from one juror that three other jurors had conducted a Ouija board seance during jury deliberations and "contacted" the dead man, who named Young as the killer. -= courtroom humor =-= 32 =--------------------------------------------------- The World's Worst Juror (from "Book of Heroic Failures", by Stephen Pile) It happened at a rape trial in Snaresbrook (U.K.) county court on an unusually warm and sultry day. One of the jurors fell asleep just as the victim was being questioned by the prosecuting counsel. "Would you," he asked, "tell the court precisely what the defendant said to you before the attack?" "No, she would not." she said. "It was far too crude and shocking." "Would you be prepared to write it down?" And she did, with every sign of distaste (it was, broadly speaking, a promise that nothing in the history of sexual congress compared with what the rapist planned to do to his victim), and the paper was passed to the judge, learned counsel, the clerk of the court, and the jury. In the second row, our hero slumbered on until he was suddenly woken by a sharp nudge from the smiling brunette next to him. She passed the note to him. He read the message thereon, gazed in wonder at his neighbour, read it again, winked at the woman, and slipped the note in his pocket. When the judge demanded the note back, the juror refused. It was, he said, a private matter. -= courtroom humor =-= 33 =--------------------------------------------------- The Lord Giveth, The Feds Taketh Away Associated Press - When William H. Irvin III received a government check for $836,939.19 in June, 1992, he considered it a gift from God since he had recently prayed for self-sufficiency. A federal court jury in Kansas City, Mo., was unmoved: it was a computer error, they said, not God, which boosted his $183.69 check to the higher amount. Convicted of knowingly spending government money, filing a false tax return and money laundering, he faces 43 years in prison and a $1.25 million fine. -= courtroom humor =-= 34 =--------------------------------------------------- Prosecutor: Did you kill the victim? Defendant: No, I did not. Prosecutor: Do you know what the penalties are for perjury? Defendant: Yes, I do. And they're a hell of a lot better than the penalty for murder. -= courtroom humor =-= 35 =--------------------------------------------------- Judge: Why did you kick Mr. Smith in the crotch? Defendant: How was I supposed to know he was going to suddenly turn around? -= courtroom humor =-= 36 =--------------------------------------------------- The following is a courtroom exchange between a defense attorney and a farmer with a bodily injury claim. It came from a Houston, Texas insurance agent. Attorney: At the scene of the accident, did you tell the constable you had never felt better in your life? Farmer: That's right. Attorney: Well, then, how is it that you are now claiming you were seriously injured when my client's auto hit your wagon? Farmer: When the constable arrived, he went over to my horse, who had a broken leg, and shot him. Then he went over to Rover, my dog, who was all banged up, and shot him. When he asked me how I felt, I just thought under the circumstances, it was a wise choice of words to say I've never felt better in my life. -= courtroom humor =-= 37 =--------------------------------------------------- Mary Louise Gilman, the venerable editor of the National Shorthand Reporter has collected many of the more hilarious courtroom bloopers in two books, 'Humor in the Court' (1977) and 'More Humor in the Court', published a few months ago. From Mrs. Gilman's two volumes, here are some of my favorite transquips, all recorded by America's keepers of the word: Q. What is your brother-in-law's name? A. Borofkin. Q. What's his first name? A. I can't remember. Q. He's been your brother-in-law for years, and you can't remember his first name? A. No. I tell you I'm too excited. (Rising from the witness chair and pointing to Mr. Borofkin.) Nathan, for God's sake, tell them your first name! Q. Did you ever stay all night with this man in New York? A. I refuse to answer that question. Q. Did you ever stay all night with this man in Chicago? A. I refuse to answer that question. Q. Did you ever stay all night with this man in Miami? A. No. Q. Now, Mrs. Johnson, how was your first marriage terminated? A. By death. Q. And by whose death was it terminated? Q. Doctor, did you say he was shot in the woods? A. No, I said he was shot in the lumbar region. Q. What is your name? A. Ernestine McDowell. Q. And what is your marital status? A. Fair. Q. Are you married? A. No, I'm divorced. Q. And what did your husband do before you divorced him? A. A lot of things I didn't know about. Q. And who is this person you are speaking of? A. My ex-widow said it. Q. How did you happen to go to Dr. Cherney? A. Well, a gal down the road had had several of her children by Dr. Cherney, and said he was really good. Q. Do you know how far pregnant you are right now? A. I will be three months November 8th. Q. Apparently then, the date of conception was August 8th? A. Yes. Q. What were you and your husband doing at that time? Q. Mrs. Smith, do you believe that you are emotionally unstable? A. I should be. Q. How many times have you committed suicide? A. Four times. Q. Doctor, how many autopsies have you performed on dead people? A. All my autopsies have been performed on dead people. Q. Were you acquainted with the deceased? A. Yes, sir. Q. Before or after he died? Q. Officer, what led you to believe the defendant was under the influence? A. Because he was argumentary and he couldn't pronunciate his words. Q. What happened then? A. He told me, he says, "I have to kill you because you can identify me." Q. Did he kill you? A. No. Q. Mrs. Jones, is your appearance this morning pursuant to a deposition notice which I sent to your attorney? A. No. This is how I dress when I go to work. The court: Now, as we begin, I must ask you to banish all present information and prejudice from your minds, if you have any. Q. Did he pick the dog up by the ears? A. No. Q. What was he doing with the dog's ears? A. Picking them up in the air. Q. Where was the dog at this time? A. Attached to the ears. Q. When he went, had you gone and had she, if she wanted to and were able, for the time being excluding all the restraints on her not to go, gone also, would he have brought you, meaning you and she, with him to the station? Mr. Brooks: Objection. That question should be taken out and shot. Q. And lastly, Gary, all your responses must be oral. Okay? What school do you go to? A. Oral. Q. How old are you? A. Oral. Q. What is your relationship with the plaintiff? A. She is my daughter. Q. Was she your daughter on February 13, 1979? Q. Now, you have investigated other murders, have you not, where there was a victim? Q. ...and what did he do then? A. He came home, and next morning he was dead. Q. So when he woke up the next morning, he was dead? Q. Did you tell your lawyer that your husband had offered you indignities? A. He didn't offer me nothing; he just said I could have the furniture. Q. So, after the anesthesia, when you came out of it, what did you observe with respect to your scalp? A. I didn't see my scalp the whole time I was in the hospital. Q. It was covered? A. Yes, bandaged. Q. Then, later on.. what did you see? A. I had a skin graft. My whole buttocks and leg were removed and put on top of my head. Q. Could you see him from where you were standing? A. I could see his head. Q. And where was his head? A. Just above his shoulders. Q. What can you tell us about he truthfulness and veracity of this defendant? A. Oh, she will tell the truth. She said she'd kill that sonofabitch, and she did! Q. Do you drink when you're on duty? A. I don't drink when I'm on duty, unless I come on duty drunk. Q. ...any suggestions as to what prevented this from being a murder trial instead of an attempted murder trial? A. The victim lived. Q. Are you sexually active? A. No, I just lie there. Q. Are you qualified to give a urine sample? A. Yes, I have been since early childhood. Q. The truth of the matter is that you were not an unbiased, objective witness, isn't it. You too were shot in the fracas? A. No, sir. I was shot midway between the fracas and the naval. Q. What is the meaning of sperm being present? A. It indicates intercourse. Q. Male sperm? A. That is the only kind I know. Q. (Showing man picture.) That's you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you were present when the picture was taken, right? Q. Was that the same nose you broke as a child? -= courtroom humor =-= 38 =--------------------------------------------------- Another Real-Life Courtroom Quote Q: You say you had three men punching at you, kicking you, raping you, and you didn't scream? A: No ma'am. Q: Does that mean you consented? A: No, ma'am. That means I was unconscious. -= courtroom humor =-= 39 =--------------------------------------------------- According to Department of Justice figures, 30,000 inmate lawsuits were filed last year (added to heavy backlogs, more than 28,000 inmate lawsuits in New York alone) against prison officials for "civil rights" violations, the vast majority described by judges and court officials as frivolous. Among the lawsuits were those prisoners complaining that the prison canteen supplied "creamy" peanut butter when a prisoner bought "crunchy", that guards wouldn't refrigerate his ice cream snack so that he could eat it later ($1 million lawsuit), that his toilet seat was too cold, that, as an inmate-paralegal in the prison law library, he should make the same wage that lawyers make, that prisons should offer salad bars ($129 million), that a limit on the number of Kool-Aid refills is "cruel and unusual punishment", and that the scrambled eggs were cooked too hard. In New York, 20 percent of the entire budget of the Attorney General's office is spent on prisoner lawsuits. budget -= courtroom humor =-= 40 =--------------------------------------------------- Amil Dinsio, 58, filed a $15 million lawsuit in May of 1994 against the United Carolina Bank in Charlotte, N.C. from his federal prison in Loretto, Pa., where he is serving four years for robbing the bank in 1992. Sentencing guidelines call for consideration of the amount of money involved in the robbery, and Dinsio accused the bank of fraudulently inflating the amount, resulting in his spending an extra 16 months in prison. -= courtroom humor =-= 41 =--------------------------------------------------- Here are a few lines spoken by people in county court during the last year: The stolen car fairy? - judge to a lawyer who said his client didn't know how a number of stolen cars had ended up on his property. Fortunately for you sir, there's not a section for gross dumbness in the Criminal Code. - judge to a man who reluctantly obeyed police orders to leave an area, yelling "sieg heil" and goose-stepping away. He is a consumer of judicial services. - judge explaining the politically correct way to refer to a criminal. So how old is your twin brother? - judge to a man who had stolen a car with his twin brother, and who had just identified himself as being 18 years old. This isn't "Let's Make a Deal." Do you see any doors up here? - judge to a man who, when asked to choose between a large fine and a short jail term for an impaired driving conviction, wanted to know the range of each to compare them and then decide. -= courtroom humor =-= 42 =--------------------------------------------------- From the L.A. Times: A British court threw out a paternity suit against Boy George. The magistrate found the case a little odd...not to mention the defendant. -= courtroom humor =-= 43 =--------------------------------------------------- In May 1994, the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court decision dismissing Richard Overton's $10,000 1991 lawsuit against Anheuser-Busch for false advertising. In the lawsuit, Overton had said he suffered physical and mental injury and emotional distress because the implicit promises in the company's advertisements, especially of success with women, did not materialize for him when he drank its product. Besides that, Overton contended, he sometimes got sick when he drank. -= courtroom humor =-= 44 =--------------------------------------------------- Ex-student Jason Wilkins sued the University of Idaho in July of 1994 for $940,000 to pay for injuries he suffered when he fell through a third story window while mooning students. Wilkins had climbed onto a three-foot-high heater to reach the window but claimed the university should have posted warnings. -= courtroom humor =-= 45 =--------------------------------------------------- The sentencing of Jose Manuel Miguel Xaviar Gonzales by Judge Roy Bean (1881): Jose Manuel Miguel Xaviar Gonzales, in a few short weeks, it will be spring. The snows of winter will flow away, the ice will vanish, the air will become soft and balmy. In short, Jose Manuel Miguel Xaviar Gonzales, the annual miracle of the years will awaken and come to pass. But you won't be there. The rivulet will run its soaring course to the sea. The timid desert flowers will put forth their tender shoots. The glorious valleys of this imperial domain will blossom as the rose. Still, you will not be here to see. From every treetop, some wild woods songster will carol his mating song. Butterflies will sport in the sunshine. The gentle breeze will tease the tassels of the wild grasses, and all nature, Jose Manuel Miguel Xaviar Gonzales, will be glad. But you will not be here to enjoy it. Because I command the sheriff of the county to lead you away to some remote spot, swing you by the neck from a knotting bough of some sturdy oak, and let you hang until dead. And the, Jose Manuel Miguel Xaviar Gonzales, I further command that such officer retire quickly from your dangling corpse, that vultures may descend from the heavens upon your filthy body until nothing shall remain but bare, bleached bones of a coldblooded, bloodthirsty, throat-cutting, murdering S.O.B." -= courtroom humor =-= 46 =--------------------------------------------------- Evidence produced at the Camden, New Jersey, kidnapping trial of James A. Howard, 39, revealed that he had done substantial library research on the crime, calculating the average prison sentence to be seven years and fixing at $500,000 the amount that would justify his risk in taking the teenage son of an Atlantic City businessman. -= courtroom humor =-= 47 =--------------------------------------------------- eye Weekly January 5 1994 Toronto's arts newspaper .....free every Thursday Naked Eye Naked Eye Will You Have A Fried Crotch With That, Ma'am? by William Burrill In sue-happy America, a woman wins a $2.9 million lawsuit against McDonald's for spilling a steaming hot coffee on her very own crotch. Thus encouraged, another reportedly rather large plaintiff files suit for emotional harm caused by the fact that she fell off the toilet while taking a dump at Mc.D's. This could be the start of a whole new trend: Here are then suggested reasons to sue McDonald's for gazillions of bucks in the New Year (and, we at eye, of course, claim 15 per cent of any actual settlements because, after all, it was our idea). * * * 1. Sue for permanent case of nausea from looking at pimples on workers who cook fries. 2. Sue for environmental guilt trip over having to throw away about 18 pieces of plastic and StyroFoam containers and utensils after eating one Mc-Hap-Hap-Happy- Wappy Meal. 3. Sue because you are constantly, against your wishes, being asked to have "fries with that." 4. Sue because they never give you vinegar unless you specifically ask for it. It should be your RIGHT, goddammit!!! 5. Sue because the cheesy-faced mock-jolliness of staff is obviously a deviously conspired act to make you feel like a piece of shit because YOU aren't working for minimum wage. 6. Sue because you have to look at those bad polyester uniforms. 7. Sue because the blithering, blabbering dickweeds you are forced to sit beside are obviously inbred morons and your mental health might suffer from Second- Hand Stupidity. 8. Sue because, just because you're a writer who sleeps until four in the afternoon, you can't get a Big Breakfast after 11 a.m. 9. Sue because the lady in the lime green stretchie pants budded into line ahead of you, causing you permanent anxiety disorders. 