This magazine is full of news about interesting products and applications. As “Backbytes” readers may recall, the one that captured my interest and cash this year was the HP Jornarda Pocket PC, inspired by Neil Cameron’s account of reading “Bleak House” on a train. I duly installed Microsoft Reader software and indulged in some of the e-books that are available free on the Web, mainly out-of-copyright 19th century novels. E-books are ideal for reading during train journeys, tedious meetings and other moments of solitary contemplation.
One of those I managed to download was Bram Stoker’s Dracula. The novel has exercised huge influence in popular culture yet it is rarely read in its original form. Its literary merit is in many ways questionable but no-one who embarks on its sprawling epistolary structure will deny that it is strangely compelling. Comment has been extensive and wide-ranging: the hunt for the vampire provides scope for Marxist, feminist, gay and many other interpretations. However, little attention has, been paid to the pivotal and symbolic role of technology and the legal profession in the book.
The format involves a collection of contemporaneous documents. Whilst we are in the England of the last years of the 19th century, the protagonists use the most up-to-date technology to create those records. Stenography, dictation and photography are all used and are all as slap-bang up to date as e-mail, client extranets and XML.
Peter Hawkins was a respected and wealthy solicitor in
The Count is a notably sophisticated commercial client. He does not retain one firm for all his legal affairs but is prepared to make appointments based on track records and suitability for the job. These days, of course, his instructions might form the basis for an invitation to tender and subsequent beauty parade. In the 1890s, he relies on his personal contact with Hawkins. The reason for using an
As well as property investment, the client requires shipping law services. He intends to transport his domestic effects, his sources of home comfort in a foreign country, to Carfax via
During Harker’s visit, the Count addresses a letter to Messrs. Samuel F. Billington & Son, of 7 The Crescent Whitby asking them to take delivery of the 50 boxes of good Transyvlanian earth and consign them to
With the caskets safely transported to
Harker is also able to use his legal experience to help Professor Van Helsing and his colleagues find their way around Carfax and in particular the chapel: after all, he had not pored over the conveyancing plans for nothing in the latter part of his articles. By this time, it seems Hawkins is dead and Harker has inherited his practice, performing his vampire hunting duties whilst senior partner of Hawkins & Harker. His clients back in
Interestingly, for his second property investment, namely No. 347 Piccadilly, the Count eschews legal advice and indulges in a bit of do-it-yourself conveyancing. As the estate agents inform Lord Godalming, the purchaser, a foreign nobleman “effected the purchase himself paying the purchase money in notes ‘over the counter,’ if your Lordship will pardon us using so vulgar an expression”. The law was not so hot on money-laundering in those days and the Count was clearly able to prepare and engross his own vesting document. The vendors would, of course, need to be careful if the travelling draft happened to be amended in red.
Stoker recounts the piecing together of various sources of evidence by the protagonists, including journals, letters and commercial documents. The process is akin to a factual investigation in a major litigation case, the intended defendant in this instance being an embodiment of evil such as most litigators rarely confront. Van Helsing, it should be noted, is legally as well as medically qualified and his alliance with Harker and Harker’s wife Mina, who fulfils all the paralegal virtues, is eventually too much for the Count. They eventually defeat him, out of the jurisdiction, by a rigorous analysis and exploitation of what laws of nature he can and cannot break. Were a modern case management system available to them, they would evidently have used it to good effect.
The other solicitor to feature in the book, Mr Marquand of Wholeman, Sons, Marquand and Lidderdale has a less than glamorous role to play. As solicitor to Lucy Westenra’s mother (Lucy’s untimely death having been hastened by the attentions of the Count and her mother having immediately predeceased her), Mr Marquand congratulates himself on the nature of his testamentary advice. This, although technically correct, was ignored by Mrs Westenra with the result that the estate has been made available to assist in the quest for the vampire. The narrator of this part of the action, Dr Seward, is subtly scathing:
We are thus presented with a contrast between two types of solicitor. Gratifyingly, it is Harker who sets out once more for Transylvania and we can reasonably assure ourselves that the Count, whose plans were initially based on the fulfilment of legal transactions, was laid low by legal vision and the harnessing of technology as well as by courage and cold steel.
Richard Harrison is a partner in Laytons