In Re the Rules for Admission To Th ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                           10/06/2017
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONT_ANA,
    AF 11-0244                        t'ILED       Case Number: AF 11-0244
    OCT 06 2017
    Ed Smith
    r-Pi< OF THE SUPREME COURT
    IN RE THE RULES FOR ADMISSION
    ORDER
    TO THE BAR OF MONTANA
    In July 2017, this Court adopted temporary arnendments to Rule 104 of the
    Montana Board of Bar Exarniners' Rules as an interim means to accommodate examinees
    who are breastfeeding. We invited comments on the arnendments and received several.
    The Court extends its thanks to the Board of Bar Examiners for its review of the issue
    and to all those who took the time to offer input on thc proposal.
    After review and consideration of the comments to the temporary amendments, at
    a public meeting on October 3, 2017, the Court determined that minor changes to the
    interim rule are in order.
    IT IS NOW ORDERED that the attached Montana Board of Bar Examiners'
    Rules, including a new subsection F to Rule 104, are ADOPTED,effective immediately.
    A copy of this Order and the attached rule shall be posted on the Court's website.
    In addition, the Clerk is directed to provide copies of this Order and attachment to the
    Executive Director and the Bar Admissions administrator of the State Bar of Montana
    with the request that they be posted on the State Bar's website; to the Chair of the Board
    of Bar Examiners; to Dean Paul Kirgis of the Alexander Blewett III School of Law; to the
    State Law Library; to Todd Everts, Connie Dixon, and Molly Peterson at Montana
    Legislative Services Division; to Helene Haapala and Scott Moe at Thomson Reuters;
    and to Robert Roy and Patti Glueckert at LexisNexis.
    Dated this 17 day of October, 2017.
    Chief Justice
    MONTANA SUPREME COURT BOARD OF BAR EXAMINERS'RULES
    Rule 101 — Board of Bar Examiners.
    A.    Contact with Board of Bar Examiners. All correspondence or other
    communications to the members of the Board of Bar Examiners must be directed
    to the Bar Admissions Administrator, State Bar of Montana, P.O. Box 577,
    Helena, MT 59624, phone (406) 442-7660. Applicants may not contact Board
    members directly, unless given prior approval by the Bar Admissions
    Adrnin istrator.
    B.    Public Request. Upon request, the Bar Admissions Administrator or the
    Adrninistrator's designee may confirm that an individual has filed an application
    for admission to the State Bar of Montana.
    Rule 102 — Bar Examination Content, Certification, and Dates.
    A.   Examination Composition. The Uniform Bar Examination is prepared and
    coordinated by the National Conference of Bar Examiners and comprises the
    Multistate Essay Examination (MEE), two Multistate Performance Test tasks
    (MPT), and the Multistate Bar Examination (MBE). It is uniformly administered,
    graded, and scored by user jurisdictions and results in a portable score subject to
    individual jurisdiction admission requirements. Applicants must sit for all
    cornponents in the same administration to earn a Uniform Bar Examination score.
    Scores from any one component of the Uniforrn Bar Examination may not be
    carried forward to any subsequent exarnination. An applicant must sit for all
    components of the Uniform Bar Examination in the sarne adrninistration to gain
    admission to the State Bar of Montana.
    B.    Certification. An applicant may not sit for the Montana Uniforrn Bar
    Examination unless the applicant has been duly certified or conditionally certified
    by the Cornmission on Character and Fitness.
    C.    Dates of Examination. The Uniform Bar Examination is administered over two
    days. The MBE is given annually on the last Wednesdays of February and July,
    and the MEE and MPT are given on the preceding Tuesdays. Unless otherwise
    directed by the Board, the February examinations are administered in Helena,
    Montana, and the July examinations are administered in Missoula, Montana. The
    exarnination facility is deterrnined by the Board.
    D.   Montana Law Seminar. A11 applicants must attend a Montana Law Seminar
    (MLS)as a prerequisite to adrnission to the State Bar of Montana. The seminar is
    held twice annually on the Thursday immediately following the administration of
    the Uniform Bar Examination or other date directed by the Board.
    The Board may establish a two-track approach to the MLS with all applicants
    taking the same course in one session and splitting the other session into litigation
    and commercial/transactional tracks. Lirnited portions of the MLS may be by
    video, recorded, or live via video link.
    Rule 103 — Examination, Administration, and Grading.