10. Sue because they won't tell you what's in the Secret Sauce on the Big Macs. How do we know it's not bull jism or something? The public has a right to know. Issues of eye in archive gopher://interlog.com Coupla Mailing lists available http://www.interlog.com/eye eye@interlog.com "Break the Gutenberg Lock..." 416-971-8421 -= courtroom humor =-= 48 =--------------------------------------------------- In an October 1994 trial in Corpus Christi, Texas, involving alleged indecent activities by one man toward another in a men's room toilet stall, both the prosecutor and defense attorney brought into the courtroom full-size models of that particular stall in order to demonstrate what did or did not take place. -= courtroom humor =-= 49 =--------------------------------------------------- From a Universal Press Syndicate article: In Detroit, the lawyer for accused murderer Rondelle Woods, 23, delivered part of his closing argument to the jury in rap: 'Went to a party, sweet 16, decided to stay on the scene.' Woods was acquitted. But in Las Vegas in December, Eric Clark, 22, pleaded with the judge, in rap for a light sentence: 'I'm sellin' dope, and I as gettin' paid too blind to see how I was gettin' played.' He got 23 years. -= courtroom humor =-= 50 =--------------------------------------------------- From Late Show with David Letterman; Friday, February 3, 1995 Top Ten Least Convincing Alibis 10. I was out drinking beer and picking up babes with Richard Simmons. 9. Busy trying to get Connie Chung pregnant. 8. Home watching CBS primetime. 7. Playing ping pong with Carol Channing. (videotape of Dave and Carol playing ping pong) 6. Out buying hams for the audience! 5. Was attending a PBS fundraiser with Newt Gingrich. 4. Spent entire weekend trying to suck myself into a Pepsi bottle. 3. Hypnotized by the sound of Casey Kasem's voice. 2. Alone in my room doing some of that Joycelyn Elders stuff. 1. I'm Batman! -= courtroom humor =-= 51 =--------------------------------------------------- From Late Show with David Letterman; Thursday, March 9, 1995 Top Ten Signs You're Watching Too Much Court TV 10. Recurring nightmare about being trapped in Ito's beard. 9. You've named your poodles "Rosa" and "Lopez". 8. You have overpowering urge to pay people to lie for you. 7. You've let both foreign and domestic policy slide for months. (Bill Clinton only) 6. When your kid breaks a neighbor's window, you yell, "Get in the Bronco and drive!" 5. All your erotic fantasies seem to involve bailiffs. 4. You ask MCI to add Johnnie Cochran to your Friends and Family list. 3. Kato Kaelin no longer seems like a freeloading bonehead. 2. You go to the supermaket every day, but all you ever buy is O.J. 1. You're having conjugal visits with yourself. [Music: "Watching the Detectives" by Elvis Costello] -= courtroom humor =-= 52 =--------------------------------------------------- In December 1994, a jury in Ellsworth, Wis., deliberated for three hours before ruling against Stewart Blair in his lawsuit against his friend Maurice Poulin for injuries incurred when Blair tripped over a snowplow blade. Blair claimed that Poulin caused the fall when he startled Blair by accidentally passing gas in his face. In a postscript to the trial, as the jurors ceremonially exited the courtroom, the foreman accidentally, audibly passed gas as he walked by the judge. -= courtroom humor =-= 53 =--------------------------------------------------- Some trues examples of frivolous lawsuits in Texas: A woman sued a man because he swore at her in traffic. He offered to meet her and apologize, but she refused and filed suit for $5,000. She won $2,500 at the trial court level, but the decision was reversed on appeal because she failed to prove her distress was more than what a reasonable person could endure. A man in Fort Worth filed a lawsuit against Elvis Presley Enterprises, contending that the King faked his death and ran off to live a normal life. He says he knows for certain that Elvis is alive because he has had frequent telephone calls from him. A South Texas man borrowed his neighbor's lawn mower. While mowing his own yard, he fell and pulled the lawn mower over his own foot. He sued his neighbor for $235,000. The jury awarded him nothing. An inmate sued the county jail because he claimed there was an abundance of feathers near his cell and he was allergic to feathers, which caused his asthma to act up. The assistant district attorney commented, "A jailbird should never be complaining about feathers." The inmate then sued the newspaper that reported the comment, claiming the guards made fun of him after they read it. ================================================================================ == LAW HUMOR =================================================================== -= law humor =-= 1 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Memphis, Tennessee, it is illegal for a woman to drive a car unless there is a man either running or walking in front of it waving a red flag to warn approaching motorists and pedestrians. -= law humor =-= 2 =--------------------------------------------------------- It is illegal to say "Oh, Boy" in Jonesboro, Georgia. -= law humor =-= 3 =--------------------------------------------------------- It is Texas law that when two trains meet each other at a railroad crossing, each shall come to a full stop, and neither shall proceed until the other has gone. In one of those "true facts" books there was an explanation for this law. It seems that one of the state senators did not want a law passed. To keep this particular law from passing, he attached the train law to it. He hoped that his fellow senators would discover the train law attached, see how ridiculous it was, and not pass the laws. Nobody saw the the train law attached and passed both laws. This may not be the real reason, but it sounds good. And it might explain some of the laws we have to live with. -= law humor =-= 4 =--------------------------------------------------------- It is against the law to fish from horseback in Utah. -= law humor =-= 5 =--------------------------------------------------------- Idaho state law makes it illegal for a man to give his sweetheart a box of candy weighing less than fifty pounds. -= law humor =-= 6 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Denver, it is unlawful to lend your vacuum cleaner to your next door neighbor. -= law humor =-= 7 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Devon, Connecticut, it is unlawful to walk backwards after sunset. -= law humor =-= 8 =--------------------------------------------------------- Years ago, I read that habeas corpus (the principle that a person cannot be held in jail without a warrant) originally passed in the English parliament when the person counting the votes jokingly counted a fat legislator as ten votes. According to the article, the bill would not have passed otherwise. (If anyone has a solid reference for this story, email it to me. -= law humor =-= 9 =--------------------------------------------------------- No one may catch fish with his bare hands in Kansas. -= law humor =-= 10 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Pocatello, Idaho, a law passed in 1912 provided that "The carrying of concealed weapons is forbidden, unless same are exhibited to public view." -= law humor =-= 11 =--------------------------------------------------------- Los Angeles "Daily News": Have you ever had the urge to rip the tag from a pillow or mattress, despite the warning of dire penalties? Well, it's perfectly legal now, if you live in Colorado. Governor Roy Romer formalized the law by gleefully tearing a label from a pillow at his office. "I've been worrying about the mattress inspector jumping through the window for years," he said. -= law humor =-= 12 =--------------------------------------------------------- San Francisco is said to be the only city in the nation to have ordinances guaranteeing sunshine to the masses. -= law humor =-= 13 =--------------------------------------------------------- I understand that in Germany, there is a law that every office must have a view of the sky, however small. So the office buildings are all long and skinny. -= law humor =-= 14 =--------------------------------------------------------- Kirkland, Illinois, law forbids bees to fly over the village or through any of its streets. -= law humor =-= 15 =--------------------------------------------------------- The state law of Pennsylvania prohibits singing in the bathtub. -= law humor =-= 16 =--------------------------------------------------------- It's illegal in Wilbur, Washington, to ride an ugly horse. -= law humor =-= 17 =--------------------------------------------------------- In certain sections of Pennsylvania many years ago, the Farmer's Anti-Automobile society set up some "rules of the road." In effect, they said: 1. "Automobiles travelling on country roads at night must send up a rocket every mile, then wait ten minutes for the road to clear." 2. "If a driver sees a team of horses, he is to pull to one side of the road and cover his machine with a blanket or dust cover that has been painted to blend into the scenery." 3. "In the event that a horse refuses to pass a car on the road, the owner must take his car apart and conceal the parts in the bushes." -= law humor =-= 18 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Tennessee, it is illegal to shoot any game other than whales from a moving automobile. -= law humor =-= 19 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Tulsa, Oklahoma, it is against the law to open a soda bottle without the supervision of a licensed engineer. -= law humor =-= 20 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Calgary, there is a by-law that is still on the books that requires businesses within the city to provide rails for tieing up horses. -= law humor =-= 21 =--------------------------------------------------------- There is/was a law on the books in Washington state that stated that a motorcar driven at night must be preceded by something like 100 yards by a man carrying a lantern... -= law humor =-= 22 =--------------------------------------------------------- In England, it is illegal to sell most goods on a Sunday, (this law is mostly ignored), it is however legal to sell a carrot. It is also legal to sell it at any price and to give free gifts with it, such as anything else one might want to buy on a Sunday! -= law humor =-= 23 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Bexley, Ohio, Ordinance number 223, of 09/09/19 prohibits the installation and usage of slot machines in outhouses. -= law humor =-= 24 =--------------------------------------------------------- A Kentucky statute says: "No female shall appear in a bathing suit on any highway within this state unless she is escorted by at least two officers or unless she be armed with a club." Later, an amendment proposed: "The provisions of this statute shall not apply to any female weighing less than sixty pounds nor exceeding 200 pounds; nor shall it apply to female horses." -= law humor =-= 25 =--------------------------------------------------------- It is illegal to drive more than two thousand sheep down Hollywood Boulevard at one time. -= law humor =-= 26 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Cupertino, California, it is illegal to count backwards audibly in hexadecimal. -= law humor =-= 27 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Israel, there's no legal way for a man named Cohen to marry a divorced woman. -= law humor =-= 28 =--------------------------------------------------------- These excerpts are from the book "Loony Laws" by Robert Pelton (Walker; $8.95) Enjoy! In Ottumwa, Iowa, "It is unlawful for any male person, within the corporate limits of the (city), to wink at any female person with whom he is unacquainted." In Los Angeles, you cannot bathe two babies in the same tub at the same time. In Zion, Ill., it is illegal for anyone to give lighted cigars to dogs, cats, and other domesticated animals kept as pets. In Carmel, N.Y., a man can't go outside while wearing a jacket and pants that do not match. In Clawson, Mich., there is a law that makes it LEGAL for a farmer to sleep with his pigs, cows, horses, goats, and chickens. In Gary, Ind., persons are prohibited from attending a movie house or other theater and from riding a public streetcar within four hours of eating garlic. In Miami, it's illegal for men to be seen publicly in any kind of strapless gown. In St. Louis, it's illegal to sit on the curb of any city street and drink beer from a bucket. In Detroit, couples are banned from making love in an automobile unless the act takes place while the vehicle is parked on the couple's own property. In Harford, Conn., you aren't allowed to cross a street while walking on your hands. In Michigan, a woman isn't allowed to cut her own hair without her husband's permission. In Baltimore, it's illegal to throw bales of hay from a second-story window within the city limits. It's also illegal to take a lion to the movies. In Oxford, Ohio, it's illegal for a woman to strip off her clothing while standing in front of a man's picture. (ed: ???) In Nicholas County, W. Va., no member of the clergy is allowed to tell jokes or humorous stories from the pulpit during a church service. In California, animals are banned from mating publicly within 1,500 feet of a tavern, school, or place of worship. In Pennsylvania, "any motorist driving along a country road at night must stop every mile and send up a rocket signal, wait 10 minutes for the road to be cleared of livestock, and continue." In Carrizozo, N.M., it's forbidden for a female to appear unshaven in public (includes legs and face). In Los Angeles, a man is legally entitled to beat his wife with a leather belt or strap, but the belt can't be wider than 2 inches, unless he has his wife's consent to beat her with a wider strap. In Kentucky, "No female shall appear in a bathing suit on any highway within this state unless she be escorted by at least two officers or unless she be armed with a club" An amendment to the above legislation: "The provisions of this statuate shall not apply to females weighing less than 90 pounds nor exceeding 200 pounds, nor shall it apply to female horses." -= law humor =-= 29 =--------------------------------------------------------- Chicago law prohibits eating in a place that is on fire. -= law humor =-= 30 =--------------------------------------------------------- According to Arkansas law, Section 4761, Pope's Digest: "No person shall be permitted under any pretext whatever, to come nearer than fifty feet of any door or window of any polling room, from the opening of the polls until the completion of the count and the certification of the returns." -= law humor =-= 31 =--------------------------------------------------------- It is against the law for a monster to enter the corporate limits of Urbana, Illinois. -= law humor =-= 32 =--------------------------------------------------------- Frankfort, Kentucky, makes it against the law to shoot off a policeman's tie. -= law humor =-= 33 =--------------------------------------------------------- The good burghers of Redwood City have outlawed the frying of gravy. -= law humor =-= 34 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Santa Clara, it is forbidden to dedicate parking spaces to the patron saint of television. -= law humor =-= 35 =--------------------------------------------------------- Prostitutes in San Francisco are not obliged to make change for bills larger than $50. -= law humor =-= 36 =--------------------------------------------------------- The city of Mountain View proscribes calling pet fish by "names of aggressive content, e.g. 