Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
By the mid-1300s church lawyers (canon lawyers) had groups and written rules, but those groups rarely punished members who broke the rules — sometimes they even stopped punishment, and complaints usually came from clients rather than other lawyers. Either lawyers were unusually honest or the church courts were bad at enforcing rules; the passage says the second is more likely because civil courts punished lawyers more and church leaders complained about failures. Ironically, those outside criticisms made lawyers unite to defend the profession, so they focused more on protecting themselves from critics than on disciplining their own members.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the passage lines about who initiated disciplinary actions (clients), then pick the offense a client would most readily notice and thus be likely to generate a complaint and a record.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.According to the information in the passage, for which one of the following ethical violations would documentation of disciplinary action against a canon lawyer be most likely to exist?
Correct Answer
A
"Advocates' professional organizations showed little fervor for disciplining their erring members." and "In the few recorded episodes of disciplinary enforcement, the initiative for disciplinary action apparently came from a dissatisfied client, not from fellow lawyers." Because documented disciplinary actions were typically brought by dissatisfied clients, an offense a client would directly experience and complain about — betraying a client's secrets to the opposing party — is most likely to appear in the records.
Upgrade Your Prep
Ready to go beyond free explanations?
LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.
Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal