October 30th, 2023 / By Deborah J. Merritt
** Update 11/15/23: NCBE has deleted the sample question I discuss here from their site. If you want to see the original question, you can find it through the Wayback Machine at this link.
In my last post, I discussed a sample bar exam question on which GPT-4 provided more helpful answers than the choices on the bar exam. As I continued my exploration, I found another question on which GPT-4 revealed that NCBE is testing an outdated minority rule of law.
The question is the eighth multiple-choice question on the NextGen site. The question posits a landlord and tenant who agree upon a commercial tenancy beginning July 1. When the tenant arrives at the premises on that date, it finds that the previous tenant has not vacated the premises–and does not intend to vacate. I prompted GPT-4 with NCBE’s question (including its answer choices) and received this response:
The answer would likely be D. The tenant had not notified the landlord before bringing the eviction action.
Here’s a breakdown of the choices:
A. By suing the previous tenant for possession, the tenant elected that remedy in lieu of a suit against the landlord.
- This is not necessarily the most convincing argument. While it’s true that the tenant elected to pursue the remedy of eviction against the prior tenant, it doesn’t mean they waived their rights against the landlord.
B. The landlord had delivered the legal right of possession to the tenant.
- This is a tricky choice. While it’s true that the landlord and tenant orally agreed to a commercial tenancy, the landlord might have failed to deliver actual possession if the previous tenant was still occupying the premises. However, the landlord did give the tenant the legal right to possess the property, even if actual possession wasn’t immediately available. This could be a valid argument, but it’s not as strong as choice D.
C. The tenant failed to timely vacate as required to sue for constructive eviction.
- This choice doesn’t make sense in this context. Constructive eviction refers to a situation where a tenant is forced to leave a property due to the landlord’s actions (or failures to act), which make the premises uninhabitable. The tenant in this scenario was trying to gain possession, not vacate.
D. The tenant had not notified the landlord before bringing the eviction action.
- This seems like the strongest answer. Before taking any legal action, it’s typically expected that the aggrieved party (in this case, the tenant) will notify the party at fault (the landlord) to give them an opportunity to rectify the situation. The tenant didn’t inform the landlord of the issue until after evicting the previous tenant, meaning the landlord wasn’t given a chance to address the issue or find a solution.
Therefore, the most likely explanation if the court finds for the landlord would be D.
This response intrigued me because, according to NCBE, the correct answer is B. I decided to explore the inconsistency between NCBE’s question writers and GPT-4, so I told GPT-4: “I want to understand more about choice B. Are there states in which it is sufficient for a landlord to deliver legal possession without actual possession?” GPT-4 responded:
Yes, there’s a distinction between legal possession and actual possession, and different jurisdictions handle this distinction differently.
- Legal Possession vs. Actual Possession:
- Legal Possession: Refers to the tenant’s right to possess a property. When a lease is signed (or an oral agreement is made, as long as it’s legally enforceable), the tenant typically gains legal possession of the property. This means that even if the tenant cannot actually use or occupy the property, they still have the legal rights to it.
- Actual Possession: Refers to the physical occupancy of a property. When a tenant moves into a property and starts using it, they have taken actual possession.
- Legal Possession Sufficient in Some Jurisdictions:
- In some jurisdictions, when a landlord grants a lease to a tenant, they are only obligated to deliver legal possession, not actual possession. In these jurisdictions, if a prior tenant holds over (i.e., doesn’t vacate at the end of their lease), the new tenant’s primary remedy might be against the holdover tenant, not the landlord. The reasoning is that the landlord has done their part by granting the right to possess the property, and any dispute over actual possession is between the new tenant and anyone unlawfully occupying the property.
- However, in many other jurisdictions, landlords have a duty to deliver both legal and actual possession. If they don’t, they can be in breach of the lease.
- Implication in the Given Scenario:
- If the jurisdiction in question is one where delivering legal possession is sufficient, then choice B (“The landlord had delivered the legal right of possession to the tenant.”) could be the correct reason for the court to find in favor of the landlord. In this scenario, the landlord gave the tenant the legal right to the property, and any issue with the holdover tenant would be for the new tenant to resolve.