'Biter', 'Killer', 'Sugar-Ray'" -= law humor =-= 37 =--------------------------------------------------------- Bicycles may not be ridden without "appropriate fashion accessories" anywhere in Santa Clara County (de facto law). -= law humor =-= 38 =--------------------------------------------------------- It is illegal to skateboard on walls "or other vertical surfaces" in Palo Alto. -= law humor =-= 39 =--------------------------------------------------------- Wearing a sweatshirt inside-out is deemed a "threatening misdemeanor" in Half-Moon Bay. -= law humor =-= 40 =--------------------------------------------------------- Kansas state law requires pedestrians crossing the highways at night to wear tail lights. -= law humor =-= 41 =--------------------------------------------------------- New Hampshire law forbids you to tap your feet, nod your head, or in any way keep time to the music in a tavern, restaurant, or cafe. -= law humor =-= 42 =--------------------------------------------------------- In 1930, the City Council of Ontario (California) passed an ordinance forbidding roosters to crow within the city limits. -= law humor =-= 43 =--------------------------------------------------------- Harthahorne (Oklahoma) City Ordinance, Section 363, states that it shall be unlawful to put any hypnotized person in a display window. -= law humor =-= 44 =--------------------------------------------------------- The Arkansas legislature passed a law that states that the Arkansas River can rise no higher than to the Main Street bridge in Little Rock. -= law humor =-= 45 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Seattle, Washington, it is illegal to carry a concealed weapon that is over six feet in length. -= law humor =-= 46 =--------------------------------------------------------- In Greene, New York, it is illegal to eat peanuts and walk backwards on the sidewalks when a concert is on. -= law humor =-= 47 =--------------------------------------------------------- A D.C. federal judge has ruled that begging is a form of free speech protected by the Constitution. That means that mugging is free speech too, only more persuasive. -= law humor =-= 48 =--------------------------------------------------------- Patent Yourself Manfred deLisle, a London patent attorney, is offering to file patent claims for the complete genome of any individual who wishes to "preserve his or her commercial options." Several hundred people have signed up for deLisle's services. However, it is anticipated that patent officials will impose extensive documentation demands that will render the scheme impractical. Amici Curiae Another London attorney, A. C. Pomeroy, is working with representatives of several major religions to file patent claims for the genetic substance deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), "on behalf of an unspecified deity." Pomeroy's clients will claim that (a) DNA is a patentable invention and (b) the inventor is unable to file a claim personally and so must have his rights protected by a consortium of interested parties. The parties reportedly have agreed to share any royalties that accrue from the patent, on an equal basis. -= law humor =-= 49 =--------------------------------------------------------- From an Associated Press news wire: The state of Massachusetts is drafting regulations prohibiting large-scale bakers to allow the odor of bread to be released into the atmosphere because it contains ethanol, which can break down into ozone, a component of smog. "If people have such a visceral response to this smell, they can bake their own bread," said the engineer at the state Department of Environmental Protection who drafted the regulation. -= law humor =-= 50 =--------------------------------------------------------- From an AP bulletin: The New York City Transit Authority has ruled that women can ride the city subways topless. New York law dictates that if a man can be somewhere without a shirt, a woman gets the same right. The decision came after arrests of women testing the ordinance on the subways. A transit police spokesman said they would comply with the new rule, but "if they were violating any other rules, like sitting on a subway bench topless smoking a cigarette, then we would take action." Smoking is not allowed in the subways. -= law humor =-= 51 =--------------------------------------------------------- But as records of courts and justice are admissible, it can easily be proved that powerful and malevolent magicians once existed and were a scourge to mankind. The evidence (including confession) upon which certain women were convicted of witchcraft and executed was without a flaw; it is still unimpeachable. The judges' decisions based on it were sound in logic and in law. Nothing in any existing court was ever more thoroughly proved than the charges of witchcraft and sorcery for which so many suffered death. If there were no witches, human testimony and human reason are alike destitute of value. - Ambrose Bierce, "The Devil's Dictionary" -= law humor =-= 52 =--------------------------------------------------------- From the National Review West: Starting January 1 1995, it is illegal in California to possess bear gall bladders. Also, it is no longer permissible to trip horses for entertainment. -= law humor =-= 53 =--------------------------------------------------------- From the March 1995 "Reader's Digest" There Oughta Be A Law By Richard Johnson It seems that we have laws for everything but the stuff that can really get on our nerves. For instance, "there oughta be a law" to protect citizens from the airline passenger who maintains his seat in a fully reclined position while an in-flight meal is being served. So I propose that we start passing some much- needed legislation to crack down on the following offenses: Resisting A Rest: Repeatedly disrupting an entire row of patrons at a theater or sports event by heading for refreshments, frequent rest-room visits, and leg-stretching. Euphonious Assault: Playing the car radio at ear-splitting volume so the next driver is blasted into the back seat. Lane Sharking: Parking over two spaces in a crowded lot so that the adjacent space is rendered useless. Coffee-right Infringement: Hurry-up restaurant employees who are too quick to bring your bill at the end of a meal. Violation Of Individual Swivel Rights: Rotating a circular merchandise rack while another shopper is browsing on the other side. Breaking And Exiting: Slipping away after dropping a bottle of pancake syrup while in an empty grocery-store aisle. Sorry I Missed Him'meanor: Intentionally returning unwanted phone calls when you know the party who called will be out. Kidyapping: Failure to get off the subject of your children. Poly-gamey: Attempting to watch two televised football games and a tennis tournament simultaneously on a Sunday afternoon by means of rapid-fire, remote-control channel surfing. Labor Fraud: Politicians who roll up their sleeves only when posing for campaign photographs. ================================================================================ == LAWYER HUMOR ================================================================ -= lawyer humor =-= 1 =------------------------------------------------------ This list of lawyer jokes cannot be sent due to a court order given at the request of some lawyers. That order has been appealed by some other lawyers. Pending the appeal (and possible further appeals up to the Supreme Court), the list will be unavailable to the general public. If you are unhappy with this situation, see your lawyer, who will be happy to handle it for you for a suitable fee. -= lawyer humor =-= 2 =------------------------------------------------------ Lawyers are people who can write a 10,000-word document and call it a brief. -= lawyer humor =-= 3 =------------------------------------------------------ The problem with lawyer jokes is that most lawyers don't think they are funny, and most people don't understand that they're just jokes! -= lawyer humor =-= 4 =------------------------------------------------------ A housewife, an accountant and a lawyer were asked, "How much is 2+2?" The housewife replies, "Four!" The accountant says, "I think it's either 3 or 4. Let me run those figures through my spreadsheet one more time." The lawyer pulls the drapes, dims the lights and asks in a hushed voice, "How much do you want it to be?" -= lawyer humor =-= 5 =------------------------------------------------------ A man went to a brain store to get some brain for dinner. He sees a sign remarking on the quality of professional brain offered at this particular brain store. So he asks the butcher: "How much for Engineer brain?" "3 dollars an ounce." "How much for [other generic profession] brain?" "4 dollars an ounce." "How much for lawyer brain?" "100 dollars an ounce." "Why is lawyer brain so much more?" "Do you know how many lawyers you need to kill to get one ounce of brain?" -= lawyer humor =-= 6 =------------------------------------------------------ A grade school teacher was asking students what their parents did for a living. "Tim, you be first," she said. "What does your mother do all day?" Tim stood up and proudly said, "She's a doctor." "That's wonderful. How about you, Amie?" Amie shyly stood up, scuffed her feet and said, "My father is a mailman." "Thank you, Amie," said the teacher. "What about your father, Billy?" Billy proudly stood up and announced, "My daddy plays piano in a whorehouse." The teacher was aghast and promptly changed the subject to geography. Later that day, she went to Billy's house and rang the bell. Billy's father answered the door. The teacher explained what his son had said and demanded an explanation. Billy's father said, "I'm actually an attorney. How can I explain a thing like that to a seven-year-old?" -= lawyer humor =-= 7 =------------------------------------------------------ Heard Alan King tell this on an Ed Sullivan retrospective: The other day my house caught fire. My lawyer said, "Shouldn't be a problem. What kind of coverage do you have?" I said, "Fire and theft." The lawyer frowned. "Uh oh. Wrong kind. Should be fire OR theft." -= lawyer humor =-= 8 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer died and arrived at the pearly gates. To his dismay, there were thousands of people ahead of him in line to see St. Peter. To his surprise, St. Peter left his desk at the gate and came down the long line to where the lawyer was, and greeted him warmly. Then St. Peter and one of his assistants took the lawyer by the hands and guided him up to the front of the line, and into a comfortable chair by his desk. The lawyer said, "I don't mind all this attention, but what makes me so special?" St. Peter replied, "Well, I've added up all the hours for which you billed your clients, and by my calculation you must be about 193 years old!" -= lawyer humor =-= 9 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer died and appeared before the pearly gates. When he arrived, a chorus of angels began to sing in his honour and St. Peter himself came out to shake his hand. "Mr Morris," said St. Peter, "it is a great honour to have you here at last. You are the first being to break Methuselah's record for longevity. You have lived 1028 years." "What are you talking about?" said Morris. "I'm 56." "56? But aren't you John Smith?" "Yes." "A lawyer?" "Yes." "From Brooklyn?" "Yes." "Let me check the records," said St Peter. He slapped his hand against his forehead. "Now I see the mistake, we added up your billing hours!" -= lawyer humor =-= 10 =------------------------------------------------------ The Pope and a lawyer find themselves together before the Pearly Gates. After a small quantum of time which was spent discussing their respective professions, ol' St. Peter shows up to usher them to their new Heavenly station. After passing out wings, harps, halos and such, St. Pete decides to show them to their new lodgings. Only a brief flight from the welcome, Pete brings them down on the front lawn of a huge palatial estate with all sorts of lavish trappings. This, Pete announces, is where the lawyer will be spending eternity, (at least until the end of time..) "Hot Dang," the Pope says to His-self, "If he's getting a place like this, I can hardly wait to see my digs!" They take flight once again, and as Pete leads on, the landscape below begins to appear more and more mundane until they finally land on a street lined with Brownstone houses. Pete indicates the third walkup on the left as the Popes new domicile and turns to leave, wishing the pontiff all his best. The Pope, in a mild state of astonishment, cries out, "Hey Pete! What's the deal here? You put that lawyer in a beautiful estate home and I, spiritual leader of terra-firma, end up with this dive?" Pete looks at the pontiff amusedly and replies, "Look here old fellow, this street is practically encrusted with spiritual leaders from many times and religions. We're putting you here with them so you guys can get your dogma together. That other guy gets an estate, because he's the first non-damned lawyer to make it up here!!" -= lawyer humor =-= 11 =------------------------------------------------------ The lawyer is standing at the gate to Heaven and St. Peter is listing his sins: 1) Defending a large corporation in a pollution suit where he knew they were guilty. 2) Defending an obviously guilty murderer because the fee was high. 3) Overcharging fees to many clients. 4) Prosecuting an innocent woman because a scapegoat was needed in a controversial case. And the list goes on for quite awhile. The lawyer objects and begins to argue his case. He admits all these things, but argues, "Wait, I've done some charity in my life also." St. Peter looks in his book and says, "Yes, I see. Once you gave a dime to a panhandler and once you gave an extra nickel to the shoeshine boy, correct?" The lawyer gets a smug look on his face and replies, "Yes." St. Peter turns to the angel next to him and says, "Give this guy 15 cents and tell him to go to hell." -= lawyer humor =-= 12 =------------------------------------------------------ A Dublin lawyer died in poverty and many barristers of the city subscribed to a fund for his funeral. The Lord Chief Justice of Orbury was asked to donate a shilling. "Only a shilling?" said the Justice, "Only a shilling to bury an attorney? Here's a guinea; go and bury 20 more of them." -= lawyer humor =-= 13 =------------------------------------------------------ At the funeral of a lady was her doctor, a friend and her lawyer. Each had promised her that at her funeral they would toss $1000 into her grave. The doctor and friend each tossed in their $1000 cash, after which the lawyer removed the cash and placed a check for $3000. -= lawyer humor =-= 14 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer and a physician had a dispute over precedence. They referred it to Diogenes, who gave it in favor of the lawyer as follows: "Let the thief go first, and the executioner follow." -= lawyer humor =-= 15 =------------------------------------------------------ "How can I ever thank you?" gushed a woman to Clarence Darrow, after he had solved her legal troubles. "My dear woman," Darrow replied, "ever since the Phoenicians invented money, there has been only one answer to that question." -= lawyer humor =-= 16 =------------------------------------------------------ Carlson was charged with stealing a Mercedes Benz, and after a long trial, the jury acquitted him. Later that day, Carlson came back to the judge who had presided at the hearing. "Your honor," he said, "I wanna get out a warrant for that dirty lawyer of mine." "Why?" asked the judge. "He won your acquittal. What do you want to have him arrested for?" "Well, your honor," replied Carlson, "I didn't have the money to pay his fee, so he went and took the car I stole." -= lawyer humor =-= 17 =------------------------------------------------------ "You seem to have more than the average share of intelligence for a man of your background," sneered the lawyer at a witness on the stand. "If I wasn't under oath, I'd return the compliment," replied the witness. -= lawyer humor =-= 18 =------------------------------------------------------ Definition of a lawyer: a man who helps you get what's coming to him. -= lawyer humor =-= 19 =------------------------------------------------------ Diogenes went to look for an honest lawyer. "How's it going?" someone asked. "Not too bad," said Diogenes. "I still have my lantern." More information on Diogenes: Diogenes may well have been looking for an honest man in his wanderings, but the reason he was wandering in the first place is that he had been ostracized for counterfeiting. -= lawyer humor =-= 20 =------------------------------------------------------ Lorenzo Dow, an evangelist of the last century, was on a preaching tour when he came to a small town one cold winter's night. He entered the local general store to get some warmth and saw the town's lawyers gathered around the pot-bellied stove, discussing the town's business. Not one offered to allow Dow into the circle. Dow told the men who he was and that he had recently had a vision where he had been given a tour of Hell, much like the traveler in Dante's Inferno. When one of the lawyers asked him what he had seen, he replied, "Very much what I see here: all of the lawyers, gathered in the hottest place." -= lawyer humor =-= 21 =------------------------------------------------------ A woman and her little girl were visiting the grave of the little girl's grandmother. On their way through the cemetery back to the car, the little