I was in my late 20's, taking college classes and still trying to figure out what I wanted to be when I grew up. In some ways, after two different careers I am still not sure of the answer to that question.
There was a question on an exam about a contract entered into by a minor being void. I answered that it was not void, and the professor marked that as a wrong answer. I wrote a page long memo defending my answer. The law as stated in the textbook we were working with, said that a minor has the right to cancel the contract. Being under age, is a valid defense against attempts to enforce a contract entered into by a minor. This defense belongs to the minor, not the other party to the contract. This means that the contract is voidable by the minor. Not that the contract is void. The minor can bring a legal action to enforce a contract and the other party can not raise age as a defense. The fine line difference between void and voidable.
The response from the professor was, "you would be a great lawyer!" He never admitted his answer was wrong, but my final grade was an "A" (the highest available.)
And that started me thinking. Maybe there was a place to use my talents. At the same time I was seeing people in my office who were getting legal advice from mortgage loan officers, and title company clerks, advice that was not always correct. That bothered me.
A clearly inspired decision. Your aha moment.
ReplyDeleteIn many ways.
DeleteWere you also inspired by Perry Mason - the TV lawyer?
ReplyDeleteMore like the movie My Cousin Vinny,
DeleteYa know... I don't think I ever heard that one. Of course, it's also quite possible that I forgot... 🤔😘
ReplyDeleteIt was before I met you.
DeleteGreat story! I first thought about going to law school in a political science class when no one in the entire class could correctly interpret a section of the Criminal Code except me. That was my lightbulb moment!
ReplyDeleteLearning helps us understand ourselves
DeleteIt's the way life twists and turns and the path you choose to take because of those twists.
ReplyDeleteThen how I ended up with the focus that I did is another long story. (Thank you Karen Jones.)
DeleteI'm glad you found your way to law. You seem to have enjoyed your life's work.
ReplyDeleteThe work was intrinsically rewarding. The bureaucracy was grinding.
DeleteIt is great to be able to choose what you want to do and have the opportunity do it.
ReplyDeleteSassybear
Https://idleeyesandadormy.com/
I was truly lucky, most adults just grind through work.
DeleteIt sounds like you ended up in the right place.
ReplyDeleteVery much so.
DeleteGood work, Mr. Mason! 😎
ReplyDeleteIt would have improved the post by including a lawyer joke.
ReplyDelete