- Variations by State:
- Landlord-tenant law can vary significantly from one state to another. So, it’s important to consult the specific laws and precedents of a given jurisdiction to understand the obligations and rights of both landlords and tenants.
If you are dealing with a specific state or jurisdiction, I can try to provide more detailed information about its stance on the delivery of possession.
I know that NCBE aims to test majority or consensus rules, rather than minority ones, on its exams, so I asked GPT-4 if it knew which rule (actual or legal possession) a majority of states follow. GPT-4 answered:
- In the U.S., the majority rule is that landlords are obligated to deliver actual possession of the premises to the tenant at the beginning of the lease term. If the landlord fails to do so, they can be held in breach of the lease.
- This rule is more protective of tenants, ensuring that when they sign a lease (or enter into a valid oral agreement for shorter-term tenancies) and perhaps move their belongings, business equipment, etc., they are assured of actually being able to use and occupy the space without interference from a holdover tenant or any other unauthorized occupant. After all, one of the primary reasons for entering into a lease is to have a physical space to live or conduct business.
- However, as with all legal matters, nuances can exist. While the majority rule requires actual possession, there are states or jurisdictions where only legal possession is required, and the burden is placed on the new tenant to deal with holdovers.
- But again, the majority trend leans toward requiring landlords to deliver actual possession. If you’re dealing with a specific issue or jurisdiction, it would be essential to consult local landlord-tenant statutes and case law or seek legal counsel for detailed guidance.
I know better than to trust GPT-4, which is trained on the internet rather than on legal databases, as an authoritative source on legal principles. In my previous posts, I have illustrated simply how GPT-4 could help a new lawyer identify legal issues in a client problem, understand the general scope of those issues, and generate questions to ask a client about the problem. I would not rely on GPT-4 to tell me whether a rule is the majority rule–or whether a particular state follows that rule.
So I turned to WestLaw to unravel this knotty question of whether a majority of states allow the landlord to deliver only legal possession to a tenant. WestLaw quickly confirmed that GPT-4 was correct. An ALR annotation collecting cases suggests that eleven states allow the landlord to deliver only legal possession, while twenty require the landlord to deliver actual possession together with legal possession. Two thoughtful student notes affirm that the requirement of actual possession is very much the majority rule, with one (Heiser) referring to a “mass exodus” away from the rule that legal possession suffices. (See the end of this post for citations.)
Even the state that originated the more landlord-friendly rule, New York, discarded it by statute in 1962. New York’s Real Property Law Article 7, section 233-a now provides: “In the absence of an express provision to the contrary, there shall be implied in every lease of real property a condition that the lessor will deliver possession at the beginning of the term.”
If you’ve followed me down this rabbit hole of real property law, you’ve learned: (1) At least for this rule of law, GPT-4 accurately identified the majority and minority rules. It was also able to explain those rules concisely. (2) NCBE is using, as one of the few sample questions it has released for the NextGen exam, a question that tests an outdated, minority rule. I alerted a contact at NCBE about this situation in mid-September, but the question is still on the sample questions site.
What do these lessons teach us about using AI in entry-law practice? And what do they suggest about the bar exam? I will explore both those questions in upcoming posts. Spoiler alert on the second question: It’s easy to declare, “ha, NCBE is wrong!” but the lesson I draw from this is deeper and more complex than that.
References:
Implied covenant or obligation to provide lessee with actual possession, 96 A.L.R.3d 1155 (Originally published in 1979, updated weekly).
Christopher Wm. Sullivan, Forgotten Lessons from the Common Law, the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, and the Holdover Tenant, 84 Wash. U.L. Rev. 1287 (2006).
Matthew J. Heiser, What’s Good for the Goose Isn’t Always Good for the Gander: The Inefficiencies of A Single Default Rule for Delivery of Possession of Leasehold Estates, 38 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 171 (2004).