girl asked, "Mommy, do they ever bury two people in the same grave?" "Of course not, dear." replied the mother, "Why would you think that?" "The tombstone back there said 'Here lies a lawyer and an honest man.'" -= lawyer humor =-= 22 =------------------------------------------------------ The defendant who pleads their own case has a fool for a client, but at least there will be no problem with fee-splitting. -= lawyer humor =-= 23 =------------------------------------------------------ These two guys, George and Harry, set out in a hot air balloon to cross the Atlantic Ocean. After 37 hours in the air, George says, "Harry, we better lose some altitude so we can see where we are." Harry lets out some of the hot air in the balloon and the balloon descends to below the cloud cover. George says, "I still can't tell where we are, lets ask that guy on the ground." So Harry yells down to the man, "Hey, could you tell us where we are?" And the man on the ground yells back, "You're in a balloon, 100 feet up in the air." George turns to Harry and says, "That man must be a lawyer." And Harry says, "How can you tell?" George says, "Because the advice he gave us is 100% accurate, and totally useless." That's the end of the Joke, but for you people who are still worried about George and Harry: They end up in the drink, and make the front page of the New York Times: "Balloonists Soaked by Lawyer". -= lawyer humor =-= 24 =------------------------------------------------------ Product Liability Suit In The United States District Court, Southwestern District, Tempe, Arizona Case No. B19293, Judge Joan Kujava, Presiding Wile E. Coyote, Plaintiff vs. Acme Company, Defendant Opening statement of Mr. Harold Schoff, attorney for Mr. Coyote: My client, Mr. Wile E. Coyote, a resident of Arizona and contiguous states, does hearby bring suit for damages against the Acme Company, manufacturer and retail distributor of assorted merchandise, incorporated in Delaware and doing business in every state, district, and territory. Mr. Coyote seeks compensation for personal injuries, loss of business income, and mental suffering caused as a direct result of the actions and/or gross negligence of said company, under Title 15 of the United States Code Chapter 47, section 2072, subsection (a), relating to product liability. Mr. Coyote states that on eighty-five separate occasions, he has purchased of the Acme Company (hereinafter, "Defendant"), through that company's mail order department, certain products which did cause him bodily injury due to defects in manufacture or improper cautionary labelling. Sales slips made out to Mr. Coyote as proof of purchase are at present in the possession of the Court, marked Exhibit A. Such injuries sustained by Mr. Coyote have temporarily restricted his ability to make a living in the profession of predator. Mr. Coyote is self- employed and thus not eligible for Workmen's Compensation. Mr. Coyote states that on December 13th, he received of Defendant via parcel post one Acme Rocket Sled. The intention of Mr. Coyote was to use the Rocket sled to aid him in pursuit of his prey. Upon receipt of the Rocket Sled, Mr. Coyote removed it from its wooden shipping crate and sighting his prey in the distance, activated the ignition. As Mr. Coyote gripped the handlebars, the Rocket Sled accelerated with such sudden and precipitate force as to stretch Mr. Coyote's forelimbs to a length of fifteen feet. Subsequently, the rest of Mr. Coyote's body shot forward with a violent jolt, causing severe strain to his back and neck and placing him unexpectedly astride the Rocket Sled. Disappearing over the horizon at such speed as to leave a diminishing jet trail along its path, the Rocket Sled soon brought Mr. Coyote abreast of his prey. At that moment, the animal he was pursuing veered sharply to the right. Mr. Coyote vigorously attempted to follow this maneuver but was unable to, due to poor design and engineering on the Rocket Sled and a faulty or nonexistent steering system. Shortly thereafter, the unchecked progress of the Rocket Sled led it and Mr. Coyote into collision with the side of a mesa. Paragraph One of the Report of Attending Physician (Exhibit B), prepared by Dr. Ernst Grosscup, M.D., D.O., details the multiple fractures, contusions, and tissue damage suffered by Mr. Coyote as a result of this collision. Repair of the injuries required a full bandage around the head (excluding the ears), a neck brace, and full or partial casts on all four legs. Hampered by these injuries, Mr. Coyote was nevertheless obliged to support himself. With this in mind, he purchased of Defendant as an aid to mobility one pair of Acme Rocket Skates. When he attempted to use this product, however, he became involved in an accident remarkably similar to that which occurred with the Rocket Sled. Again, Defendant sold over the counter, without caveat, a product which attached powerful jet engines (in this case, two) to inadequate vehicles, with little or no provision for passenger safety. Encumbered by his heavy casts, Mr. Coyote lost control of the Rocket Skates soon after strapping them on, and collided with a roadside billboard so violently as to leave a hole in the shape of his full silhouette. Mr. Coyote states that on occasions too numerous to list in this document he has suffered mishaps with explosives purchased of Defendant: the Acme "Little Giant" Firecracker, the Acme Self-Guided Aerial Bomb, etc. (For a full listing, see the Acme Mail Order Explosives Catalog and attached deposition, entered in evidence as Exhibit C.) Indeed, it is safe to say that not once has an explosive purchased of Defendant by Mr. Coyote performed in an expected manner. To cite just one example: At the expense of much time and personal effort, Mr. Coyote constructed around the outer rim of a butte a wooden trough beginning at the top of the butte and spiralling downward around it to some few feet above a black X painted on the desert floor. The trough was designed in such a way that a spherical explosive of the type sold by Defendant would roll easily and swiftly down to the point of detonation indicated by the X. Mr. Coyote placed a generous pile of birdseed directly on the X, and then, carrying the spherical Acme Bomb (Catalog #78) climbed to the top of the butte. Mr. Coyote's prey, seeing the birdseed, approached, and Mr. Coyote proceeded to light the fuse. In an instant, the fuse burned down to the stem, causing the bomb to detonate. In addition to reducing all Mr. Coyote's careful preparations to naught, the premature detonation of Defendant's product resulted in the following disfigurements to Mr. Coyote: 1. Severe singeing of the hair on the head, neck, and muzzle. 2. Sooty discoloration. 3. Fracture of the left ear at the stem, causing the ear to dangle in the aftershock with a creaking noise. 4. Full or partial combustion of whiskers, producing kinking, frazzling, and ashy disintegration. 5. Radical widening of the eyes, due to brow and lid charring. We come now to the Acme Spring-Powered Shoes. The remains of a pair of these purchased by Mr. Coyote on June 23rd are Plaintiff's Exhibit D. Selected fragments have been shipped to the metallurgical laboratories of the University of California at Santa Barbara for analysis, but to date, no explanation has been found for this product's sudden and extreme malfunction. As advertised by Defendant, this product is simplicity itself: two wood-and- metal sandals, each attached to milled-steel springs of high tensile strength and compressed in a tightly coiled position by a cocking device with a lanyard release. Mr. Coyote believed that this product would enable him to pounce upon his prey in the initial moments of the chase, when swift reflexes are at a premium. To increase the shoes' thrusting power still further, Mr. Coyote affixed them by their bottoms to the side of a large boulder. Adjacent to the boulder was a path which Mr. Coyote's prey was known to frequent. Mr. Coyote put his hind feet in the wood-and-metal sandals and crouched in readiness, his right forepaw holding firmly to the lanyard release. Within a short time, Mr. Coyote's prey did indeed appear on the path coming toward him. Unsuspecting, the prey stopped near Mr. Coyote, well within range of the springs at full extension. Mr. Coyote gauged the distance with care and proceeded to pull the lanyard release. At this point, Defendant's product should have thrust Mr. Coyote forward and away from the boulder. Instead, for reasons yet unknown, the Acme Spring-Powered Shoes thrust the boulder away from Mr. Coyote. As the intended prey looked on unharmed, Mr. Coyote hung suspended in the air. Then the twin springs recoiled, bringing Mr. Coyote to a violent feet-first collision with the boulder, the full weight of his head and forequarters falling upon his lower extremities. The force of this impact then caused the springs to rebound, whereupon Mr. Coyote was thrust skyward. A second recoil and collision followed. The boulder, meanwhile, which was roughly ovoid in shape, began to bounce down a hillside, the coiling and recoiling of the springs adding to its velocity. At each bounce, Mr. Coyote came into contact with the boulder, or the boulder came into contact with Mr. Coyote, or both came into contact with the ground. As the grade was a long one, this process continued for some time. The sequence of collisions resulted in systemic physical damage to Mr. Coyote, viz, flattening of the cranium, sideways displacement of the tongue, reduction of length of legs and upper body, and compression of vertebrae from base of tail to head. Repetition of blows along a vertical axis produced a series of regular horizontal folds in Mr. Coyote's body tissues, a rare and painful condition which caused Mr. Coyote to expand upward and contract downward alternately as he walked and emit an offkey, accordion-like wheezing with each step. The distracting and embarrassing nature of this symptom has been a major impediment to Mr. Coyote's pursuit of a normal social life. As the court is no doubt aware, Defendant has a virtual monopoly of manufacture and sale of goods required by Mr. Coyote's work. It is our contention that Defendant has used its market advantage to the detriment of the consumer of such specialized products as itching powder, giant kites, Burmese tiger traps, anvils, and two-hundred-foot-long rubber bands. Much as he has come to mistrust Defendant's products, Mr. Coyote has no other domestic source of supply to which to turn. One can only wonder what our trading partners in Western Europe and Japan would make of such a situation, where a giant company is allowed to victimize the consumer in the most reckless and wrongful manner over and over again. Mr. Coyote respectfully requests that the Court regard these larger economic implications and assess punitive damages in the amount of seventeen million dollars. In addition, Mr. Coyote seeks actual damages (missed meals, medical expenses, days lost from professional occupation) of one million dollars; general damages (mental suffering, injury to reputation) of twenty million dollars; and attorney's fees of seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars. By awarding Mr. Coyote the full amount, this Court will censure Defendant, its directors, officers, shareholders, successors, and assigns, in the only language they understand, and reaffirm the right of the individual predator to equal protection under the law. -= lawyer humor =-= 25 =------------------------------------------------------ Lawyers are the only profession where the more there are, the more are needed! - Robert Lucky, IEEE Spectrum -= lawyer humor =-= 26 =------------------------------------------------------ Lawyers in Japan Copied from the Sunday Daily Breeze - Take heart, America. Three monkey wrenches have been thrown into Japan's well-oiled economic machine. It's only a mater of time before that powerful engine of productivity begins to sputter and fail. What could cause such a sharp turnaround? High interest rates? Increased unemployment? Lower productivity? No, it's something much more economically debilitating, and permanent. Three American lawyers have become the first foreign attorneys permitted to practice law in Japan. What's more, two of them are from New York! The decline has begun. Japan has one attorney for every 10,000 residents, compared to the U.S. ratio of one attorney for every 390 residents. For every 100 attorneys trained in Japan, there are 1,000 engineers. In the United States, that ratio is reversed. But a law that became effective on April 1 permits foreigners to practice in Japan for the first time since 1955. Already, an additional 20 American and six British lawyers have applied for permission to open practices in Japan. If anything can slow the Japanese economy, it's the presence of American attorneys. What better way to even our balance of trade than to send Japan our costliest surplus commodity? -= lawyer humor =-= 27 =------------------------------------------------------ For three years, the young attorney had been taking his brief vacations at this country inn. The last time he'd finally managed an affair with the innkeeper's daughter. Looking forward to an exciting few days, he dragged his suitcase up the stairs of the inn, then stopped short. There sat his lover with an infant on her lap! "Helen, why didn't you write when you learned you were pregnant?" he cried. "I would have rushed up here, we could have gotten married, and the baby would have my name!" "Well," she said, "when my folks found out about my condition, we sat up all night talkin' and talkin' and decided it would be better to have a bastard in the family than a lawyer." -= lawyer humor =-= 28 =------------------------------------------------------ God decided to take the devil to court and settle their differences once and for all. When Satan heard this, he laughed and said, "And where do you think you're going to find a lawyer?" -= lawyer humor =-= 29 =------------------------------------------------------ When asked, "What is a contigent fee?" a lawyer answered, "A contingent fee to a lawyer means, if I don't win your suit, I get nothing. If I do win it, you get nothing." -= lawyer humor =-= 30 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer named Strange was shopping for a tombstone. After he had made his selection, the stonecutter asked him what inscription he would like on it. "Here lies an honest man and a lawyer," responded the lawyer. "Sorry, but I can't do that," replied the stonecutter. "In this state, it's against the law to bury two people in the same grave. However, I could put "here lies an honest lawyer." "But that won't let people know who it is" protested the lawyer. "Certainly will," retorted the stonecutter. "People will read it and exclaim, "That's strange!" -= lawyer humor =-= 31 =------------------------------------------------------ An anxious woman goes to her doctor. "Doctor," she asks nervously, "Can you get pregnant from anal intercourse?" "Certainly," replies the doctor, "Where do you think lawyers come from?" -= lawyer humor =-= 32 =------------------------------------------------------ Proctologist: A brain surgeon for lawyers. -= lawyer humor =-= 33 =------------------------------------------------------ It has been discovered that lawyers are the larval stage of politicians. -= lawyer humor =-= 34 =------------------------------------------------------ There is no better way to exercise the imagination than the study of the law. -= lawyer humor =-= 35 =------------------------------------------------------ No artist ever interpreted nature as freely as a lawyer interprets the truth. - Jean Giradoux -= lawyer humor =-= 36 =------------------------------------------------------ A small town that cannot support one lawyer can always support two. -= lawyer humor =-= 37 =------------------------------------------------------ There are two kinds of lawyers, those who know the law and those who know the judge. -= lawyer humor =-= 38 =------------------------------------------------------ I'll never discuss my lawyer's character in his absence, so let's discuss his absence of character! - Michael Lara -= lawyer humor =-= 39 =------------------------------------------------------ There is no doubt that my lawyer is honest. For example, when he filed his income tax return last year, he declared half of his salary as 'unearned income.' - ibid -= lawyer humor =-= 40 =------------------------------------------------------ Between grand theft and a legal fee, there only stands a law degree. -= lawyer humor =-= 41 =------------------------------------------------------ The trouble with the legal profession is that 98% of its members give the rest a bad name. -= lawyer humor =-= 42 =------------------------------------------------------ At a convention of biological scientists, one researcher remarks to another, "Did you know that in our lab we have switched from mice to lawyers for our experiments?" "Really?" the other replied, "Why did you switch?" "Well, for five reasons. First, we found that lawyers are far more plentiful. Second, the lab assistants don't get so attached to them. Third, lawyers multiply faster in numbers. Fourth, animal rights groups will not object to their torture. And fifth, there are some things even a rat won't do. There is a drawback however; sometimes it's very hard to extrapolate the test results to human beings" -= lawyer humor =-= 43 =------------------------------------------------------ A tourist wanders into a back-alley antique shop in San Francisco's Chinatown. Picking through the objects on display, he discovers a detailed, life-sized bronze sculpture of a rat. The sculpture is so interesting and unique that he picks it up and asks the shop owner what it costs. "Twelve dollars for the rat, sir," says the shop owner, "and a thousand dollars more for the story behind it." "You can keep the story, old man," he replies, "but I'll take the rat." With the transaction complete, the tourist leaves the store with the bronze rat under his arm. As he crosses the street in front of the store, two live rats emerge from a sewer drain and fall into step behind him. Nervously looking over his shoulder, he begins to walk faster, but every time he passes another sewer drain, more rats come out and follow him. By the time he's walked two blocks, at least a hundred rats are at his heels, and people begin to point and shout. He walks even faster, and soon breaks into a trot as multitudes of rats swarm from sewers, basements, vacant lots, and abandoned cars. Rats by the thousands are at his heels and as he sees the waterfront at the bottom of the hill, he panics and starts to run full tilt. No matter how fast he runs, the rats keep up, squealing hideously, now not just thousands but millions, so that by the time he comes rushing up to the water's edge, a trail of rats twelve city blocks long is behind him. Making a mighty leap, he jumps up onto a light post, grasping it with one arm while he hurls the bronze rat into San Francisco Bay with the other, as far as he can heave it. Pulling his legs up and clinging to the light post, he watches in amazement as the seething tide of rats surges over the breakwater into the sea, where they drown. Shaken and mumbling, he makes his way back to the antique shop. "Ah, so you've come back for the rest of the story," says the owner. "No," says the tourist, "I was wondering if you have a bronze lawyer." -= lawyer humor =-= 44 =------------------------------------------------------ A little old lady walked into the head branch of the Chase Manhattan Bank holding a large paper bag in her hand. She told the young man at the window that she wished to take the $3 million she had in the bag and open an account with the bank. She said that first, though, she wished to meet the president of Chase Manhattan Bank due to the amount of money involved. The teller seemed to think that was a reasonable request and after opening the paper bag and seeing the bundles of $1000 bills which amounted to right around $3 million, telephoned the bank's secretary to obtain an appointment for the lady. The lady was escorted upstairs and ushered into the president's office. Introductions were made and she stated that she would like to get to know the people she did business with on a more personal level. The bank president then asked her where she came into such a large amount of money. "Was it an inheritance?" he asked. "No." she answered. "Was it from playing the stock market?" "No." she replied. He was quiet for a minute, trying to think of where this little old lady could possibly come into $3 million. "I bet." she stated. "You bet?" repeated the bank president. "As in horses?" "No." she replied, "I bet people." Seeing his confusion, she explained that she justs bets different things with people. All of a sudden she said, "I'll bet you $25,000.00 that by 10:00 o'clock tomorrow morning, your balls will be square." The bank president figured she must be off her rocker and decided to take her up on the bet. He didn't see how he could lose. For the rest of the day, the bank president was very careful. He decided to stay home that evening and take no chances; there was $25,000.00 at stake. When he got up in the morning and took his shower, he checked to make sure everything was okay. There was no difference; he looked the same as he always had. He went to work and waited for the little old lady to come in at 10:00 o'clock, humming as he went. He knew this would be a good day; how often do you get handed $25,000.00 for doing nothing. At 10:00 o'clock sharp, the little old lady was shown into his office. With her was a younger man. When he inquired as to the man's purpose for being there, she informed him that he was her lawyer and she always took him along when there was this much money involved. "Well," she asked, "what about our bet?" "I don't know how to tell you this," he replied, "but I am the same as I've always been only $25,000.00 richer." The lady seemed to accept this, but requested that she be able to see for herself. The bank president thought this was reasonable and dropped his trousers. She instructed him to bend over and then grabbed a hold of him. Sure enough, everything was fine. The bank president then looked up and saw her lawyer standing across the room banging his head against the wall. "What' wrong with him?" he inquired. "Oh him," she replied, "I bet him $100,000.00 that by 10:00 o'clock this morning that I'd have the president of Chase Manhattan Bank by the balls." -= lawyer humor =-= 45 =------------------------------------------------------ A certain lawyer was quite wealthy and had a summer house in the country, to which he retreated for several weeks of the year. Each summer, the lawyer would invite a different friend of his to spend a week or two up at this place, which happened to be in a backwoods section of Maine. On one particular occasion, he invited a Czechoslovakian friend to stay with him. The friend, eager to get a freebee off a lawyer, agreed. Well, they had a splendid time in the country, rising early and living in the great outdoors. Early one morning, the lawyer and his Czechoslovakian companion went out to pick berries for their morning breakfast. As they went around the berry patch, gathering blueberries and raspberries in tremendous quantities, along came two huge bears, a male and a female. The lawyer, seeing the two bears, immediately dashed for cover. His friend, though, wasn't so lucky, and the male bear reached him and swallowed him whole. The lawyer ran back to his Mercedes, tore into town as fast has he could, and got the local backwoods sheriff. The sheriff grabbed his shotgun and dashed back to the berry patch with the lawyer. Sure enough, the two bears were still there. "He's in *that* one!" cried the lawyer, pointing to the male, while visions of lawsuits from his friend's family danced in his head. He just had to save his friend. The sheriff looked at the bears, and without batting an eye, leveled his gun, took careful aim, and shot the female. "Whatdya do that for!" exclaimed the lawyer, "I said he was in the other!" "Exactly," replied the sheriff, "and would _you_ believe a lawyer who told you that the Czech was in the male?" -= lawyer humor =-= 46 =------------------------------------------------------ A Russian, a Cuban, an American and a Lawyer are in a train. The Russian takes a bottle of the Best Vodka out of his pack; pours some into a glass, drinks it, and says: "In USSR, we have the best vodka of the world, nowhere in the world you can find vodka as good as the one we produce in Ukrainia. And we have so much of it, that we can just throw it away..." Saying that, he open the window and throw the rest of the bottle through it. All the others are quite impressed. The Cuban takes a pack of Havanas, takes one of them, lights it and begins to smoke it saying: "In Cuba, we have the best cigars of the world: Havanas, nowhere in the world there is so many and so good cigar and we have so much of them, that we can just throw them away..." Saying that, he throws the pack of havanas through the window. One more time, everybody is quite impressed. At this time, the American just stands up, opens the window, and throws the Lawyer through it... -= lawyer humor =-= 47 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer's dog, running about unleashed, beelines for a butcher shop and steals a roast. Butcher goes to lawyer's office and asks, "If a dog running unleashed steals a piece of meat from my store, do I have a right to demand payment for the meat from the dog's owner?" The lawyer answers, "Absolutely." "Then you owe me $8.50. Your dog was loose and stole a roast from me today." The lawyer, without a word, writes the butcher a check for $8.50. Several days later, the butcher opens the mail and finds an envelope from the lawyer: $250 due for a consultation. -= lawyer humor =-= 48 =------------------------------------------------------ A Rabbi, a Hindu and a lawyer were driving late at night in the country when their car expired. They set out to find help, and came to a farmhouse. When they knocked at the door, the farmer explained that he had only two beds, and one of the three had to sleep in the barn with the animals. The three quickly agreed. The Rabbi said he would sleep in the barn and let the other two have the beds. Ten minutes after the Rabbi left, there was a knock on the bedroom door. The Rabbi entered exclaiming, "I can't sleep in the barn; there is a pig in there. It's against my religion to sleep in the same room with a pig!" The Hindu said he would sleep in the barn, as he had no religious problem with pigs. However, about five minutes later, the Hindu burst through the bedroom door saying, "There's a cow in the barn! I can't sleep in the same room as a cow! It's against my religion!" The lawyer, anxious to get to sleep, said he'd go to the barn, as he had no problem sleeping with animals. Two minutes later, the bedroom door burst open and the pig and the cow entered... -= lawyer humor =-= 49 =------------------------------------------------------ A police chief, a fire chief, and a city attorney were traveling together by car to a municipal management conference in a distant city. Their car broke down in a rural area and they were forced to seek shelter for the night at a nearby farmhouse. The farmer welcomed them in, but cautioned them that there were only two spare beds and that one of them would have to sleep in the barn with the farm animals. After a short conference, the police chief agreed to take the barn. Shortly after retiring, a knock was heard on the door of the farmhouse. The party inside answered to find the police chief standing there, complaining that he could not sleep. There were pigs in the barn, he said, and he was reminded of the days when everyone called him a pig. The fire chief then volunteered to exchange with the police chief. A short time later, another knock was heard at the door. The fire chief complained that the cows in the barn reminded him of Mrs. O'Leary's cow that started the Chicago fire and that every time he started to go to sleep, he started to have a fireman's worst nightmare, that of burning to death. The city attorney, in desperation for sleep, then agreed to sleep in the barn. This seemed like a good idea until a few minutes later, when another knock was heard at the door. When the occupants answered the door, there stood the very indignant cows and pigs. -= lawyer humor =-= 50 =------------------------------------------------------ The Lawyer's Motto: "Insofar as manifestations of functional deficiencies are agreed by any and all concerned parties to be imperceivable, and are so stipulated, it is incumbent upon said heretofore mentioned parties to exercise the deferment of otherwise pertinent maintenance procedures." In Other Words: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." -= lawyer humor =-= 51 =------------------------------------------------------ A doctor, an engineer, and a lawyer go out hunting in the woods one day. Each of them brings along his hunting dog, and they spend most of the morning arguing about which of the dogs is the smartest. Early in the afternoon, they discover a clearing in the forest. In the middle of the clearing is a large pile of animal bones. Seeing the bones, the doctor turns to the others and says, "I'm going to prove to you two that my dog is the smartest. Watch this!" He then calls his dog over and says, "Bones! See the bones? Go get 'em!" The dog rushes over to the pile, rummages around for a bit, and then proceeds to build a replica of the human skeleton, perfect down to the last detail. The doctor grins smugly; after all, his dog has just build a *human* skeleton from *animal* bones. The engineer, however, is totally unimpressed. "That's nothing," he says. "Watch this." He calls his dog over, and points out the pile. "Bones! Get the bones!" The dog rushes over, tears down the skeleton, and in its place builds a perfect replica of the Eiffel Tower. It even has a little French flag waving at the top. The doctor is forced to agree that the engineer's dog is, in fact, smarter than his own. The lawyer, however, is still not impressed. "My dog is smarter," he says. "Watch." He then calls his dog over, points to the pile, and says simply "Bones." The dog rushes over to the pile, tears down the tower, eats half the bones, buries the other half, screws the other two dogs, and takes the rest of the afternoon off. -= lawyer humor =-= 52 =------------------------------------------------------ A law firm receptionist answered the phone the morning after the firm's senior partner had passed away unexpectedly. "Is Mr. Spenser there?" asked the client on the phone. "I'm very sorry, but Mr. Spenser passed away last night," the receptionist answered. "Can anyone else help you?" The man said no and hung up. Ten minutes later, he called again and asked for Mr. Spenser, his ex-wife's lawyer. The receptionist said, "You just called a few minutes ago, didn't you? Mr. Spenser has died. I'm not making this up." The man again hung up. Fifteen minutes later, he called a third time and asked for Mr. Spenser. The receptionist was irked by this time. "I've told you twice already, Mr. Spenser is dead. He is not here! Why do you keep asking for him when I say he's dead? Don't you understand what I'm saying?" The man replied, "I understand you perfectly. I just like hearing you say it over and over." -= lawyer humor =-= 53 =------------------------------------------------------ Two lawyers made a date to have lunch together. The first person showed up on time, but the second person didn't show until 1-1/2 hours after they were supposed to meet... 1st lawyer: "How come you're so late?" 2nd lawyer: "Oh, I ran over a milk bottle and got a flat tire.." 1st lawyer: "A milk bottle? Didn't you see it in the road?" 2nd lawyer: "No, the kid had it under his coat..." -= lawyer humor =-= 54 =------------------------------------------------------ Washington State Attorney Season And Bag Limits 1300.01 General 1. Any person with a valid Washington State hunting license may harvest attorneys. 2. Taking of attorneys with traps or deadfalls is permitted. The use of currency as bait is prohibited. 3. Killing of attorneys with a vehicle is prohibited. If accidentally struck, remove dead attorney to roadside and proceed to nearest car wash. 4. It is unlawful to chase, herd, or harvest attorneys from a snow machine, helicopter, or aircraft. 5. It shall be unlawful to shout "whiplash", "ambulance", or "free Perrier" for the purpose of trapping attorneys. 6. It shall be unlawful to hunt attorneys within 100 yards of BMW dealerships. 7. It shall be unlawful to use cocaine, young boys, $100 bills, prostitutes, or vehicle accidents to attract attorneys. 8. It shall be unlawful to hunt attorneys within 200 yards of courtrooms, law libraries, whorehouses, health spas, gay bars, ambulances, or hospitals. 9. If an attorney is elected to government office, it shall be a felony to hunt, trap, or possess it. 10. Stuffed or mounted attorneys must have a state health department inspection for AIDS, rabies, and vermin. 