Quintin Johnstone (March 29, 1915 – June 27, 2014) was an American legal scholar. He served as the Justus S. Hotchkiss Professor Emeritus of Law at
Yale Law School, where he was an authority on
property law and
land transactions,[1] and was later an academic at the
New York Law School.
Johnstone received his undergraduate and legal education at the
University of Chicago. After beginning a career in academia, he obtained additional degrees from
Cornell and Yale Law School. The majority of Johnstone's tenure as a law professor was spent at
Yale University, where he advocated for the teaching of property law and took an active role in recruiting international students.[2] Johnstone also co-founded the law school of
Addis Ababa University in 1967, establishing the first of such institution in
Ethiopia.[3]
At Yale, Johnstone assumed major administrative positions. He was remembered for being a "strong supporter of empirical work and interdisciplinary approaches to law" and "more concerned with the relation of legal education to the professor than any other member of the faculty".[4] Upon his death in 2014,
Robert Post, the
dean of Yale Law School, described him as "an iconic figure" at the institution.
After a year of study, Johnstone obtained a
Master of Laws (LL.M.) from
Cornell Law School in 1941. He subsequently went to Yale Law School, becoming one of six students in the J.S.D. program to have already taught at domestic law schools,[8] and graduated in 1951 with his
Doctor of Juridical Science.[7]
Career
After graduating from Cornell Law, Johnstone worked briefly in private practice before becoming an attorney in the
Office of Price Administration. In 1947, he became an assistant professor at the
Willamette University College of Law, later joining the faculty of the
University of Kansas as an associate professor in 1950. After five years of teaching, Johnstone became a visiting professor at
Yale Law School in 1955, with President
Alfred Whitney Griswold announcing his appointment as an associate professor on August 10, 1956, alongside future-judge
Ellen Ash Peters.[9] He rose to a full-time professorship in 1959, and received the Law School's appointment as the Justus S. Hotchkiss Professor of Law in 1964.[10]
From 1967 until 1969, Johnstone took a leave from Yale to move to
Ethiopia, where he co-founded the Haile Selassie I University Law School of
Addis Ababa University and served as its dean.[1] Having previously been stationed in
Tanzania, he grew concerned that African legal education too closely mirrored the West and advocated for relinquishing control of the American-governed law school to native
Ethiopians.[11] Johnstone also aimed to train future students for government office at the university, replacing foreign professors on the faculty with Ethiopian ones.[11]
Johnstone achieved emeritus status at Yale Law in 1985, and assumed a professorship at the
New York Law School (NYLS) that same year, becoming a professor emeritus at NYLS in 2000.[10] He chaired the Graduate Committee at Yale, efficiently managing a controversial program, and oversaw the school's admissions for a period.[12] He was alone in teaching the specialty of property law, and made multiple unsuccessful efforts to increase the number of faculty in the field, though succeeded on only one occasion. During a meeting of the Yale Governing Board, he persuaded the faculty to hire
Charles A. Reich, who expressed interest in teaching property law, and argued for the importance of teaching property.[13] Johnstone was also noted for his concern regarding the legal profession, which had been a focus of his scholarly works as a legal academic.[4]
Johnstone gained a reputation for being among the toughest graders at Yale Law. With no class rankings at the school, he remembered its absence as meaning "less push for top grades than there might be at other places".[14] Both
Anita Hill and future-Justice
Clarence Thomas were among his students. Johnstone taught Thomas in three classes, remembering him as a serious student that "performed very well" and who "[took] stands and aggressively [defended] them" in class.[15][16] In considering the importance of Johnstone's teaching of the essentials of law, Judge
Ralph K. Winter Jr. likened his and Joseph W. Bishop Jr.'s[a] eventual retirement to being "the equivalent of a loss of 20% of the faculty" at Yale Law School.[12]
Throughout his career, Johnstone received multiple accolades for his legal service. He was awarded an honorary degree by
Quinnipiac University in 1993.[18] In 1996, the
Connecticut Bar Association awarded him its John Eldred Shields Distinguished Professional Service Award for outstanding service to the legal community.[19] Johnstone was also a member of the Connecticut Bar Foundation's board of directors and served as its president[20] from 1987 until 1991.[10][21] On June 2, 2011, Johnstone was given the Service to the Profession Award by the Connecticut Law Tribune,[22] where he previously had been the chair of the editorial board from 1999 to 2011,[23][24] and the Tribune renamed it in his honor afterwards.[10] The Connecticut Bar Association presented him its Tapping Reeve Legal Educator Award on April 4, 2014,[3][25] in recognition of his longstanding contributions to legal education.[26] The CATIC Foundation established two memorial prizes in his honor: the Quintin Johnstone Scholarship, presented to students interested in property law, and the Quintin Johnstone Prize in Real Property Law, awarded to a student of Yale Law "who has demonstrated excellence in the area of real property law".[27][28]
Personal life and death
Johnstone had a wife, Nancy, and two children: Robert Dale Johnstone and Katherine Mary Johnstone.[10] He died at 99 years of age on June 27, 2014, within his home in
Hamden, Connecticut.[2][29] A memorial service was held at Yale Law School on November 9, 2014.
Robert Post, then the dean of the school, said of him:
Quintin Johnstone was an iconic figure at the Yale Law School [...] He taught here for more than 55 years, and perhaps instructed more students than any other teacher in the School’s history. His mastery of the intricacies of property law was treasured by generations of students, as were his insights into the legal profession. He was still actively teaching at 96 years of age. We shall miss him deeply. A treasured landmark has passed away.[30]
Johnstone, Quintin; Wenglinsky, Martin (1985). Paralegals: Progress and Prospects of a Satellite Occupation.
Praeger Publishers (published November 19, 1985).
ISBN978-0313249457.
Johnstone, Quintin; Hopson, Dan (1967). Lawyers and Their Work: An Analysis of the Legal profession in the United States and England.
Bobbs-Merrill (published January 1, 1967).
ASINB0006BOY2I.
Johnstone, Quintin (1951). Survey of the Legal Profession: Legal and Clinic Reports.
Johnstone, Quintin (Winter 1978). "Australian Green Bans: Trade Union Activism Restricting Urban Development". The Urban Lawyer. 10 (1): 115–129.
JSTOR27890805.
Johnstone, Quintin; Flood, John A. (1982). "Paralegals in English and American Law Offices". Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice. 2.
University of Windsor: 152–192.
Craig, Walter E. (February 1968). "Review of Lawyers and Their Work: An Analysis of the Legal Profession in the United States and England by Quintin Johnstone, Dan Hopson, Jr". Stanford Law Review. 20 (3): 610–612.
doi:
10.2307/1227518.
JSTOR1227518.
Pipkin, Ronald M. (September 1987). "Review of Paralegals: Progress and Prospects of a Satellite Occupation. by Quintin Johnstone, Martin Wenglinsky". Social Forces. 66 (1): 285–286.
doi:
10.2307/2578920.
JSTOR2578920.