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AI, Bar Exam, GPT-4, NCBE
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October 26th, 2023 / By Deborah J. Merritt
In the first three posts in this series, I used a bar exam question as an example of the type of problem a new lawyer might confront in practice. I then explored how GPT-4 might help a new lawyer address that practice problem. In this post, I’ll work with another sample question that NCBE has released for the NextGen bar exam. On this question, GPT-4 beats the bar exam. In other words, a new lawyer using GPT-4 would obtain better answers than one who remembered material studied for the bar exam.
Take a look at the seventh multiple-choice question on the NextGen list of sample questions. In this question, the client is a state college that wants to fire a tennis coach. The question format parallels the one we discussed in my previous posts: It asks which “legal topics are the most important for you to research before advising the client” and instructs the test-taker to choose two topics from a list of six.
When prompted with the multiple-choice question, GPT-4 quickly identifies the two correct answers: employment at will and procedural due process. The Bot also offers succinct explanations about why those topics are the most important of the six to research. But that’s not the interesting part–we already know that GPT-4 can easily pass the bar exam.
Instead, I prompted GPT-4 (on a different day and with a new conversation) with the fact pattern in this MCQ and asked: “What legal topics are most important for you to research before advising the client?” Here’s how GPT-4 responded:
When representing a state college considering terminating an employee, several legal considerations come into play. Given the provided facts, here are the most important legal topics to research before advising the client:
- At-Will Employment vs. Contractual Employment:
In many U.S. jurisdictions, unless there is an employment contract stating otherwise, employment is typically considered “at-will.” This means that either the employer or the employee can terminate the employment relationship at any time for any reason (that isn’t illegal). However, if the coach and college had an oral contract, its terms will need to be considered.
2. Oral Contracts:
While written contracts are easier to enforce, oral contracts can still be binding. The challenge is proving their terms and existence. Research would be needed to determine the enforceability of oral contracts in your jurisdiction and what evidence would be required to prove the terms of such an agreement
3. Implied Contract:
Even if there was no formal oral agreement about the contract’s duration, the actions and communications between the college and the coach might have implied a certain term of employment. Research would be needed to determine if an implied contract was potentially formed and its implications.
4. Due Process Rights for Public Employees:
Since the college is a state institution, the coach may have constitutional due process rights. If the coach has a property interest in their job (i.e., a reasonable expectation of continued employment), the state cannot deprive them of this without due process. Depending on local laws and court rulings, this might entail the need for a hearing before termination.
5. Public Policy and Whistleblower Protections:
The coach cannot be terminated for reasons that violate public policy (e.g., reporting illegal activities). Ensure that the budget cuts are the true and only reason for the contemplated termination.
6. Discrimination Laws:
Federal and state laws prohibit employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability, and sometimes sexual orientation and gender identity. Ensure the coach’s termination isn’t grounded in any discriminatory reasons.
7. Breach of Good Faith and Fair Dealing:
In some jurisdictions, there’s an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in employment relationships. This means that even in at-will employment, employers cannot terminate employees to avoid paying earned benefits or for other bad faith reasons.
8. Potential Damages:
If the coach were to bring a wrongful termination suit and win, what would the potential damages be? This might include lost wages, emotional distress, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees.
9. Alternative Dispute Resolution:
Does the state college have any policies or practices regarding mediation or arbitration before proceeding with termination?
10. Release and Settlement Options:
If the college wants to avoid potential litigation, they might consider offering the coach a severance package in exchange for a release of claims.
After researching these topics, it would be crucial to provide a well-informed opinion to the client about the potential risks and benefits of terminating the coach, as well as any alternative strategies that might minimize legal exposure.
This answer includes the two points tested by the MCQ, but it is much more comprehensive. A new lawyer would do well following the leads offered by GPT-4. In contrast, a lawyer who simply remembered material tested on the bar exam would fall woefully short of serving this client competently. Comparing these two responses points out three problems with the bar exam–and with legal education more generally.
First, the subjects tested by the bar exam–and that we teach as “foundational” in law school–do not track contemporary law practice. The discrimination laws cited by GPT-4 are as (or more) critical to an employment law practice as the notion of employment at will. One of the first questions I would ask my client in this situation is whether the coach is a member of any protected class. But discrimination laws are not part of the subject matter tested on the bar exam, so the question doesn’t embrace them.