11. It shall be illegal for a hunter to disguise himself as a reporter, drug dealer, pimp, female legal clerk, sheep, accident victim, bookie, or tax accountant for the purpose of hunting attorneys. Bag Limits 1. Yellow Bellied Sidewinder 2 2. Two-faced Tort Feasor 1 3. Back-stabbing Divorce Litigator 4 4. Small-breasted Ball Buster (Female only) 3 5. Big-mouthed Pub Gut 2 6. Honest Attorney EXTINCT 7. Cut-throat 2 8. Back-stabbing Whiner 2 9. Brown-nosed Judge Kisser 2 10. Silver-tongued Drug Defender $100 BOUNTY 11. Hairy-assed Civil Libertarian 7 -= lawyer humor =-= 55 =------------------------------------------------------ Ben Dover And C. Howlett Fields Attorneys At Law -= lawyer humor =-= 56 =------------------------------------------------------ Legal business card: Dewey, Cheatham, & Howe Attorneys at Law -= lawyer humor =-= 57 =------------------------------------------------------ When a lawyer tells his clients he has a sliding fee schedule what he means is that after he bills you it's financially hard to get back on your feet. -= lawyer humor =-= 58 =------------------------------------------------------ It was so cold last winter that I saw a lawyer with his hands in his own pockets. -= lawyer humor =-= 59 =------------------------------------------------------ A man walked into a bar with his alligator and asked the bartender, "Do you serve lawyers here?" "Sure do," replied the bartender. "Good," said the man. "Give me a beer, and I'll have a lawyer for my 'gator." -= lawyer humor =-= 60 =------------------------------------------------------ There was the cartoon showing two people fighting over a cow. One was pulling the cow by the tail; the other was pulling on the horns. Underneath was a lawyer milking the cow. -= lawyer humor =-= 61 =------------------------------------------------------ If you laid all of the lawyers in the world, end to end, on the equator, it would be a good idea to just leave them there. -= lawyer humor =-= 62 =------------------------------------------------------ There was a young man shipwrecked on an island. He found a magic lamp on the shore one day, picked it up and rubbed it. A Genie appeared. However, he was not a typical Genie, he was an attorney Genie. When the Genie told the man he was also an attorney, the man laughed and said, "Oh come on, Genies can't be attorneys too!" The Genie said he would prove it. He told the man to make his three wishes, but on one condition, for every wish he made, all attorneys were granted double of what the man wished for. The man pondered the offer and decided that something was better than nothing and decided his three wishes. "My first wish is for 1 million dollars." The Genie reminded the man that he would grant the wish, but all attorneys would get double that amount. The man agreed and then made his second wish. "My second wish is for a beautiful blonde with blue eyes." Once again, the Genie granted the wish and also granted all attorneys with two of the blonde eyed babes. The Genie announced that the man had one more wish and to consider his choice carefully. The man thought for a moment. Suddenly, he drew the Genie's attention to a piece of driftwood lying on the beach. He told the Genie: "For my next wish, please pick up that piece of driftwood and beat me _half_ to death!!!" -= lawyer humor =-= 63 =------------------------------------------------------ Two lawyers are in a bank, when, suddenly, armed robbers burst in. While several of the robbers take the money from the tellers, others line the customers, including the lawyers, up against a wall, and proceed to take their wallets, watches, etc. While this is going on lawyer number one jams something in lawyer number two's hand. Without looking down, lawyer number two whispers, "What is this?" to which lawyer number one replies, "it's that $50 I owe you." -= lawyer humor =-= 64 =------------------------------------------------------ I'm going to sponsor a convention to honor honest lawyers as soon as I can find a phone booth to hold it in. -= lawyer humor =-= 65 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer was trying to console a weeping widow. Her husband had passed away without a will. "Did the deceased have any last words?" asked the lawyer. "You mean *right* before he died?" sobbed the widow. "Yes," replied the lawyer. "They might be helpful if it's not too painful for you to recall." "Well," she began, "he said 'Don't try to scare me! You couldn't hit the broad side of a barn with that gun.'" -= lawyer humor =-= 66 =------------------------------------------------------ A blind rabbit and a blind snake meet each other. Neither one remembers what kind of animal they are, so they decide to feel each other. The rabbit says, "You feel me first." The snake says okay, and he starts feeling the rabbit. He says, "Well, you have fur all over, and a little cotton tail, and two long ears, and big back feet..." The rabbit says, "I know! I'm a rabbit! Yippee!" Then the rabbit feels the snake. He says, "Okay, you're long and thin, and slimy all over, and there's a little forked tongue..." The snake says, "Damn, I'm a lawyer." -= lawyer humor =-= 67 =------------------------------------------------------ Man goes goes to lawyer for help. Man: What is your least expensive fee? Lawyer: $50 for three questions. Man: That's pretty expensive, isn't it? Lawyer: Yes. So what's your third question -= lawyer humor =-= 68 =------------------------------------------------------ Four surgeons were taking a coffee break and were discussing their work. The first one said, "I think accountants are the easiest to operate on. You open them up and everything inside is numbered." The second one said, "I think librarians are easiest to operate on. You open them up and everything inside is in alphabetical order." The third one said, "I like to operate on electricians. You open them up and everything inside is color-coded." The fourth one said, "I like to operate on lawyers. They are heartless, spineless, gutless, and their head and their ass are interchangeable." -= lawyer humor =-= 69 =------------------------------------------------------ The scene is heaven, with three men standing at the Pearly Gates. Saint Peter says to the first man, "Let's see, you're Mr. Jones, the engineer. We've been expecting you. Please follow me." Saint Peter leads him down a hall to a door marked #101. "This is where you'll be staying Mr. Jones," says Saint Peter as he opens the door. Inside is a dark, dank, cold, musty room. Water is dripping from the rocklike walls where torture equipment is hanging. Chained to the center of the floor is a growling, fierce-looking dog. Mr. Jones steps in and a loud voice cries out from above, "Mr.Jones! You have sinned!" Saint Peter closes the door and returns to the remaining two men waiting at the entrance gate. "And you are Mr. Smith, the doctor," Saint Peters addresses the second man. "You are in room 102. Please follow me." Once again when the door is opened this room is dark and dank, water dripping down the walls with horrible torture equipment hanging everywhere, and a growling, snarling dog chained to the center of the floor. As Mr. Smith steps in, a voice from above cries, "Mr. Smith! You have sinned!" Saint Peter closes the door and returns to the last man waiting at the entrance gate. "And you must be Mr. Brown, the lawyer. We have been waiting for you. You are in room number 103. Please follow me." When they get to room #103, Saint Peter opens the door to reveal another dark, musty, gloomy room with torture equipment hanging from the water dripping walls. But in the center of the room stands Bo Derek. As the lawyer steps in the room the voice cries out, "Bo Derek! You have sinned!" -= lawyer humor =-= 70 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer dies and goes to Heaven, where he is brought before God. "A lawyer, eh?" says God (who seems to be Canadian). "We've never had a lawyer in Heaven before. Argue a point of the law for my edification." The lawyer goes into panic and says, "Oh, God, I cannot think of an argument worthy of your notice. But I'll tell you what...you argue a point of the law and I'll refute you." -= lawyer humor =-= 71 =------------------------------------------------------ The lawyer died. Having not lived an all-that-honest life he found himself at the gates of Hell. "Welcome to Hell" announced the Devil greeting him warmly. "Glad you could join us. As your last taste of free will, you are allowed to choose which of three possible places that you will spend the rest of eternity." There were three doors behind the Devil. He opened the first door. Flames shot into the room and the lawyer could see thousands of people amidst the fire. "No" said the lawyer. "Not this one." The Devil opened the second door. The lawyer could see thousands of people slaving away at a large rockpile. They were all being whipped as they hammered the large boulders into smaller boulders. "No" again said the lawyer. Finally, the devil opened up that last door which showed thousands of people in a incredibly large lake with vomit up to their chins. All of them were chanting 'Don't make waves, don't make waves...' "That's awful!!" commented the lawyer in repulsion. "You think that's bad?" asked the devil, "you should see it when the angels spend the weekend here with their motorboats!" -= lawyer humor =-= 72 =------------------------------------------------------ Dear Prospective Employer: I am a starving student on the 1993 production line at Harvard Law Factory. A recent examination of my aspirations has convinced me that I must eat in the years to come. The exorbitant sums paid by most legal factories to summer associates fit in well with the modest goals I have set for myself. Feel assured that I understand the responsibilities incumbent upon a summer associate at your firm. I am not at all squeamish about milking our powerful corporate clients of their every last cent by providing legal services of the calibre necessary to defeat well-founded claims by victims caught in the corporate vice. I have learned much at Hahvahd. I can promise that such human foibles as pity will never interfere with my willingness to stretch the innocent on the rack of legal trickery for the good of the client and its share-holders. Although my parents lost their fortune in the 1987 stock market crash, we have managed to retain our insultingly extravagant La Jolla mansion by means of lies and trickery. I have gained a deep admiration for conspicuous consumption and hope to become an expert in the practice. If I may quote the Bible, "You cannot serve both God and Mammon." (Matt. 6:24). So why bother serving God? I would be delighted to discuss further my background in a personal interview. I am satisfied by my ability to demonstrate the amorality needed to be a successful attorney, and the hunger needed to be a successful and profitable hour biller with your factory. I appreciate the time spent reading this form letter and my "you've seen it all before" resume. I look forward to receiving a form letter with good news from you soon! Desperately, but cocksurely, Jack Meoff, Jr. enclosure JACK MEOFF, JR. School Residence Family Residence 666 Brattle St., #14 99 Oversight Dr. Cambridge, MA 02138 La Jolla, CA 92123 (617) 123-4567 (714) 321-9999 EDUCATION HARVARD LAW FACTORY. Juris Doctor will be awarded May, 1993. Grade Point Average: 3. 93/4. 00 *Christopher Columbus Langell Scholar *Staff Member (redundant, huh?) Harvard Review *Founder, CRAP in '92 (Committee to Re-elect America's President) DARTMOUTH COLLEGE. Bachelor of Science, summa cum laude, awarded 1990. Grade Point Average: 3. 97/4. 00Class Rank: 3/1245 Major: Economic Assumptions Minor: Business Antics *Senior Thesis: "The Rich: How to Keep them that Way" *Editor-in-chief, "The Dartmouth Review" *President, Future Fascists of America EXPERIENCE WICHITA MUNICIPAL JAIL Conspirator, Operation Rescue, 1991 *Deprived numerous U. S. Citizens of their civil rights *Endured three nights of detention for flouting U. S. District Judge Patrick Kelly's injunction encouraging infanticide SILVERADO SAVINGS AND LOAN Personal Assistant, Office of Mr. Neil Bush, 1990 *Rubber-stamped numberless unsecured loans to family friends *Hid under rock with "sensitive" files when federal inspectors visited EXXON CORPORATION Intern, Legal Department, 1989 *Collaborated in escape from liability for Exxon Valdez spill *Advised that Capt. Hazelwood be publicly pilloried as drunk culprit UNITED STATES SENATE Intern, Office of the Honorable Jesse Helms, 1988 *Authored bill to mandate a return to the values of the Middle Ages *Rigged spring-guns to "delay" Anti-life protesters at door *Bullshit official positions to constituents INTERESTS *Money *Wealth *Riches *Treasure Trove REFERENCES Available for a modest fee -= lawyer humor =-= 73 =------------------------------------------------------ Malborn sat in his attorney's office. "Do you want the bad news first or the terrible news?" the lawyer said. "Give me the bad news first." "Your wife found a picture worth a half-million dollars." "That's the bad news?" asked Malborn incredulously. "I can't wait to hear the terrible news." "The terrible news is that it's of you and your secretary." -= lawyer humor =-= 74 =------------------------------------------------------ A dying man gathered his Lawyer, Doctor, and Clergyman at his bed side and handed each of them an envelop containing $25,000 in cash. He made them each promise that after his death and during his repose, they would place the three envelops in his coffin. He told them that he wanted to have enough money to enjoy the next life. A week later, the man died. At the wake, the Lawyer and Doctor and Clergyman, each concealed an envelop in the coffin and bid their old client and friend farewell. By chance, these three met several months later. Soon the Clergyman, feeling guilty, blurted out a confession saying that there was only $10,000 in the envelop he placed in the coffin. He felt, rather than waste all the money, he would send it to a Mission in South America. He asked for their forgiveness. The Doctor, moved by the gentle Clergymans sincerity, confessed that he too had kept some of the money for a worthy medical charity. The envelop, he admitted, had only $8000 in it. He said, he too could not bring himself to waste the money so frivolously when it could be used to benefit others. By this time, the Lawyer was seething with self-righteous outrage. He expressed his deep disappointment in the felonious behavior of two of his oldest and most trusted friends. I am the only one who kept his promise to our dying friend. I want you both to know that the envelop I placed in the coffin contained the full amount. Indeed, my envelop contained my personal check for the entire $25,000. -= lawyer humor =-= 75 =------------------------------------------------------ A great line by Danny de Vito in "Other People's Money": Of course I've got lawyers. They are like nuclear weapons: I've got em coz everyone else has. But as soon as you use them they fuck everything up. -= lawyer humor =-= 76 =------------------------------------------------------ "You are a cheat!" shouted the attorney to his opponent. "And you're a liar!" bellowed the opposition. Banging his gavel sharply, His Honor interrupted: "All right, now that both attorneys have been identified, let's get on with this case." -= lawyer humor =-= 77 =------------------------------------------------------ Old lawyers never die. They just establish law firms. -= lawyer humor =-= 78 =------------------------------------------------------ As the highway patrolman approached the accident site, he found that the entire driver's side of the BMW had been ripped away, taking with it the driver's arm. The injured Yuppie lawyer, obviously in shock, kept moaning, "My car, my car," as the officer tried to comfort him. "Sir," the patrolman said gently, "I think we should be more concerned about your arm than your car." The driver looked down to where his arm should have been, then screamed, "My Rolex! My Rolex!!!" -= lawyer humor =-= 79 =------------------------------------------------------ A lawyer is settling accounts with his client. "Let's do it this way," he says, "pay me $5000 now and then $400 a month." "Gee," the client says, "I feel like I'm paying for a car." Lawyer replies, "You are! And a nice car it is too." -= lawyer humor =-= 80 =------------------------------------------------------ Harry Bender: Imagine the appeals, dissents and remandments, if lawyers had written 'The