- Emory Buckner
Emory Buckner (1888-1941) was a major U.S.
lawyer who served as theUnited States Attorney for theSouthern District of New York , where he gained a reputation as one of the greatestprosecutors in American history. During his time atDewey Ballantine , he was also one of the architects of modernWall Street 's legal culture.Background
Buckner was the son of an impoverished
Nebraska preacher. He attended theUniversity of Nebraska–Lincoln . When he contacted the dean of the law school,Roscoe Pound , about attending law school, Dean Pound encouraged Buckner to attendHarvard Law School and raised money to pay Buckner's way. Buckner did well as Harvard Law School, and graduated near the top of his class. While in law school, he established a close friendship withFelix Frankfurter which would prove to be a lifelong friendship.Early years as a lawyer
Following graduation, he worked for the US Attorney's office and for the
New York County district attorney . He first gained prominence there when he was just five years out of law school, when he was chosen to conduct a highly publicized investigation into corruption allegations at theNew York Police Department .Years in private practice
Entering private practice, he formed a partnership, Buckner & Howland, which in 1913 merged with Root, Clark & Bird (a highly successful
Wall Street law firm founded in 1909 by three of Buckner's law school classmates) to form the firm of Root, Clark, Buckner & Howland, a firm which spawned bothDewey Ballantine (which today isDewey & LeBoeuf ) andCleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton .US Attorney, 1925-27
Recognized as one of the greatest
trial lawyers of his time, Buckner served as US Attorney for the Southern District of New York 1925-27. In the midst of Prohibition, he directed highly publicized trials of the operators ofspeakeasies . He also gained national notoriety when he insisted on prosecutingHarry M. Daugherty , (United States Attorney General underWarren G. Harding ) for bribe taking, against the wishes of the Coolidge administration.At Root, Clark, 1927-41
Returning to Root, Clark in 1927, Buckner became one of the architects of Wall Street's modern legal culture. Serving as Root, Clark's hiring partner, Buckner shaped a generation of the nation's top corporate lawyers. He is credited with coining the term "associate" for junior members of a law firm, which replaced the older term, "law clerk". At his urging, Root, Clark became the first law firm to pay its associates an annual bonus out of the firm's profits. He also initiated the practice of having an annual luncheon with hiring partners at the other Wall Street firms, at which they set the "going rate" for associate salaries. Under his leadership, Root, Clark also became the first of the
white shoe firms to acceptJewish applicants. Buckner disdained rival firmCravath, Swaine & Moore 's tendency to "hold associates' hands" and insisted on delegating the maximum possible amount of work to his young associates: by systematically under-staffing cases, Buckner was able to provide his clients with quality work product at cheaper rates.Under Buckner's leadership, Root, Clark also became the first firm to encourage associates to come to the firm directly after law school instead of spending time in public service before joining the firm. Buckner's friend Frankfurter deplored the practice and it led to some tension between the two, particularly in 1926-27, when the two had a heated argument over
Henry Friendly . Frankfurter, who was Friendly's teacher at Harvard Law, encouraged Friendly to spend a fourth year at law school, then spend a year clerking forLouis Brandeis , and then return to the Harvard Law School faculty. Buckner encouraged Friendly to clerk immediately, and then come to Root, Clark. Buckner won out, and Friendly joined Root, Clark in 1928, where he became a partner. (With five other Root, Clark partners, Friendly founded Cleary, Friendly, Gottlieb & Steen, the predecessor ofCleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton , in 1946.)Buckner and Frankfurter clashed again five years later over another of Frankfurter's students,
Telford Taylor , but this time Frankfurter was successful, and Taylor never joined Root, Clark.Buckner explored the possibility of leveraging the notoriety he gained as US Attorney into a run for
governor of New York , but reconsidered after he suffered astroke in 1934. During this period, his chief assistant at Root, Clark wasJohn Marshall Harlan II , who would later serve with Buckner's friend Frankfurter on theUnited States Supreme Court .Buckner died in 1941, at the age of 63. His obituary in the "
New York Times " said cquote|Buckner realized that he who wields the instruments of justice wields the most powerful instruments of government. In order to assure their just and compassionate use, a prosecutor must have an almost priest-like attitude toward his duties. Buckner practiced this attitude without deviation.References
* Martin Mayer, "Emory Buckner" (New York: Harper & Row, 1968).
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