Second, both law school and the bar exam teach aspiring lawyers to think narrowly. Courses, classroom hours, and exam questions (especially multiple-choice ones) march students through hundreds of isolated doctrinal rules. Except in clinics, we rarely ask students to solve whole legal problems. GPT-4 is absolutely right that the terms of the oral contract, the possibility of an implied contract, and the extent of damages are as important for the lawyer to consider as the concept of employment at will. Yet we rarely encourage students to consider multiple doctrines within a single subject area, much less across subjects.
Students may need to learn some legal principles in isolation but I think we, as legal educators, need to recognize how atomized our teaching and testing have become. Over the last few decades, we have squeezed ever more doctrine into each credit hour, losing opportunities to help students integrate those pieces. Our shift towards multiple-choice testing, meanwhile, reinforces the notion that law consists of discrete legal principles operating in isolation.
Third, our teaching and licensing focus too much on reciting legal rights–and too little on helping clients solve problems more holistically. Even when a client asks only about the “legal repercussions” of an action, as the client did in this bar exam question, an effective lawyer would explore the problem more holistically with the client. Is abrupt termination the only solution to the client’s problem? Could the client offer the coach a severance package that would avoid litigation? Even if the client has no legal obligation to offer the coach a hearing, would a hearing help ease the blow to the coach? Could a hearing even lead to a new solution to the client’s underlying problem (a budget shortfall)? Maybe the coach would be willing to cut back their hours and continue serving the team.
Even without special prompting, GPT-4 recognized one of these more holistic solutions (a severance package) as an issue for the new attorney to consider. The bar exam question, in contrast, forces the aspiring lawyer to focus single-mindedly on the “legal topics.” Who is the machine in this comparison? Could working with GPT-4, ironically, lead us back to more holistic problem-solving with our clients?
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AI, Teaching, Bar Exam, GPT-4
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October 11th, 2023 / By Deborah J. Merritt
In my last two posts, I explored the ways in which GPT-4 could help a new lawyer identify legal issues in a client problem. Most law graduates are fairly adept at issue spotting, but they can still benefit from GPT’s advice. In this post I consider a task that fewer graduates have a chance to hone while in law school: questioning a client to obtain key facts related to the client’s problem.
The Uncle, the Guest Room, and the Fentanyl
I outlined the basic facts of this client problem, drawn from a sample bar exam question, in my first post. The client was staying in a guest room at his uncle’s house. While the client was away from the house, police knocked on the front door of the house and asked the uncle if they could search the house. The police offered no reason for the search, other than that they were investigating a noise complaint, but the uncle consented to the search. Police found fentanyl in the guest bedroom and charged the client with possession. The new lawyer wants to file a motion to suppress the fentanyl.
In my first post, GPT-4 helped the new lawyer identify possible issues to raise in this motion. In the second post, GPT-4 responded to a request to narrow those issues to the two most promising ones. Those issues were the client’s standing to challenge the search and whether the uncle’s consent was valid. I continued my dialogue with GPT-4, asking it to give me the most important questions to ask my client with respect to those two issues. GPT-4 responded:
When focusing on the two central issues of standing to challenge the search and the validity of the consent to search, here are the most important questions you would want to ask your client:
1. Standing to Challenge the Search:
a. Nature of Stay: – How often have you stayed in the guest bedroom at your uncle’s house? – Have you stayed there regularly or was this a one-time event? – How long was your stay? Was it just for the night, or did you have an extended stay?
b. Personal Belongings: – Did you leave any personal belongings in the guest bedroom? If so, what kind of belongings (e.g., clothes, luggage, personal documents)? – Were any of these belongings visible to anyone entering the room?
c. Expectation of Privacy: – Did you have any conversations with your uncle or any other resident about the privacy of the room during your stay? – Were you given a key or any means to lock the guest bedroom? If so, did you lock the room when you left?
d. Knowledge of Prior Guests: – To your knowledge, had other guests used the room shortly before or after your stay?
