The rules of procedure are to the litigating lawyer regulatory and enabling legislation:3 They tell or attempt to tell him what the lawyer may and may not do, and they afford the means by which the lawyer can bring about, or attempt to bring about, the results sought.
A distinctive element of the American procedure far resolving legal contro?versies is the adversary system, which is the characteristic form of trial procedure in common law countries, in civil as well as criminal cases. Its essential feature is that a decision is made by judge, or judge with jury, who finds the facts and ap?plies the law from submissions made by partisan advocates on behalf of the parties.4 In this system of trial procedure, the responsibility for beginning suit, for shaping the issues, and for producing evidence rests almost entirely upon the par?ties. The court takes almost no active part. It does not do its own investigating. It rarely even asks a question. Most often it is only responsible for guiding the proceeding according to certain procedural rules and for making decisions on ques?tions of law that arise. This system is to be contrasted with what is generally called the inquisitorial system, which is used in countries of the civil law tradition such as France and Germany. In the inquisitorial system of trial, the judge ap?plies the law and finds the facts by his own active investigation and inquiries at trial.
Under the adversary system, the scope of the lawyer's power and responsi?bility is wide. It is the lawyer who makes the initial and usually final decisions as to choice of court, size of claim, nature of claim stated, parties, extent and kind of pre-trial investigation, mode of trial (whether jury or non-jury), settlement offers, extent and kind of proofs, style of presentation and argument, and, with?in limits, speed and vigor of presentation. The trials are largely produced and di?rected by the lawyers. They supply the actors and the script, through the wit?nesses called and the testimony elicited by direct and cross examination. Judges are called on to intervene only occasionally and then briefly, to ensure that all the procedural safeguards of due process5 are met and essential fairness is achieved. They rule on the admissibility of evidence, but this is a negative function of keep?ing out unreliable evidence rather than an affirmative one of providing the facts upon which a case is determined.6
The reasons for the prevalence of the adversary system are manifold, but four are certainly among the most important: (1) It is believed that a truer deci?sion will be reached as the result of a contest directed by interested parties.7 An interested party naturally will be most effective in seeking, discovering, and pre?senting the materials which will reveal the strength of his own case and the weak?ness of his adversary's case; (2) The parties, who after all are the persons princi?pally interested in the resolution of the controversy, should bear the major burden of the time, energy and costs required; (3) Although impartial investigation may be better when no final decision need be reached, setting up sides makes easier the type of yes-or-no decision that is thought to be necessary in a lawsuit;8 (4)Since resort to law has replaced resort to force that characterized primitive ages, the human instinct to do battle is better satisfied by a means of settling disputes that are very much in the hands of the parties.
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