    A.   Attendance at Examination. An applicant rnay not be admitted to a Uniforrn
    Bar Examination session more than one-half hour after the session begins. An
    applicant who is admitted after an examination session begins may not receive
    extra time and the examination session will conclude as scheduled.
    B.   MEE and MPT Grading. Each examination paper produced by an applicant on
    the MEE and MPT is separately graded. Examination papers are graded and
    credited by applicant nurnber and not by applicant name.
    C.   Score Combining. MBE answer sheets are scanned and centrally scored by the
    National Conference of Bar Examiners. MEE and MPT answers are graded on a
    scale of zero to six, with six being the highest qualifying score and zero being the
    lowest possible score. All scores are converted to the 400 Uniform Bar
    Examination point scale and cornbined with the MBE scaled scores. MEE and
    MPT scores are scaled to the MBE, with the MBE weighted 50%, the MEE 30%,
    and the MPT 20%.
    An applicant with a combined scaled score of 266 or higher will be deemed to
    have passed the Montana Uniform Bar Examination.
    D.   Disruption During Examination. Should a serious disruption occur during any
    portion of a Uniform Bar Exarnination session, the Bar Adrnissions Administrator
    or proctors rnust record the incident on the proctor and irregularity report forms
    and the Board will be notified. If examination time is lost by the general
    examination population due to the disruption, a corresponding amount of time will
    be added to the end of the same exarnination session, if reasonably feasible.
    E.   Individual Emergencies During Examination. If during the course of Uniform
    Bar Examination adrninistration an applicant has a sudden and unexpected
    emergency not of the applicant's rnaking and the Bar Admissions Administrator
    has approved the applicant's departure or other inability to complete the
    exarnination, the departure will be treated as a deferral and the fees will transfer to
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    the next examination. The Bar Admissions Adrninistrator will record the incident
    on the proctor and irregularity report forrns and the Board will be notified.
    Rule 104 — Testing Accommodations.
    A.   Application Deadline for Testing Accommodations. An applicant who claims a
    disability and who seeks an accommodation to sit for the Uniform Bar
    Examination shall submit a request for the accommodation with supporting
    evidence by the application filing deadline for the relevant Uniform Bar
    Examination adrninistration unless the disability occurs between the application
    filing deadline and the relevant Uniform Bar Examination administration.
    B.   Consideration of Testing Accommodation Requests. Requests for testing
    accornmodation are considered on a case-by-case basis. To qualify for
    accommodation, the requesting applicant must submit evidence sufficient to
    satisfy the Board or its designee that:
    1.    the applicant is otherwise qualified to sit for the Unifonn Bar Examination;
    2.    the applicant suffers from a disability;
    3.    the disability limits the applicant's ability to demonstrate, under standard
    testing conditions, that the applicant possesses the knowledge, skills, and
    abilities tested on the Uniform Bar Examination;
    4.    the disability is permanent or long-term;
    5.    the disability has a current substantial impact on the applicant. A mere
    submission of a rnedical diagnosis of impairment is insufficient to qualify
    the applicant for accommodation; and
    6.    the requested accommodation must address only a disability the law
    recognizes and must be tailored to address the disability as it relates
    to the Uniform Bar Examination testing conditions.            The requested
    accommodation may not give the applicant an advantage over other
    applicants, but must permit the applicant to perform "on a level playing
    field" with other applicants.
    Requests for accomrnodations will be considered by the Board or its designee
    based on the information subrnitted by the applicant and other information as may
    be reasonably available to the Board. Taking into account the resources available
    to it, the Board rnay, but is not required to, seek the assistance of experts on the
    particular request for accommodation.
    The Board may require the applicant to provide additional information relating to
    the claimed physical or mental irnpairment and prior testing accommodations
    received, and may require the applicant to submit to examination by a qualified
    professional designated by the Board in connection with the applicant's requested
    testing accommodation.
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    C.   Appeal of Board Decision. The Board's decision on whether to grant the
    requested accommodation or to offer an alternative accommodation is final. An
    applicant rnay petition for relief from the Board's decision by petitioning the
    Montana Suprerne Court.