2. Consent to Search:
a. Uncle’s Understanding: – Do you know if your uncle understood what he was consenting to when he allowed the police to enter? – Is there any reason to believe your uncle might have felt pressured or coerced into giving consent?
b. Relationship with Uncle: – How would you describe your relationship with your uncle? (This can provide insight into whether the uncle might have any reason to allow or disallow a search.)
c. Prior Conversations: – Had you discussed with your uncle the possibility of police or others searching the room or the house? – Were there any explicit or implicit understandings about the privacy or security of the guest room between you and your uncle?
d. Presence of Contraband: – Were you aware that the fentanyl was in the guest bedroom? – If so, why was it there, and who had access to the room during your stay and after?
The answers to these questions can provide crucial information to determine the viability of a motion to suppress. They can also help in formulating a defense strategy beyond the suppression motion.
This is an excellent list of questions to begin fleshing out the motion to suppress. The new lawyer might think of additional questions while talking with the client, but GPT-4’s outline offers the new lawyer a strong starting place. If the new lawyer has never interviewed a client to uncover the facts of a dispute, GPT-4’s list will help the lawyer through that initial interview. Even if the lawyer is fairly experienced, GPT-4 generated this list in less than 30 seconds. Rather than type out their own questions (which will take much longer than 30 seconds), efficient lawyers can start with GPT-4’s list and supplement the questions as needed.
I wondered if GPT-4 could help with more interpersonal aspects of client interviews, so I entered another prompt: “Thank you for this list of questions to ask my client. What if my client answers the last question by saying that he didn’t know the fentanyl was in the bedroom–but I think he’s lying. How should I handle that situation?”
GPT-4 responded with a detailed discussion of how to handle the ethical challenge of representing a criminal defendant who might lie on the stand. The advice was sound, including a reminder that the new lawyer could seek guidance from senior colleagues, ethics hotlines, or the local rules of Professional Conduct. GPT-4’s performance on this question suggests that it can be an important sounding board on ethical issues. As with other questions, it may not give a full answer–but it is advice that a lawyer can obtain quickly and confidentially.
In this situation, however, I was looking for something different. I explained to GPT-4 that I wasn’t yet worried about representing this client at trial; very few criminal cases proceed to trial. Instead, I explained that I was seeking “a gentle way in which I can encourage my client to be more open.” GPT-4 responded:
Certainly. Building trust and creating an environment where the client feels safe and understood is crucial. Here are some gentle approaches you can use to encourage your client to be more open:
- Reiterate Attorney-Client Privilege: Remind your client that everything they share with you is protected by attorney-client privilege. This means that you cannot and will not share their information with others (with very limited exceptions). This can reassure them that their disclosures will remain confidential.
- Express the Importance of Truth: Gently explain that for you to defend them most effectively, you need to know all the facts, even the uncomfortable ones. You can phrase it in a way that emphasizes strategy: “The more I know, the better I can anticipate the prosecution’s moves and build a strong defense.”
- Non-Confrontational Approach: Instead of directly confronting them about a potential lie, ask open-ended questions that give them an opportunity to provide more details or correct any previous statements.
- Empathy and Active Listening: Make sure you listen actively and show empathy. If your client feels you are genuinely trying to understand and aren’t judging them, they may be more willing to open up.
- Refrain from Showing Doubt: If you show disbelief or doubt, your client might become defensive or more closed off. Even if you have doubts, try to maintain a neutral and understanding demeanor.
- Share General Information: Sometimes, sharing general anecdotes (without breaching confidentiality) about how honesty from past clients helped their cases can encourage your client to be more forthcoming.
- Reassure Your Commitment: Let your client know that regardless of the details they provide, you’re there to defend their rights and interests to the best of your ability.
- Ask About Their Concerns: Sometimes clients have specific fears or concerns about disclosing certain information. By directly asking about their concerns, you can address them and potentially alleviate their fears.
Building a strong attorney-client relationship based on trust is key. Over time, as you work together and your client sees your commitment and advocacy on their behalf, they may become more open and forthcoming.