Ten Commandments' -= lawyer humor =-= 81 =------------------------------------------------------ Lawyer: Did you say the plaintiff was shot in the woods? Doctor: No, I said he was shot in the lumbar region. -= lawyer humor =-= 82 =------------------------------------------------------ Subpoena: From the root "sub", below, and the Latin "poena" for male organ or penis. Therefore, "below the penis" or "by the balls." -= lawyer humor =-= 83 =------------------------------------------------------ Lawyer: a cat who settles disputes between mice. -= lawyer humor =-= 84 =------------------------------------------------------ The scene is a dark jungle in Africa. Two tigers are stalking through the brush when the one to the rear reaches out with his tongue and licks the ass of the tiger in front. The startled tiger turns around and says, "Hey! Cut it out, alright!" The rear tiger says, "sorry," and they continue. After about another five minutes, the rear tiger again reaches out with his tongue and licks the ass of the tiger in front. The front tiger turns around and cuffs the rear tiger and says, "I said stop it!" The rear tiger says, "sorry," and they continue. After about another five minutes, the rear tiger once more licks the ass of the tiger in front. The front tiger turns around and asks the rear tiger, "What is it with you, anyway?" The rear tiger replies, "Well, I just ate a lawyer and I'm trying to get the taste out of my mouth!" -= lawyer humor =-= 85 =------------------------------------------------------ In the middle of the night, in the middle of nowhere, two cars both slightly cross over the white line in the center of the road. They collide and a fair amount of damage is done, although neither is hurt. It is impossible to assess blame for the accident on either however. They both get out. One is a doctor and the other is a lawyer. The lawyer calls the police on his car phone; they'll be there in 20 minutes. It's cold and damp, and both men are shaken up. The lawyer offers the doctor a drink of brandy from his hip flask, the doctor accepts, drinks and hands it back to the lawyer, who puts it away. "Aren't you also going to have a drink?" the doctor says. "After the police get here." replies the lawyer. -= lawyer humor =-= 86 =------------------------------------------------------ The October 8, 1990 issue of Fortune has picked up on a small story which appeared in the Los Angeles Times. As best as I remember, there was a lawyer who got caught three times in an alleged speed trap. He sued the city under RICO (Racketeering Influence and Corruption) statutes. Part of the allegation is that the city set the speed limit without reviewing the traffic patterns every 5 years. A judge ruled that the city could be sued under RICO. I doubt that this is what they had in mind when Congress passed the RICO statutes. -= lawyer humor =-= 87 =------------------------------------------------------ When judgement day came, God decided to be lenient and take up to heaven every one except the really awful people. The result was a planet full of lawyers. -= lawyer humor =-= 88 =------------------------------------------------------ The son of a Spanish lawyer graduated from college and was considering the future. He went to his father, who had a very large office, and asked if he might be given a desk in the corner where he could observe his father's activities. He could be introduced to his father's clients as a clerk. This way, he could decide on whether or not to become a lawyer. His father thought this to be a splendid idea and this arrangement was set up immediately. On his son's first day at work, the first client in the morning was a rough-hewn man with calloused hands, in workman's attire, who began the conversation by saying, "Mr. Lawyer, I work for some people named Gonzales who have a ranch on the east side of town. For many years, I have tended their crops and animals, including some cows. I have raised the cows, tended them, fed them, and it has always been my understanding and belief that I was the owner of the cows. Mr. Gonzales died and his son has inherited the farm, and he believes that since the cows were raised on his ranch and fed on his hay, the cows are his. In short, we have a dispute as to the ownership of the cows." The lawyer said, "I have heard enough. I will take your case. DON'T WORRY ABOUT THE COWS!" After the tenant farmer left, the next client came in, a young, well-dressed man, clearly a member of the landed class. "My name is Gonzales. I own a farm on the east side of the town," he said. "For many years, a tenant farmer has worked for my family tending the crops and animals, including some cows. The cows have been raised on my land and fed on my hay, and I believe that they belong to me, but the tenant farmer believes that since he raised them and cared for them, they are his. In short, we have a dispute over ownership of the cows." The lawyer said, "I have heard enough. I will take your case. DON'T WORRY ABOUT THE COWS!" After the client left, the son came over to his father with a look of concern. "My father, I know nothing of the law, but it seems to me that we have a serious problem regarding these cows." "DON'T WORRY ABOUT THE COWS!" said the lawyer. "The cows will be ours!" -= lawyer humor =-= 89 =------------------------------------------------------ From the "Around New York" column of the New York Times, April 3, 1991: Court Says Legal Aid Lawyers Had Right To Wear Buttons A state appeals court ruled yesterday that Legal Aid Society lawyers had a constitutional right to wear "Ready to Strike" buttons in October, when they argued their cases in court. The lawyers were wearing the buttons to signify their support of a threatened strike. But Justice George Roberts of State Supreme Court ordered them to remove their buttons in his Manhattan courtroom on the ground they could prejudice the court and upset their clients. The Apellate division of the State Supreme Court said "the mere act of wearing a button" was protected by the Constitution's guarantee of free speech. Justice Richard W. Wallach pointed out in a concurring opinion that Justice Roberts had said he would have allowed non-political buttons such as those that said "Save the Whales". But Justice Wallach issued a caution to all lawyers, "If the choice had to be made between saving the lives of lawyers or saving whales, there is little doubt that the overwhelming majority of Americans would come down on the side of the whales." -= lawyer humor =-= 90 =------------------------------------------------------ A truck driver used to amuse himself by running over lawyers he would see walking down the side of the road. Every time he would see a lawyer walking along the road, he would swerve to hit him, and there would be a loud "THUMP" and then he would swerve back on the road. This pasttime was immensely enjoyable to the truck driver. One day, as the truck driver was driving along, he saw a priest hitchhiking, so he thought he would do a good turn by offering the priest a lift. He pulled the truck over and asked the priest, "Where are you going, Father?" "I'm going to the church 5 miles down the road!" replied the priest. "No problem, Father! I'll give you a lift. Climb in the truck." With that, the happy priest climbed into the passenger seat, and the truck driver continued down the road. Suddenly, the truck driver saw a lawyer walking down the road, and instinctively he swerved to hit him. But then he remembered there was a priest in the truck with him, so at the last minute he swerved back to the road, narrowly missing the lawyer. However, even though he was certain he missed the lawyer, he still heard a loud "THUD". Not understanding where the noise came from he glanced in his mirrors, and when he didn't see anything, he turned to the priest and said, "I'm sorry, Father. I almost hit that lawyer." "That's okay," replied the priest. "I got him with the door!" -= lawyer humor =-= 91 =------------------------------------------------------ Upon seeing an elderly lady for the drafting of her will, the attorney charged her $100. She gave him a $100 bill, not noticing that it was stuck to another $100 bill. On seeing the two bills stuck together, the ethical question came to the attorney's mind, "Do I tell my partner?" -= lawyer humor =-= 92 =------------------------------------------------------ About 1900, a very respectable Western lawyer was filing some insurance papers when he came to the question: "If your father is dead, state the cause." Unwilling to reveal that his father had been hanged for cattle rustling, the lawyer evaded the problem by answering this way: "He died while taking part in a public ceremony when the platform gave way." -= lawyer humor =-= 93 =------------------------------------------------------ After successfully passing the bar exam, a man opened his own law office. He was sitting idle at his desk when his secretary announced that a Mr. Jones had arrived to see him. "Show him right in!" our lawyer replied. As Mr. Jones was being ushered in, our lawyer had an idea. He quickly picks up the phone and shouts into it, "And you tell them that we won't accept less then fifty thousand dollars, and don't even call me until you agree to that amount!" Slamming the phone down he stood up and greeted Mr. Jones; "Good Morning, Mr. Jones, what can I do for you?" "I'm from the phone company" Mr. Jones replied, "I'm here to connect your phone." -= lawyer humor =-= 94 =------------------------------------------------------ Experts are people who know a great deal about very little and who go along learning more and more about less and less until they know practically everything about nothing. Lawyers, on the other hand, are people who know very little about many things and keep learning less and less about more and more until they know practically nothing about everything. Judges are people who start out knowing everything about everything but end up knowing nothing about anything because of their constant association with experts and lawyers. -= lawyer humor =-= 95 =------------------------------------------------------ A federal magistrate ruled that the Alabama prison policy of allowing female guards to oversee showers by male prisoners is not "cruel and unusual punishment" for the men but a reasonably policy for security and equal employment opportunities for female guards. -= lawyer humor =-= 96 =------------------------------------------------------ An airliner was having engine trouble and the pilot instructed the cabin crew to have the passengers take their seats and prepare for an emergency landing. A few minutes later, the pilot asked the flight attendants if everyone was buckled in and ready. "All set back here, Captain," came the reply, "except one lawyer who is still passing out business cards." -= lawyer humor =-= 97 =------------------------------------------------------ A gang of robbers broke into a lawyer's club by mistake. The old legal lions gave them a fight for their lives. The gang was very happy to escape. "It ain't so bad," one crook noted when the gang got back to their hideout. "We got out with $25 between us." "I warned you to stay clear of lawyers!" the boss screamed. "We had over $100 when we broke in!" -= lawyer humor =-= 98 =------------------------------------------------------ A Mexican bandit made a specialty of crossing the Rio Grande from time to time and robbing banks in Texas. Finally, a reward was offered for his capture, and an enterprising Texas ranger decided to track him down. After a lengthy search, he traced the bandit to his favorite cantina, snuck up behind him, put his trusty six-shooter to the bandit's head, and said, "You're under arrest. Tell me where you hid the loot or I'll blow your brains out." But the bandit didn't speak English and the Ranger didn't speak Spanish. Fortunately, a bilingual lawyer was in the saloon and translated the Ranger's message. The terrified bandit blurted out, in Spanish, that the loot was buried under the oak tree in back of the cantina. "What did he say?" asked the Ranger. The lawyer answered, "He said 'Get lost, you turkey. You wouldn't dare shoot me.'" -= lawyer humor =-= 99 =------------------------------------------------------ A very good man dies, and as a reward for a life well-spent, goes to heaven. When he arrives, St. Peter meets him at the gate. "Welcome," says St. Peter, "since you were such a good person in life, you may enter heaven." "Thank you," said the man. "But before I come in, could you tell me what kind of other people are here?" "Well, all kinds," replied St. Peter. "Are there any convicted criminals in heaven?" asked the man. "Yes, some," said St. Peter. "Are there any communists in heaven?" asked the man. "Yes, there are," replied St. Peter. "Are there any Nazis in heaven? Asked the man. "Just a few," said St. Peter. "Well, are there any lawyers in heaven?" asked the man. St. Peter replied, "What, and ruin it for everyone else?" -= lawyer humor =-= 100 =------------------------------------------------------ A mobster was on trial, facing a possible life sentence, but his lawyer bribed a juror to hold out for a lesser charge. After hours of deliberation, the jury returned a verdict carrying a maximum of ten years in prison. Afterward, the lawyer approached the juror. "You had me so worried! When the jury was out so long, I was afraid you couldn't pull it off." "I was worried too!" answered the juror. "The others all wanted to acquit him!" -= lawyer humor =-= 101 =------------------------------------------------------ Two prisoners are talking about their crimes: George: "I robbed a bank, and they gave me 20 years." Herman: "Hmm. I killed a man, and I'm here for 3 days." George: "*WHAT*??? I rob a bank and get 20 years; you kill a man and get 3 days???" Herman: "Yeah, it was a lawyer." -= lawyer humor =-= 102 =------------------------------------------------------ A redundancy in wording: Criminal Lawyer -= lawyer humor =-= 103 =------------------------------------------------------ A man went into the Chamber of Commerce of a small town, obviously desperate. He asked the man at the counter, "Is there a criminal attorney in town?" The man replied, "Yes, but we can't prove it yet." -= lawyer humor =-= 104 =------------------------------------------------------ The temperature control in Hell went haywire and the heat started to make even the condition in Heaven uncomfortable. St. Peter got Satan on the horn and yelled, "You'd better fix that immediately or I'll sue." On hearing that, Satan chuckled, "Oh yeah, how? I have all the lawyers down here. And besides, how can fix it when you have all the good engineers?" -= lawyer humor =-= 105 =------------------------------------------------------ Star Trek Lawyer Joke Dr. McCoy was involved in a shuttle craft accident and he was left trapped inside the damaged ship. While Captain Kirk was waiting for the emergency crews to free his comrade he pounded on the ship and shouted, "Bones, Bones! Do you think your alright? Are you badly hurt?" To which Dr. McCoy replied, "Damn it, Jim! How should I know? I'm a doctor, I'm not a lawyer!" -= lawyer humor =-= 106 =------------------------------------------------------ A Farmer walked into an attorney's office wanting to file for a divorce. The Attorney asked, "May I help you?" The Farmer said, "Yea, I want to get one of those dayvorce's." The Attorney said, "Do you have any grounds?" The Farmer said, "Yea, I got about 140 acres." The Attorney said, "No, you don't understand, do you have a case?" The Farmer said, "No, I got a John Deere." The Attorney said, "No, you don't understand, I mean do you have a grudge?" The Farmer said, "Yeh, I got a grudge, that's where I park my John Deere." The Attorney said, "No Sir, I mean do you have a suit?" The Farmer said, "Yes Sir, I got a suit, I wear it to church ever' Sunday." The Attorney said, "Well Sir, does your wife beat you up or anything?" The Farmer said, "No Sir, we both get up at 4:30 A.M. together." The Attorney then said, "Well is she a nagger or anything?" The Farmer said, "No, she's a little white gal, but our last kid was a nagger and that's why I want this Dayvorce!" -= lawyer humor =-= 107 =------------------------------------------------------ Actually, my mom is a lawyer. When a client comes in and says that they: a) Want a divorce and will drag it out forever and, b) To see that that the other party gets what they deserve and, c) To make sure the the wrongdoer is revealed for what they are. She asks them for a detailed list of all of the property. At this point, the client