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New York Law School
New York Law School.jpg
Motto Juris praecepta sunt haec: honeste vivere, autem non laedere, suum cuique tribuere.
The precepts of the law are these: to live justly, not to injure anyone, and to render to each person what is due.
-Corpus Juris Civilis (Justinian Code)
Established June 11, 1891
Type Private
Endowment $208,000,000[1]
Dean Dean Anthony W. Crowell
Academic staff Full time, 95; Adjunct, 118
Students 1,500
Location Lower Manhattan, New York, United States
Campus Urban
Website www.nyls.edu

New York Law School is a private law school in the TriBeCa neighborhood of Lower Manhattan in New York City, New York, United States. The school is located within four blocks of all major courts in the borough of Manhattan in New York City and is one of eight ABA-approved law schools in that city. As of February 29, 2012 (2012-02-29), Anthony Crowell is the 16th Dean and President of New York Law School.[2]

Contents

History [edit]

Early years [edit]

Deans of NYLS
George Chase 1891–1918
School closed for World War I 1918–1919
George Chase 1919–1924
Robert D. Petty 1924–1932
George C. Smith 1932–1936
Alfred E. Hinrichs 1936–1938
Edmund H. H. Caddy 1938–1941
School closed for World War II 1941–1947
Edmund H. H. Caddy 1947–1950
Alison Reppy 1950–1958
Daniel Gutman 1958–1968
Charles W. Froessel 1968–1969
Walter A. Rafalko 1969–1973
E. Donald Shapiro 1973–1983
James F. Simon 1983–1992
Harry Wellington 1992–2000
Richard A. Matasar 2000–2011
Anthony W. Crowell 2012–

During the winter of 1890, a dispute arose at Columbia Law School over an attempt to introduce the Case Method of study. The Case Method had been pioneered at Harvard Law School by Christopher Columbus Langdell. The dean and founder of Columbia Law School, Theodore Dwight, opposed this method, preferring the traditional method of having students read treatises rather than court decisions. Because of this disagreement, Dwight and a number of other faculty and students of Columbia Law School left and founded their own law school in Lower Manhattan the following year.

On June 11, 1891, New York Law School was chartered by the State of New York, and the school began operation shortly thereafter. By this time, Theodore Dwight was in poor health, and was not able to be actively involved with the Law School, so the position of dean went to one of the other professors from Columbia Law School, George Chase. New York Law School held its first classes on October 1, 1891, in the Equitable Building at 120 Broadway, in Lower Manhattan's Financial District.[3]

In 1892, after only a year in operation, it was the second-largest law school in the United States. Steady increases in enrollment caused the Law School to acquire new facilities in 1899, at 35 Nassau Street,[4] only blocks away from the Law School's previous location; and by 1904, the Law School had become the largest law school in the United States. Continuous growth led the Law School to acquire a building of its own in 1908, at 172 Fulton Street, in the Financial District. New York Law School would remain at this site until 1918, when it closed briefly for World War I.[5]

Interwar period [edit]

When New York Law School reopened in 1919, it was located in another building at 215 West 23rd Street, in Midtown.[6] However, George Chase contracted an illness that resulted in him running New York Law School for the last three years of his life from his bed; he died in 1924.[7] New York Law School continued without Chase, seeing its enrollment peak in the mid 1920s, but it saw a steady decline after that. At the onset of the Great Depression, the Law School began seeing a serious decline in enrollment, which forced the Law School to accept a much lower quality of students than they had previously accepted. With much fewer and poorer performing students, the Law School moved to smaller facilities at 253 Broadway, just opposite City Hall.[8] In 1936, the Law School moved to another location at 63 Park Row, on the opposite side of City Hall Park; it also became coeducational that same year. However, as enrollment was still declining, both because of the Great Depression and because of the military draft started in 1940, and the school closed in 1941. The remaining students that were still enrolled finished their studies at St. John's University School of Law, in Brooklyn.[9]

Reopening [edit]

After reopening in 1947, the Law School started a new program that was influenced by a committee of alumni headed by New York State Supreme Court Justice Albert Cohn. The Law School resumed operations in a building at 244 William Street. In 1954, New York Law School was accredited by the American Bar Association, and in 1962, moved to its current facilities at 57 Worth Street, in TriBeCa.