This is a good answer: It would remind the new attorney (or teach them for the first time) about some ways to gain a client’s trust. And like the ethical counsel, this advice is available quickly and confidentially. I was disappointed, however, that GPT-4 didn’t recommend an approach that I often found successful with clients facing criminal charges. I continued my conversation with GPT-4 by asking: “What about saying to the client: ‘The prosecutor will try to build as strong a case as possible. Can you think of any evidence the prosecutor might offer that would show that you knew about the fentanyl? Or that the fentanyl belonged to you?'”
GPT-4 liked my approach and offered reasons why it would work:
That’s a strategically astute way to approach the situation. By framing the question this way, you’re not directly accusing or doubting your client. Instead, you’re positioning the conversation around preparing for the prosecutor’s potential strategy.
This approach accomplishes a few things:
- Strategy Focused: It shifts the conversation from a potentially confrontational one about honesty to a strategic discussion about anticipating the prosecutor’s moves.
- Empowerment: It empowers the client to be an active participant in their defense by thinking proactively about potential evidence.
- Indirect Confirmation: If the client does provide insight into potential evidence, it may give you a better understanding of the actual situation without having directly challenged their earlier statements.
- Building Trust: This method shows the client that you’re on their side and preparing for all possibilities, which can further cement trust in the attorney-client relationship.
Using this approach, you can gather potentially important information and gauge your client’s reaction, all while fostering collaboration and trust.
Here’s what I learned from using GPT-4 to prepare for this client interview:
- For this problem, GPT-4 did an excellent job generating relevant factual questions for the client. A conscientious lawyer would want to consider additional questions, especially if the legal issues are more esoteric than the ones listed here. But GPT-4 can at least jump start the process of brainstorming questions.
- GPT-4 may serve as a useful sounding board on ethical issues. In my experience, lawyers sometimes ignore red flags or feelings of unease. GPT-4 offers a quick, confidential way to check those feelings. Of course, lawyers should always follow up by checking the Rules of Professional Conduct, calling a hotline, or talking with more senior colleagues (as GPT-4 itself suggested). But GPT-4 may offer a useful resource on ethics. I plan to explore that possibility further in a future post.
- GPT-4 can offer basic advice on the interpersonal aspects of client interviewing. But knowing what to do isn’t the same as doing it. In a world increasingly dominated by AI, good interpersonal skills may distinguish excellent lawyers from mediocre ones.
- It is fun to suggest approaches to GPT-4 and get its feedback. I don’t know yet if GPT-4 is a “yes bot” who will approve any approach I suggest. That’s another avenue to explore in a future post.
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AI, Bar Exam, Client Counseling, GPT-4
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October 9th, 2023 / By Deborah J. Merritt
This post is part of a series in which I’m exploring how artificial intelligence (especially the GPT-4 tool available from OpenAI) can assist entry-level lawyers in their work. In my first post I showed how GPT-4 could help a lawyer identify legal issues in a new client problem. The client in this imaginary problem was charged with illegal possession of fentanyl, and the lawyer wants to prepare a motion to suppress evidence of the seized fentanyl. In this post we’ll continue to ask GPT-4 for help with that problem.
I’m Too Busy for All That
When asked to identify legal issues that could support the motion to suppress, GPT-4 offered our hypothetical lawyer a list of 8 points to consider. But an entry-level lawyer might not have time to research all 8 of those points. I followed up with GPT-4, therefore, by asking “Now imagine that you have limited time to prepare this motion. Based on the facts you already know, which two topics are most important to research?” (The facts of the underlying problem appear in the first sample question on this NextGen page.) Here’s how GPT-4 responded:
Given the limited time and based on the facts provided, the two most important topics to focus on would be:
- Standing to Challenge the Search: This is fundamental. If your client does not have standing to challenge the search because he lacked a “reasonable expectation of privacy” in the guest bedroom, then any other issues regarding the legality of the search are moot, at least as far as your client’s defense is concerned. Determining whether a guest, who doesn’t live at the residence and was not present during the search, has a legitimate expectation of privacy is pivotal to the success of the motion to suppress.