always says with glee, "For the court?" To which she says, "No, for me. Since you are going to squander all your wealth on lawyers fees, I want to know what I am getting." At which point they ask for a quick settlement. -= lawyer humor =-= 108 =------------------------------------------------------ Old lawyers never die, they just lose their appeal. -= lawyer humor =-= 109 =------------------------------------------------------ Augustine's Laws Bulls do not win bull fights; people do. People do not win people fights; lawyers do. The exact date that professional attorneys came into existence is unknown, although the first complaints about them were recorded in the twelfth century. Two thirds of the world's lawyers are located right here in the United States. This has led, in some quarters, to occasional suggestions for a new export product. Why are there more flies in Cairo than lawyers in Washington? Amswer: Cairo got first choice. Almost 37 percent of the U. S. House of Representatives and 53 percent of the U. S. Senate are comprised of lawyers. It's like buying chicken wire from the fox - a Full Employment Act for lawyers. John Naisbitt, writing in Megatrends, asserts that "Lawyers are like beavers: They get in the mainstream and damn it up. Forbes magazine recently reported an incident whereby a man attempted to kill himself by jumping in front of a subway car in New York; however, having failed, he won a $650,000 judgement from New York City because the train hit him. The Denver Post may have been on to more than it realized when it reported, "... the former Deputy Attorney General said the bar has never been so successful in serving the poor. -= lawyer humor =-= 110 =------------------------------------------------------ Marlene T. Sipes, a Columbia S.C. lawyer, was suspended for a year in March by the state supreme court on charges that she pocketed $1,819 in 1986 from her daughter's Girl Scout troop cookie fund. -= lawyer humor =-= 111 =------------------------------------------------------ Talk is cheap...until lawyers get involved. -= lawyer humor =-= 112 =------------------------------------------------------ I broke a mirror in my house. I'm supposed to get seven years of bad luck, but my lawyer thinks he can get me five. -= lawyer humor =-= 113 =------------------------------------------------------ Sharks And Lawyers "Shark" comes from the German "schurke," meaning greedy parasite. While no brave soul has gotten close enough to determine where lawyers come from, logic and common sense dictate a similar derivation. Sharks, unlike most fish, have no bones; their skeletons are mad entirely of cartilage. Lawyers, too, are spineless, as willing to argue one side of a case as the other. For the right price. Best known as scavengers of the dead and dying, sharks have well-honed sensors with which they can track the sounds of other injured and struggling beings. They are also equipped with fine senses of smell that allow them to detect minute dilutions of blood (one part blood to one million parts water) up to one-quarter mile away. Precisely the distance a hopeful personal injury lawyer will run behind an ambulance to toss a business card. From the moment of birth, sharks' skin is tough and rough, covered with thousands of tiny hard teeth call denticles that abrade any passerby made of softer stuff. Lawyers are also thick-skinned. Easily identified by their humorlessness and abrasive personalities, they are the bane of many social gatherings. A shark will swallow anything, up to half its own size, in one gulp. Several hundred years ago, a naturalist wrote that the headless body of a knight in armor was found in a white shark's stomach. Inside another was more recently found a sea lion, a horse and the body of another seven-foot-long shark. Lawyers, too, will swallow anything, even their pride, as increasing numbers of lawyer hopefuls trudge to law school each year for three years of browbeating in the hopes of financing their Porsches. Some sharks even prey on their own kind. The smell and taste of blood in the water can trigger them into an obsessed Feeding Frenzy, in which they often eat their own bodies while twisting and turning to get more food. This is not unlike the Litigation Frenzy, where lawyers are pitted against other lawyers, and ultimately themselves, to waste reams of paper while losing sight of a fair resolution for their clients. -= lawyer humor =-= 114 =------------------------------------------------------ From "Book Of Anecdotes", a story told of former President and General, U.S. Grant: Undistinguished and often shabby in appearance, Ulysses S. Grant did not recommend himself to strangers by looks. He once entered an inn at Galena, Illinois, on a stormy winter's night. A number of lawyers, in town for a court session, were clustered around the fire. One looked up as Grant appeared and said, "Here's a stranger, gentlemen, and by the looks of him he's travelled through hell itself to get here." "That's right," said Grant cheerfully. "And how did you find things down there?" "Just like here," replied Grant, "lawyers all closest to the fire." -= lawyer humor =-= 115 =------------------------------------------------------ If law school is so hard to get through, how come there are so many lawyers? - Calvin Trillin -= lawyer humor =-= 116 =------------------------------------------------------ 4 out of 5 doctors say that if they were stranded on a deserted island with no lawyers, they wouldn't need ANY aspirin. -= lawyer humor =-= 117 =------------------------------------------------------ A mature woman was in the pastorial study counseling for her upcoming fourth wedding. "Father, how am I going to tell my husband that I am still a virgin?" "My child, you have been a married woman for many years. Surely that cannot be." "Well, father, my first husband was a psychologist, and all he wanted to do was talk, and the next one was in construction and he always said he'd get to it tomorrow. The last one was a gynecologist and all he did was look. But this time, father, I'm marrying a lawyer and I'm sure I'm going to get screwed." -= lawyer humor =-= 118 =------------------------------------------------------ It seems that a devout, good couple was about to get married, but a tragic car accident ended their lives. When they got to heaven, they asked St. Peter if he could arrange for them to be married, saying that it was what they had hoped for in life, and they still desired wedded union. He thought about it and agreed, but said they would have to wait. It was almost one hundred years later when St. Peter sent for them. They were married in a simple ceremony. So things went on, for thirty years or so, but they determined, in this time, that eternity was best not spent together. They went back to St. Peter, and said, "We thought we would be happy forever, but now we believe that we have irreconcilable differences. Is there any way we can get divorced?" "Are you kidding?" said St. Peter. "It took me a hundred years to get a priest up here to marry you. I'll never get a lawyer!" -= lawyer humor =-= 119 =------------------------------------------------------ From Orson Bean: A lawyer shows up at the pearly gates. St. Peter says, "Normally we don't let you people in here but you're in luck, we have a special this week. You go to hell for the length of time you were alive, then you get to come back up here for eternity." The lawyer says, "I'll take the deal." St. Peter says, "Good, I'll put you down for 212 years in hell ..." The lawyer says, "What are you talking about? I'm 65 years old!" St. Peter says, "Up here we go by billing hours." -= lawyer humor =-= 120 =------------------------------------------------------ Three persons arrive at heaven and St. Peter greets them before the Pearly Gates. "Welcome to Heaven. We have just one last thing to do before you enter. Are you ready for your last test?" The first person says, "I've prepared for this moment for 73 years." "Okay," says St. Peter, "spell 'God'." "G-O-D." "Very good, enter your eternal reward." The second person says, "Well, that was easier than I thought; I'll take my test now." "Okay," says St. Peter, "spell 'love'." "L-O-V-E." "Excellent, enter your eternal reward." The third person, a lawyer, says, "Boy, is _this_ is gonna be a snap. Give me my test." "Okay," says St. Peter, "spell 'prorhipidoglossomorpha'." -= lawyer humor =-= 121 =------------------------------------------------------ Mark Twain was at a dinner party where he gave one of his customary after- dinner speeches. When he had finished a prominent lawyer stood up, shoved his hands in his pockets and said, "Doesn't it strike this company as unusual that a professional humorist should be so funny?" Mark Twain came back with, "Doesn't it strike this company as unusual that a lawyer should have both hands in his own pockets?" -= lawyer humor =-= 122 =------------------------------------------------------ On CNN: The outlook for the economy is so bad that the mob in New Jersey just laid off 3 judges. -= lawyer humor =-= 123 =------------------------------------------------------ A doctor, a lawyer and a mathematician were discussing the relative merits of having a wife or a mistress. The lawyer says, "For sure a mistress is better. If you have a wife and want a divorce, it causes all sorts of legal problems. The doctor says, "It's better to have a wife because the sense of security lowers your stress and is good for your health. The mathematician says, "You're both wrong. It's best to have both so that when the wife thinks you're with the mistress and the mistress thinks you're with your wife, you can do some mathematics. -= lawyer humor =-= 124 =------------------------------------------------------ A physician, an engineer, and an attorney were discussing who among them belonged to the oldest of the three professions represented. The physician said, "Remember, on the sixth day God took a rib from Adam and fashioned Eve, making him the first surgeon. Therefore, medicine is the oldest profession." The engineer replied, "But, before that, God created the heavens and earth from chaos and confusion, and thus he was the first engineer. Therefore, engineering is an older profession than medicine." Then, the lawyer spoke up. "Yes," he said, "but who do you think created all of the chaos and confusion?" -= lawyer humor =-= 125 =------------------------------------------------------ "My daddy is a movie actor, and sometimes he plays the good guy, and sometimes he plays the lawyer." - Malcolm Ford, to his preschool classmates on what his father, actor Harrison Ford, does for a living. -= lawyer humor =-= 126 =------------------------------------------------------ A tradesman of Windham, Connecticut, having occasion to boil a number of cattle's feet, threw the bones at the back of the courthouse. An attorney asked what bones they were? A bystander replied that he believed them to be client's bones, as they were well picked. (Wheeler's North-American Calendar for 1793) -= lawyer humor =-= 127 =------------------------------------------------------ In the halls of justice, the only justice is in the halls. - Lenny Bruce -= lawyer humor =-= 128 =------------------------------------------------------ In a terrible accident at a railroad crossing, a train smashed into a car and pushed it nearly four hundred yards down the track. Though no one was killed, the driver took the train company to court. At the trial, the engineer insisted that he had given the driver ample warning by waving his lantern back and forth for nearly a minute. He even stood and convincingly demonstrated how he'd done it. The court believed his story and the suit was dismissed. "Congratulations," the lawyer said to the engineer when it was over. "You did superbly under cross-examination." "Thanks," he said, "but he sure had me worried." "How's that?" the lawyer asked. "I was afraid he was going to ask if the damned lantern was lit!" -= lawyer humor =-= 129 =------------------------------------------------------ Legaldegook For Tax Laws Caught In A Time Warp "The provisions of the preceding sentence shall not be applicable with respect to the taxable year beginning January 1, 1975, or any succeeding taxable year which begins before January 1, 1980; and, for purposes of such sentence, January 1, 1980, shall be deemed to be the first January 1 occurring after January 1, 1974, and consecutive taxable years in the period commencing January 1, 1980, shall be determined as if the taxable year which begins on January 1, 1980, were the taxable year immediately succeeding the taxable year which began on January 1, 1974." - Internal Revenue Code 3302(c)(2)(C) Sesquipedality Award For Most Splendiferous Display Of Highfalutin' Vocabulary "The evidentiary record consisting of a four (4) day trial is gargantuan, elephantine, and Brobdingnagian... It would be hebetudinous and obtuse to fail to be cognizant of the adverse consequences of a ruling in this case. However, a decision by the court should not be infected with pusillanimity and timidity. The karma of this case must not be aleatory or adventitious, but a pellucid and transpicuous analysis of the law and facts... With certitude and intrepidity and hopefully, with some degree of sagacity, sapience, and perspicaciousness, this court disposes of the relevant and germane issues. Autochthonously, this court bifurcates the issues for decisional purposes. The primigenial issue is whether a new trial should be granted. The court comes to this infrangible, ineluctable, and adamantine conclusion that defendant's motion for a new trial absolutely must be denied. The French phrase 'pas du tout' is applied in rejecting the defendant's argument... I find defendant's degree of culpability to be magnitudinous and megatherine." - Circuit Judge Ralph Anderson, of South Carolina. -= lawyer humor =-= 130 =------------------------------------------------------ The following was posted on rec.org.sca: Legalese Unto all who read these words, greetings from Yaakov! Ferret writes: "By the way there are legal documents in Modern English that require further translation by special interpreters into a form of English everyone can understand. That is what lawyers are for. Or is Legalese a non-English language?" Actually, despite many cognates with English, Legalese is proof that lawyers are descended from the same wandering Asian tribes that eventually colonized the United States accross the Bering Strait land-bridge. Consider the following lingistic evidence, as documented from such authentic sources on Amerind culture as F-Troop and Bonanza (after all, they were only written approximately 75 years after the closing of the American frontier. Heck, many of the descendents of the original tribes portrayed were still alive, thus lending credence to the veracity of the text. English Amerind Legalese Person Someone-Come-Close Party-of-the-First-Part Contract Paper-that-speak The-aforesaid-agreement Gun Bang-stick Either of the following: Protected-Constitutional- Right or Dangerous-weapon Note that both the dialects of the lawyers and of Amerinds use several words to describe what English does in one word, thus, the languages are related, Q.E.D. (Another legalese, but this looks like a loaner word from the math-geek tribe, which in fact did not originate in any known language group and may provide radical new proof of spontaneous generation.) It is believed that the proto-Lawyers headed *west* instead of *east* like everyone else in the Universe, probably becuase they were engaged in litigation with the Scythians. The Scythians attempted to evade the proto-lawyers by using aliases like 'Sarmations' (which lead to the Samaritans accidently getting their junk mail due to a typo in the syro-aramaic) and building boats to flee to Finland. This plan was ultimately foiled when the proto-lawyers (now going under the archaic name 'Barristers' from the Greek description of their talk: 'bar-bar' 'stir-stir') impounded their fleet (which had conveniently run aground in Crimea. Apparently, the Scythians were lousy navigators, but that is the subject of a different thread.) The Barristers followed the Scythians to Scotland and Ireland, but ultimately settled in England where they could do contingency fee work for the Vikings in their ongoing quit claim action against the Angles and the Saxons (the Jutes were originally named but were dismissed due to lack of personal jurisdiction). Here they established a matriachal culture based on litigator-women who particip
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