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Legal Eagle Divorce Watch: Supreme Unhappiness?

legal eagle wedding watch divorce watch.JPGThey work on the most significant — and glamorous — legal cases of our time. They get $250,000 signing bonuses when they leave the marble palace at One First Street for private practice. They dominate when it comes to Legal Eagle Wedding Watch.

But at the end of the day, Supreme Court clerks are just like us. Some of their storybook weddings end unhappily.

From Robert Ambrogi, over at Legal Blog Watch:

It is the dream of so many Biglaw lawyers: To simplify, to downsize, to forgo big bucks in favor of personal fulfillment. And it was the dream the former Washington, D.C., Biglaw partner had pursued — at least until his plans were foiled by last week’s Massachusetts Appeals Court opinion in the case, C.D.L. v. M.M.L.

The unidentified lawyer had it all, graduating from law school near the top of his class, clerkships with a federal circuit court and then the Supreme Court, a private practice in energy law with the D.C. office of a large Wall Street firm, average annual income of $700,000, a large house in Maryland and private schools for the kids.

Eventually the travel and stress got to him and he began to contemplate downsizing. He and his wife came up with a plan for him to leave his firm and seek an alternative career, but still earn sufficient income to keep their lifestyles comfortable.

Seems reasonable. But things didn’t turn out quite as they expected.

Read more, below the fold.

As readers of our recent, occasional series on Career Alternatives for Attorneys know well, there are many things you can do with a law degree. Like sitting on your duff:

in January 2001, without any discussion with his wife, the husband quit his lucrative law firm job. Ever since, he has been unemployed, living off his assets and savings, making only “minimal attempts” to obtain other work by applying for low-paying jobs for which he has no experience.

This means he’s been unemployed for the past seven years. As Robert Ambrogi of Legal Blog Watch puts it, “Unemployment is good work, if you can afford it.”

Alas, his wife couldn’t — she divorced his sorry ass. The judge ordered the lawyer to pay his ex-wife alimony of $711.54 a week. He appealed. Despite his SCOTUS clerk pedigree, he did not prevail:

[H]e found no sympathy with the Appeals Court, which noted that he “has taken no steps to diminish” his own comfortable lifestyle and that he has the “historical capacity to earn at a level close to four times the attributed income.”

Sure, Biglaw isn’t always fun. Many lawyers at large firms would love to break the golden handcuffs.

But if you have a spouse and/or kids, you may have certain obligations that trump your desire for leisure. There’s a reason they call it “work.”

Divorce May Undo Lawyer’s Career Change [Legal Blog Watch]
C.D.L. v. M.M.L. [Massachusetts Appeals Court (via Westlaw - Weblinks)]

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