The State Bar Association of North Dakota Winter 2014 Gavel Magazine | Page 10

SHAKESPEARE AND THE LAW What We Lawyers Can Learn From the Bard By Lynn M. Boughey Twenty years ago, two able lawyers and three distinguished judges heard the real trial of the century, oral arguments in the celebrated case of State of Denmark vs. Hamlet, Formerly Prince of Denmark. The event was hosted by the Associaiton of the Bar of the City of New York. What’s that you say? He dies at the end? Well, apparently not. Hamlet lived (perhaps Horatio found an anecdote at the last moment, so the rest is not silence!), and Hamlet had been tried and convicted for numerous offenses, and has submitted his appeal to the Royal Danish Court of Appeals for the Elsinore Circuit. State of Denmark v. Hamlet, Formerly Prince of Denmark The briefs, transcript of the oral arguments, and the trial transcript (the text of the play itself) are all found in the delightful book, The Elsinore Appeal: People v. Hamlet (1996 St. Martin’s Press). What were some of the issues on appeal? The insanity defense, of course. “‘Twas madness.” Or perhaps at the very least diminished capacity! The play begins 8 with Hamlet seeing the ghost of his father, who sets him upon this bloody path. And does he act quickly, decisively, with little haste? No. Hamlet, supposedly a law student attending the German school of Wittenburg, awaits more substantive proof, bides his time, and – according to the prosecution – sets up the basis of his insanity defense by feigning madness. The prosecution claims, with some ample basis, that Hamlet’s self-serving statements indicating madness should all be rejected as a well-thought-out ruse. And of course, Hamlet understandably claims self-defense as to Laertes, who in the duel cut him first with the unbated and envenomed sword. Hamlet did not, at that point, know that the sword he rested from Laertes had a venomous unction applied to it and was merely “returning the favor” of this most unkindest cut of all. What of Polonius, you say? The bothersome counselor and Ophelia’s father, who was behind the curtains in the Queen’s bed chamber? Hamlet thought him the King, his Uncle and newly anointed “step-father” by his marriage to Gertrude his mother. Can the criminal intent to kill one follow to the other? And what of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, Hamlet’s two erstwhile school chums? What defense does Hamlet impose? That his forging of the document that led to their being put to death by the King of England was done while Hamlet was out at sea, in international waters, and as such Denmark had no jurisdiction! The learned counsel and distinguished judges dealt also with poor Ophelia’s death. Can a suicide following a lovers’ breakup be a criminal offense? Were Hamlet’s actions “reckless” and proximately caused her death? Or was it “merely” negligent homicide? And by the way, is sending a “Dear John” letter to a jilted lover who subsequently commits suicide a proper basis for criminal liability? And what of his comments, overheard by Ophelia, about the virtues of suicide (“To be or not to be . . .”)? Is Hamlet at least civilly liable for “pushing” poor Ophelia literally into the drink? Moreover, there is a significant factual question: Did Ophelia really commit suicide? There is an eyewitness that says he saw her along the river, slip, hold onto a willow, fall into the brook, and drown! How can such a conviction, we must ask, stand? But this is not all. Hamlet further asserts that the King, his Uncle, is really the one to blame for the many deaths, and for his own death as well. Even Laertes, in his dying declaration – clearly admissible under Rule 804(b)(2) – concurs and asserts that Claudius is to blame, not Hamlet! Finally, Hamlet asserts that he is the rightful king and has sovereign immunity from all charges [