Renaissance [edit]

In 1973, the New York State Department of Education issued a report that criticized the Law School as the worst school in the state[10] In 1973, E. Donald Shapiro became the dean of the Law School, and reformed the curriculum, expanding it to include many more classes to train students for more than simply passing the Bar Examination. These reforms, combined with the addition of new Joint Degree Programs with City College of New York in 1975 and Manhattanville College in 1978 helped the Law School to recruit new students. Dean Shapiro's reform of the curriculum was behind New York Law School gaining accreditation by the Association of American Law Schools in 1974. The New York State Department of Education even changed its view of the Law School, proclaiming in the same year that the Law School received its second accreditation stating that the school had started to undergo a "renaissance."[10]

The buildings of the Law School underwent renovation during the leadership of Dean James F. Simon, from 1983 to 1992. Under Simon's successor, Dean Harry H. Wellington, who served in that position until 2000, the curriculum was revised to put greater emphasis on the practical skills of a professional attorney.

57 Worth Street building.

21st century [edit]

In late June 2006, New York Law School sold its Mendik building at 240 Church Street. This sale enabled the school to move forward with the sale of $135 million in insured bonds, which were issued through the New York City Industrial Development Agency. The school's securities were given an A3 credit rating by Moody's and an A-minus rating by S&P, both reflective of the school's stable market position and solid financial condition. The proceeds from the building sale have been allocated to the school's endowment, which is now among the top 10 of all American law schools.[11]

WSTM Mark Frank 0050.jpg

The Law School opened its first dormitory in the East Village in 2005, and in August 2006, it broke ground on the $190 million expansion and renovation program that will transform its TriBeCa campus into a cohesive architectural complex that nearly doubles the school's current size. The centerpiece of the expansion is a new glass-enclosed, 235,000-square-foot (21,800 m2), nine-level building—five stories above ground and four below, which will integrate the Law School's existing buildings. The new facility opened in July 2009, followed by the complete renovation of the Law School's existing buildings in the spring of 2010.

New York Law School has a 80.4% New York bar exam pass rate for first-time takers (2011).

On December 16, 2008, in connection with the Bernard Madoff scandal, New York Law School filed a lawsuit against J. Ezra Merkin, Ascot Partners, and Merkin's auditor BDO Seidman, LLP, after losing its $3 million investment in Ascot. The lawsuit charged Merkin with recklessness, gross negligence and breach of fiduciary duties.[12]

With the financial crisis of 2008, and the attending collapse in employment prospects for recent law school graduates, NYLS came under criticism for its combination of costly tuition (which rivals Harvard Law School) and poor results for students. The New York Times specifically focused on Dean Richard A. Matasar, who had become prominent for criticizing the high cost of law schools while serving as dean of one of the most expensive (and lowest ranked) law schools in the country. The article also mentioned the large increase in class sizes at NYLS during a period of contraction in the legal employment market.[13] Professor Paul Campos, on his Inside the Law School Scam blog, attacked NYLS among other low-ranked schools for their use of expensive summer-start programs, which charge students thousands of dollars for the chance of obtaining admission.[14] Law School Transparency indicates that only 35% of NYLS's class of 2011 have found long-term, full-time legal jobs[15]

Government leaders and judges from the United States often speak at or visit the Law School. These have included former President Jimmy Carter; Justices of the Supreme Court Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Harry A. Blackmun, William J. Brennan Jr., Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Sandra Day O’Connor; former New York State Governor Mario Cuomo; former New York City Mayors Edward Koch, David Dinkins, Rudolph Giuliani and current Mayor Michael Bloomberg; Drew S. Days III, U.S. Solicitor General; Thomas Pickering, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations; and Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo of the International Criminal Court. In October 2011, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon spoke.

Rankings [edit]

According the law professor blog The Faculty Lounge, 39.6% of the Class of 2012 was employed in full-time, long-term positions requiring bar admission, ranking 175th out of 197 law schools. [16]

The 2013 edition of U.S. News and World Report unranked New York Law School in its list of U.S. law schools [17]

Curriculum [edit]

New York Law School has two divisions:

  • Full Time Day
  • Part Time Evening

It offers the following degrees:

Besides these degrees, New York Law School also has "Three + Three Programs," which allow undergraduate students to start at the Law School after only three years of undergraduate education, and then receive their undergraduate degree after successfully completing the first year at the Law School. The programs also allow students to continue receiving comparable financial aid to that which they received during their undergraduate education provided they maintain their academic performance. They also are not required to take the Law School Admission Test before entering the Law School. These programs are with the following schools:

The School's dynamic curriculum focuses on integrating the study of theory and practice and on including the perspectives of legal practitioners. The Law School's unique skills-based curriculum offers clinics, simulation courses, externships, project-based learning courses, and a new first-year Legal Practice program to carry out that goal. Through a number of other new initiatives and programs, the School has expanded its offerings in order to provide "the Right Program for Each Student."