- Consent to Search: Given that the search was conducted based on the uncle’s consent, it’s essential to examine the validity of that consent. This involves determining:
- Whether the uncle had the actual or apparent authority to consent to a search of the guest bedroom. If he did not have such authority, then the search could be challenged as illegal.
- The voluntariness of the consent. If the uncle’s consent was obtained through coercion, duress, or misunderstanding, then the search might be challenged as a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
These two topics directly address the circumstances leading to the discovery of the fentanyl. Establishing that the search was unconstitutional due to a lack of standing or an invalid consent would be foundational to the success of a motion to suppress.
Once again, most of this response is very helpful. Within seconds, GPT-4 has focused the entry-level lawyer on the most important issues to address in a motion to suppress.
These two issues, however, are the ones that NCBE identified as correct in the sample bar exam question on which my hypothetical is based. Would a lawyer who had passed that exam need to ask GPT-4 for help? Or could that lawyer rely upon their own memory of search and seizure law?
Many new lawyers would immediately see the most promising issues in this problem, but I would still advise them to check their instincts with GPT-4. The bot can reassure them that they’re on the right track and haven’t overlooked an obvious issue. As I showed in my previous post, the bot will also note issues that are worth considering–even if the lawyer ultimately focuses their motion on these two primary issues. Most important, we’ll see later in this series that knowledge acquired for the bar exam is often woefully insufficient to address client problems. That knowledge might suffice here, but it won’t always.
What Is GPT-4 Talking About?
Just like humans, GPT-4 sometimes misspeaks. The last paragraph of the response pasted above suggests that a lack of standing could lead to a finding of unconstitutionality. That seems inconsistent with GPT-4’s previous responses, as well as with the basic knowledge of standing that a law graduate should hold. Lack of standing might prevent the client from challenging the search, but it would not make the search unconstitutional. If a human mentor concluded their response this way, a new lawyer might follow up to make sure they’ve understood.
It’s just as easy to follow up with GPT-4. “I’m confused by your last sentence,” I told GPT-4. “Does a lack of standing lead to a finding that the search was unconstitutional?” GPT-4 immediately responded:
I apologize for any confusion. You’re right; my phrasing was imprecise in that context. Allow me to clarify:
“Standing” in the context of Fourth Amendment challenges does not refer to whether the search itself was constitutional or not. Instead, it refers to whether the individual challenging the search (in this case, your client) has the right or “standing” to do so based on their personal expectation of privacy in the place that was searched.
If your client lacks standing, it means they cannot challenge the constitutionality of the search. It doesn’t make the search itself unconstitutional. So, if your client lacks standing, the motion to suppress would fail regardless of any potential Fourth Amendment violations related to the search.
Thank you for pointing that out, and I appreciate the opportunity to clarify.
This exchange teaches us two important things about GPT-4. First, GPT-4 will make mistakes. In that respect, it is no different from any human that a new lawyer might consult. People misspeak and they make mistakes; so does AI. One of the biggest errors an AI user can make is assuming that AI is infallible. GPT-4 is an incredible mentor, but it is fallible.
Second, it is possible to confront GPT-4 about apparent mistakes–and the new lawyer doesn’t have to worry about offending a more senior lawyer. As the above example illustrates, GPT-4 quickly recognized its error and clarified the information–and no one’s feelings were hurt in the process. Users often obtain the best results from AI by engaging the AI in a conversation.
In my next post, we’ll see how GPT-4 helps our new lawyer gather essential factual information for their motion to suppress.
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AI, GPT-4, law practice
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October 6th, 2023 / By Deborah J. Merritt
Generative AI will transform legal education and law practice in ways that we are just starting to imagine. To stretch our imaginations–and begin thinking about the ramifications for legal education–I decided to feed GPT-4 some of the sample questions that NCBE has prepared for the NextGen bar exam. I wasn’t interested in whether GPT-4 could pass NextGen; that’s almost a given at this point. Instead, I used these questions as examples of the kind of client problems that a newly licensed lawyer might face. How could GPT-4 help that lawyer address those problems?
