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Order of the Coif

 
Law Encyclopedia: Order of the Coif
This entry contains information applicable to United States law only.

An unincorporated national scholastic honor society in law. Its purpose is to foster excellence in legal scholarship and to recognize those who have attained high grades in law school or who have distinguished themselves in the teaching of law. There are more than sixty chapters located in law schools throughout the country.

The honor society is named after the English Order of the Coif, the most ancient and one of the most honored institutions of the common law. The coif was a close-fitting cap of white linen that covered the ears and was tied with strings under the chin, like a baby's bonnet. It originated in the twelfth century as a head covering for men and became part of the ecclesiastic and legal headgear, lasting until the sixteenth century. For a long period of time, English judges were selected only from the order.

The Order of the Coif honor society was formed in 1912 as a national organization. The national constitution sets requirements for election to membership and criteria for the creation of chapters at law schools. The order is a federated organization with authority in local matters vested in each chapter. Each chapter has its officers, and the national organization has an executive committee composed of three officers and three other members. Officers are elected every three years.

Law students who are graduating seniors are eligible for election to the Order of the Coif if they have completed 75 percent of their law studies in graded courses and their grade record ranks them in the top 10 percent of all graduating seniors of the chapter's school. A chapter may also elect members of the law school faculty if the chapter believes professors have exhibited qualities of scholarship consistent with the objectives of the order.

A chapter may each year elect to honorary membership one member of the legal profession who is recognized for his or her scholarship. Every three years the national executive committee may elect up to five honorary members who have attained national distinction for their contributions to the legal system.

In addition, every three years the Order of the Coif recognizes legal scholarship by conferring one or more awards on the author or authors of published legal works. The national executive committee also is empowered to establish other awards for the purpose of recognizing preeminent legal scholarship and leadership among law students, law professors, judges, and practitioners.

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The Order of the Coif is an honor society for United States law school graduates. A student at an American law school who earns a Juris Doctor degree and graduates in the top 10 percent of his or her class is eligible for membership if the student's law school has a chapter of the Order.

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Election and Membership

Membership in the society is generally considered one of the highest honors a law student can receive, similar to membership in Phi Beta Kappa (Liberal Arts and Sciences) or Alpha Omega Alpha (Medicine) or Tau Beta Pi (Engineering). According to the Order's constitution, "[t]he purpose of The Order is to encourage excellence in legal education by fostering a spirit of careful study, recognizing those who as law students attained a high grade of scholarship, and honoring those who as lawyers, judges and teachers attained high distinction for their scholarly or professional accomplishments."

The exact induction process varies by law school, but students are generally notified of their election to the Order after the final class ranks at their schools are calculated and published (which at some schools may be after the formal graduation ceremony, on account of the time-consuming process of grading law school exams). When a student becomes a member of the Order of the Coif, he or she receives a certificate of membership, a badge of membership for wear during academic ceremonies, a Coif key, and in some cases an actual coif or representation of the same.

If a member law school graduates fewer than thirty students, it may still induct its top three students. A school can decide, at its sole discretion, not to allow an otherwise eligible student to receive the honor. A chapter may also choose to limit membership to students with further distinguished achievements beyond the minimum class-rank requirement. Each member school may induct, as an honorary member, one person each year. Typically the people chosen for honorary membership are United States Supreme Court justices and prominent federal appellate judges; most schools do not exercise their right to bestow honorary membership in most years.

Chapter Applications

Just as membership in the Order is a valuable credential on the resume of any lawyer, it is a major milestone in the evolution of a law school to be granted a chapter of the Order, as it signifies that the nation's best law schools have recognized the newly admitted institution as one of their own. While over 190 law schools are accredited by the American Bar Association, only 80 have Order of the Coif chapters as of 2006. This means that students at the majority of law schools in the US are ineligible for membership, regardless of their class ranking. However, the law schools with chapters include all institutions that are ranked in the top 50 according to the U.S. News & World Report's law school rankings, except for the Boston University School of Law, Columbia Law School, Harvard Law School, George Mason University School of Law, and Notre Dame Law School (the last does not rank its students)[citation needed]. These schools have their own honorary awards and have not sought chapters of the Order. Neither Notre Dame nor Columbia Law School have chapters because neither school calculates the top ten percent of its graduating class by GPA, as required by the Order's constitution.

For a law school to establish a chapter of the Order, a four-fifths majority of existing members must agree that the proposed school meets the appropriate standards.[1] A law school can also be removed from the Order if a two-thirds majority of member schools agrees to bring the matter to a vote and a four-fifths majority (excluding the school in question) then votes to remove the school.

Criteria considered when a law school applies for a chapter of the Order include: (1) American Bar Association and American Association of Law Schools approval; (2) at least ten years of existence as a law school; (3) affiliation with a university; (4) if a part-time J.D. program exists, the part-time program must offer students and faculty affiliated with the part-time program the same scholarship opportunities as all other students and faculty; (5) a stimulating intellectual environment for the study of law; (6) commitment of the university and law school administration to quality legal education; (7) faculty scholarship and institutional support for same; (8) a diverse educational program; (9) a diverse student body with strong academic credentials; (10) a law library that will support and encourage research activity; and (11) appropriate physical facilities. [2]

The University of Illinois established the first Order of the Coif chapter in 1902.

References

  • Frank R. Strong, Order of the Coif: English Antecedents and American Adaptation, 63 ABA J. 1725, 1726 (1977)

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Law Encyclopedia. West's Encyclopedia of American Law. Copyright © 1998 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Order of the Coif" Read more