New York Law School operates on the standard semester basis. 86 credits are required for graduation, 38 of which are for required courses. The first and second years have mandatory studies, and the third year is all elective courses. Students must maintain a minimum 2.0 GPA for all courses. The required courses include: Civil Procedure; Contracts; Constitutional Law; Criminal Law; Evidence; Property; Torts; and Legislation and Regulation. Students also complete two courses emphasizing the development of professional legal skills: a two-semester course on Legal Practice; and a one-semester course on Professional Responsibility. More than 250 electives allow students to customize their programs.

The areas of concentration offered for study by New York Law School are Civil Liberties, Constitutional Law, Corporate and Securities Law, Criminal Law, International Law, Information and Media Law, Labor and Employment Law, Professional Values and Practice, Real Estate Law and Taxation. New York Law School has eight clinics: Civil Rights, Criminal Defense (in both Richmond and Kings Counties), Criminal Prosecution, Elder Law, Mediation, Securities Arbitration, and Wills. Simulation courses offered include: Advanced Appellate Advocacy; Advocacy of Criminal Cases; Alternative Dispute Resolution; Negotiating, Counseling, and Interviewing (NCI); Trial Advocacy; and The Role of the Government Attorney.

Academic centers [edit]

The faculty has established eight academic centers which provide specialized study and offer prime opportunities for exchange between the students, faculty, and expert practitioners. These eight academic centers engage many students in advanced research through the John Marshall Harlan Scholars Program, an academic honors program designed for students with the strongest academic credentials. Harlan Scholars have the opportunity, through affiliation with a center to focus on a particular field of study, gaining depth and substantive expertise beyond the broad understanding of the law that is gained in the J.D. program.

Center for Business and Financial Law

The Center for Business and Financial Law provides students with an unparalleled, rigorous, and integrated approach to academic study and skills training in all aspects of corporate, commercial, and financial law. Through cutting-edge courses, events, projects, and research, the Center brings together academics, practitioners, and students to addess the challenges that animate business and finance.

C.V. Starr Center for International Law

New York Law School, aided by a grant from the C.V. Starr Foundation, created the C.V. Starr Center for International Law. The Center supports teaching and research in all areas of international law but concentrates on the law of international trade and finance, deriving much of its strength from interaction with New York's business, commercial, financial, and legal communities. The Center organizes symposia events to engage students and faculty in discussions of important and timely issues with experts and practitioners in the field. For professional development, the Center offers extensive resources for studying and researching careers in international law.

The Center publishes The International Review, an award-winning academic newsletter. The International Review is the only academic newsletter published by an ABA-accredited law school that reports on a broad range of contemporary international and comparative law issues. The Newsletter on Newsletters awarded The International Review with its 2007 Gold Award for "Best Edited Organization Newsletter." It is published twice a year by the Center, and is free through email subscription or on the website.

Center for New York City Law

The Center for New York City Law is the only program of its kind in the country. Its objectives are to gather and disseminate information about New York City's laws, rules, and procedures; to sponsor publications, symposia, and conferences on topics related to governing the city; and to suggest reforms to make city government more effective and efficient. The Center's bimonthly publication, City Law, tracks New York City's rules and regulations, how they are enforced, and court challenges to them. Its Web site, New York Law School, contains a searchable library of more than 40,000 administrative decisions of New York City agencies. The Center publishes three newsletters: CityLaw, CityLand and CityReg.

Center for Professional Values and Practice

The School's Center for Professional Values and Practice provides a vehicle through which to examine the role of the legal profession and approaches to law practice. The Center's work supports the development of lawyering skills and reflective professionalism, including consideration of how these have evolved over the decades, even as business and ethical pressures have intensified and become more complex, and the roles of lawyers in society have multiplied.

Center for Real Estate Studies

The Center for Real Estate Studies at New York Law School provides students with a unique educational opportunity to study both the private practice and public regulation of real estate. Launched in 2007, the Center offers an extensive selection of classroom courses, advanced seminars, and independent study projects, as well as externships in governmental offices and real estate firms. It also sponsors conferences, symposia, and continuing legal education programs on a broad spectrum of issues. The Center aims to bridge the existing gap between the private practice and academic study of real estate, and is one of the premier research centers in the country for the study of real estate. In January 2009, the Center began offering the LL.M. in Real Estate.