In this and a series of future posts, I’ll explore that question. Along the way, I hope to develop some insights into how GPT-4 could reshape legal education and the bar exam. Let’s get started with the first problem facing our hypothetical entry-level lawyer.
An Illegal Search?
NCBE’s first sample question is a multiple-choice question centered on a criminal defense lawyer representing a client who has been charged with possession of fentanyl. Check out the question on the NextGen site.
This question follows a new format that NCBE has deveoped for the NextGen exam. It assesses the test-taker’s familiarity with legal concepts without requiring recall of detailed rules. GPT-4 easily chose the correct answers here (A and F). But that’s not particularly interesting given what we already know about GPT-4’s capabilities. Instead, let’s imagine that a new lawyer confronted this problem at work and wasn’t sure where to start. Workplace problems don’t come with multiple-choice answers, so I started a new chat (on a different day) and fed GPT-4 the same problem with these modifications:
- I began the prompt with the words “Imagine that you are a criminal defense lawyer . . . . “
- I changed the call of the question to “What legal topics are the most important for you to research to determine the likelihood of success on a motion to suppress?”
- I omitted the provided answers.
Here’s what GPT-4 advised me:
- Standing to Challenge the Search: One of the most crucial questions is whether your client has standing to challenge the search. A defendant can only challenge a search if they had a “reasonable expectation of privacy” in the place searched. Since your client doesn’t live in the uncle’s house and was not present during the search, you’ll need to determine if they had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the guest bedroom.
- Consent to Search: Even if a search would have been illegal without a warrant, if someone gives the police permission to search, that search is usually considered reasonable and, therefore, legal. Here, the uncle gave the officers consent. You would need to research:
- Whether the uncle had actual authority or the apparent authority to consent to a search of the guest bedroom.
- If the consent was voluntarily given or if there were any issues of coercion, duress, or misunderstanding.
- Scope of the Consent: It’s essential to determine if the search exceeded the scope of the consent given. If the uncle only agreed to a cursory look around and the police conducted a detailed and invasive search of the guest room, then the search might exceed the scope of the consent.
- Exigent Circumstances: You’d need to evaluate if the police are claiming any exigent circumstances that justified a warrantless entry. A mere noise complaint might not rise to the level of an exigent circumstance, but it’s good to be prepared for any arguments the prosecution might raise.
- The Plain View Doctrine: If contraband or evidence of a crime is in plain view and an officer has a legal right to be in the position to have that view, they can seize it without a warrant. Determine if the fentanyl was in plain view when the officers conducted the search.
- The Fruit of the Poisonous Tree Doctrine: If the initial entry or search was illegal, then any evidence discovered as a result of that illegal action could be considered “fruit of the poisonous tree” and might be suppressed.
- State Constitution and Statutes: Besides the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment, look into the state constitution and any state statutes that might provide additional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.
- Recent Case Law: It’s crucial to research recent cases in your jurisdiction to see how courts have ruled on similar issues. Case law can give you an idea of how your motion might be received and can be used to support your arguments.
Once you’ve researched these topics, you’ll have a clearer picture of the strengths and weaknesses of a motion to suppress in this situation.
This is an enormously helpful response: It identifies several angles for the lawyer to explore and gives some detail about each one. I particularly like the fact that GPT-4 advises the lawyer to remember the state constitution and statutes; those do provide additional protection in some states. And I like the final reminder to check recent case law. New attorneys (and even more senior ones) sometimes forget that step. At least on this problem, GPT-4 serves as an excellent issue spotter.
Ethan Mollick has described GPT-4 as an intern who is willing to do lots of work quickly and without pay. In this situation, I think of GPT-4 as a group of senior mentors that a new attorney can tap for advice. Some of the advice is better than other advice, and some advice is just plain wrong: Even very distinguished senior lawyers sometimes make a mistake. But as this example shows, GPT-4’s collective wisdom is well worth tapping.
Our new lawyer, of course, still has a lot of work to do. In my next post, I’ll explore what the new lawyer might do next–and how GPT-4 might continue to help.
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