Institute for Information Law & Policy

The Institute for Information Law & Policy is New York Law School's home for the study of information, communication and law in the global digital age. The goal of the Institute is to apply the theory and technology of communications and information to strengthening democratic institutions and the rule of law as technology evolves. Through its curriculum, ongoing conference and speaker series and a variety of original projects, the Institute investigates the emerging field of information law, which encompasses intellectual property, privacy, free speech, information access, communications, and all areas of law pertaining to information and communication practices.

The Center puts on the State of Play conference series which deals with the intersection of virtual worlds, games and the law.

Diane Abbey Law Center for Children and Families

The Diane Abbey Law Center for Children and Families exists to ensure that children and the families who care for them receive the legal assistance they need to remain safe and secure, and to thrive. Founded in 2009, the Center offers a comprehensive curriculum aimed at creating excellent practitioners able to represent children and families in all aspects of family law. The Center approach is holistic and interdisciplinary, recognizing that assisting families requires a basic understanding not merely of law, but also social work, psychology, and other fields. Center members engage in volunteer externships, work with alumni mentors, and complete capstone projects that make concrete contributions to the lives of families in need. The Center not only prepares graduates for successful careers, but also helps give New York’s children and families the support they need.

Justice Action Center

The Justice Action Center brings together New York Law School faculty and students in an ongoing critical evaluation of public interest lawyering. Through scholarship and fieldwork, the Center seeks to evaluate the efficacy of law as an agent of change and social betterment. Through a focused curriculum, symposia, clinical experience, and research opportunities, the Center seeks to instill in students a deeper intellectual understanding of the law regardless of their final career goals, and to present opportunities to maintain their ties to the social justice community beyond law school.

In 2006, the School's Labor & Employment Law Program became part of the Justice Action Center. Ever since New York Law School alumnus Senator Robert F. Wagner—the "legislative pilot of the New Deal"—wrote and led the fight to enact the National Labor Relations Act, New York Law School has remained on the cutting edge of labor and employment law and public policy. In the tradition of Senator Wagner, New York Law School's Labor & Employment Law Program seeks to advance and influence law and public policy with an action-oriented, public-interested agenda.

Notable faculty [edit]

Former [edit]

Present [edit]

Present Full Time
Present Adjunct

Notable alumni [edit]

In addition to more than 100 sitting judges and many partners of prominent law firms, New York Law School graduates have achieved success working in business, education, and the arts.

Academic [edit]

Business [edit]

Civic [edit]

Cultural [edit]

Government [edit]

Charles M Barbuti NYPD Captain Retired  Attorney -Target of  Internal Investigation Alleged  Misuse / destruction of NYC Owned Vehicles  ( SEE NY DAILY NEWS June 27,2009 See Len Levitt NYPD CONFIDENTIAL Nov 29,2010) 

  • Bainbridge Colby, United States Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson (1920–1921).
  • Grenville T. Emmet, United States Ambassador to the Netherlands (1934-1937) and Austria (1937).
  • James W. Gerard, U.S. Ambassador to Germany during World War I, and New York Supreme Court justice.
  • Seymour Glanzer, First Chief of the Anti-Fraud Section of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington D.C., and one of three original prosecutors in the Watergate Scandal.
  • Colonel William Glasser, First General Counsel, JCCIA (U.S. Joint Contracting Command, Iraq/Afghanistan) (2005-2006).
  • David N. Kelley, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York (2003-2005).
  • Dan Oates, Police Chief, Aurora Colorado.
  • Ferdinand Pecora, appointed Chief Counsel to the U.S. Senate's Committee on Banking and Currency following the 1932 election of Franklin D. Roosevelt. He led Senate hearings, known as the Pecora Commission into the causes of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 which launched a major reform of the American financial system, that resulted in the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Became one of the first members of the Securities Exchange Commission.

Judicial [edit]

Political [edit]

Sports [edit]

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Foundation Center, New York Law School IRS form 990 (2005), line 21
  2. ^ New York Law School. "Anthony W. Crowell, Counselor to New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Named 16th Dean and President of New York Law School". New York Law School. Retrieved January 7, 2013. 
  3. ^ Adelphi University "In and About the City: New York Law School Opened. The Offspring of the Trouble at Columbia a Great Success," New York Times, October 2, 1891.
  4. ^ Adelphi University Display Ad 16 – No Title, New York Times, June 1, 1900.
  5. ^ Adelphi University "New Building for New York Law School: Eleven Story Building to be Ready Next Spring-Banking Floor and Business Offices," New York Times, July 21, 1907.
  6. ^ Adelphi University Display Ad 133 – No Title, New York Times, August 17, 1919.
  7. ^ Adelphi University "George Chase Dies, Law School Dean," New York Times, January 9, 1924.
  8. ^ Adelphi University Display Ad 95 – No Title, New York Times, September 16, 1934.
  9. ^ Adelphi University "N. Y. Law School to Close in Fall: Institution, Founded in 1891 After Columbia Split, to be Absorbed by St. John's," New York Times, September 12, 1941.
  10. ^ a b Adelphi University "Law School is Fighting Its Way Back," New York Times, February 1, 1977.
  11. ^ New York Law School Launches $190 Million Expansion and Renovation of TriBeCa Campus
  12. ^ "Merkin, Ascot Fund Sued Over Madoff Investments". Cable News Network. December 18, 2008. 
  13. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/17/business/law-school-economics-job-market-weakens-tuition-rises.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all
  14. ^ http://insidethelawschoolscam.blogspot.com/2012/04/ninth-circle.html
  15. ^ http://www.lstscorereports.com/?school=newyork&show=chars
  16. ^ Rosin, Gary. "Full Rankings: Bar Admission Required, Full-Time, Long Term", The Faculty Lounge, 30 March 2013. Retrieved on 2 May 2013.
  17. ^ - New York Law School - Best Law Schools - Education - US News and World Report
  18. ^ Bianco, Anthony (March 30, 1998). "Joe Plumeri: The Apostle of Life Insurance". Business Week. Retrieved July 15, 2010. 
  19. ^ Franklin William Fort, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 22, 2007.
  20. ^ Charles Francis Xavier O'Brien, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 16, 2007.
  21. ^ Assemblyman Guy F. Talarico, New Jersey Legislature, backed up by the Internet Archive as of February 25, 1998. Accessed June 13, 2010.

External links [edit]

Coordinates: 40°43′02.5″N 74°00′23″W / 40.717361°N 74.00639°W / 40.717361; -74.00639


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364 news items

 
Capital New York
Fri, 26 Apr 2013 05:49:08 -0700

12:30 p.m. Manhattan Borough Presidents hosts "Start-Up City" conference and mayoral forum (moderator: Ben Smith of Buzzfeed) at New York Law School, 185 West Broadway, Manhattan. @BuzzFeedBen @SalAlbanese @DeBlasioNYC @AdolfoCarrion ...

New York Post

Crain's New York Business
Fri, 26 Apr 2013 13:01:38 -0700

... policy of banning cellphones and other electronics from public schools would be overhauled by many of the Democratic mayoral candidates seeking to succeed him, the group of six said at a tech forum Friday afternoon at New York Law School. "So many ...
 
JDJournal.com
Mon, 29 Apr 2013 10:39:50 -0700

New York Law School Graduates Finding Work at Small Law Firms · Massachusetts Bar Task Force Releases Report · LSAT Required For All ABA-approved Law Schools · Canadian Law Grads Struggling to Find Required Work · Northwestern University Law ...

Thomson Reuters News & Insight

Thomson Reuters News & Insight
Thu, 25 Apr 2013 09:58:46 -0700

Schmidt's April 22 ruling comes four months after the Appellate Division, First Department, upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit filed against New York Law School, saying it was troubled by the school's actions but that they did not rise to the level of ...
 
MyCentralJersey.com
Wed, 22 May 2013 22:23:03 -0700

Yates, a graduate of New York Law School, spent eight years as an associate in the real estate practice of Mauro, Savo, Camerino, Grant & Schalk where, she estimates, about 80 percent of her work focused on residential sales and purchases with the ...
 
New York Law Journal (registration)
Tue, 30 Apr 2013 19:40:00 -0700

Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman's Task Force to Expand Access to Civil Legal Services is holding its Second Annual Law School Conference on May 16, 2013, at New York Law School, to discuss how law schools can best collaborate with legal services ...

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Tue, 21 May 2013 06:08:08 -0700

6:45 p.m. Mayoral candidates attend the "Campaign for Children Mayoral Forum," in the New York Law School auditorium, 185 West Broadway, Manhattan. @BillThompsonNYC. 7 p.m. On "The Road to City Hall": New York City Schools Chancellor Dennis ...
 
my.hsj.org
Fri, 24 May 2013 07:19:34 -0700

Fox News reported that Robert Blecker, a professor of criminal law at New York Law School, argues that, “The very fact that some minors commit atrocious crimes merits the option of capital punishment.” In the 2005 Roper v. Simmons case, the group for ...
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