    D.   Subsequent Accommodation Requests.
    Applicants who retake the Uniforrn Bar Examination shall subrnit "Form 1:
    Applicant Request for Test Accommodations" each time they apply for the
    Uniform Bar Examination, even if they previously requested and were granted
    accommodations by the Board. It is not necessary to resubmit supporting
    evidence that was submitted with a previous request if the applicant sat for the
    Uniform Bar Examination within the preceding three years and:
    (1)is requesting the same accommodation that was previously granted; and
    (2) has had no material changes in the physical or mental irnpairrnent for
    which the previous accommodation was granted. New supporting evidence is
    required if there is any change in the requested accornmodation. An update to
    prior medical evidence assessing the applicant's current functional limitations and
    ongoing need for accommodation is required if the nature of the applicant's
    impairment changes. The Board may require an update to prior evidence in all
    cases in which it deterrnines that the prior evidence is insufficient to establish the
    applicant's current level of impairrnent and need for accommodation.
    E.   Definitions.
    1.    "Accommodation" means an adjustment to or modification of the Uniform
    Bar Exarnination testing conditions that addresses the functional limitations
    related to the applicant's disability without:
    a.     fundamentally altering the nature of the Uniform Bar Examination or
    the Board's ability to determine through examination whether the applicant
    possesses the necessary knowledge, skills, and abilities to pass the Uniform
    Bar Examination;
    b.       irnposing an undue burden on the Board;
    c.       compromising the security ofthe Uniform Bar Examination; or
    d.       cornpromising the validity of the Uniforrn Bar Exarnination.
    2.    "Disability" rneans a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act
    of 1990(ADA), which defines a person with a disability as a person with a
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    physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major
    life activity that is of central importance to daily life.
    3.    "Qualified professional" means a licensed physician, psychiatrist, or other
    health care provider who has cornprehensive training in the field related to
    the applicant's disability.
    4.    "Substantially limits one or more major life activity" rneans the physical or
    mental impairment prevents or severely restricts the applicant from
    performing or engaging in activities that are of central importance to most
    persons' daily lives.
    F.   Breastfeeding-Related Requests. Although breastfeeding is not a disability as
    defined above, and is not to be considered one for purposes of granting
    accommodations, the Board will afford breastfeeding applicants accommodations
    in a manner consistent with public policy and law. Any breastfeeding applicant
    seeking such an accomrnodation shall submit a letter request for breastfeeding
    accommodation to the Bar Admissions Administrator by the filing deadline for the
    relevant Uniform Bar Examination administration stating the type of
    accommodation desired. Thc applicant need not submit the request for
    breastfeeding accommodations on the form otherwise required for a disability-
    based accommodation. A doctor's statement need not be submitted with the
    request but may be asked for by the Board at a later date. The request for
    breastfeeding accommodations should include documentation of the child's date
    or expected date of birth. Individual accommodations may vary, in the Board's
    discretion, depending upon each applicant's request or circumstances and whether
    such accomrnodations are medically necessary for the health of the applicant or
    the infant. The types of accommodations that may be granted by the Board
    include but are not limited to the following, depending on each individual
    applicant's circumstances:
    1.    Permission to bring to the exam and store at the testing site necessary
    medical equipment and supplies, including a breast pump, storage supplies
    and a cooler;
    2.    A private or semi-private location with an electrical outlet, if requested, to
    breastfeed or express breast milk. A semi-private location is defined as one
    that is located away from other applicants, except other applicants who are
    also breastfeeding or expressing milk.
    3.    Stop-the-clock breaks during each three-hour testing period to be used
    soley for the purpose of breastfeeding the infant or breast pumping, if
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    existing breaks     are   insufficiently   frequent   for   an   individual's
    circumstances.
    The Board's decision on whether to grant the requested accommodation or to offer
    an alternative accommodation is final. An applicant may petition for relief from
    the Board's decision by petitioning the Montana Supreme Court.
    Rule 105 — Rules of Conduct.
    A.   Examination Rules of Conduct. An applicant shall abide by all rules and
    instructions governing the administration of all portions of the Uniform Bar
    Exarnination. An applicant MAY NOT:
    1.    falsify the application or proofs required for admission to the Uniform Bar
    Examination;
    2.     utilize any unauthorized notes, books, recordings, electronically retrievable
    data, or other unauthorized materials while taking the exarnination. The
    only items perrnitted in the examination room are those that have been
    approved by the Board: (a) computers specifically configured for use of
    computer-based testing, such as Exam Soft; or (b) blue books issued by the
    test proctors and approved writing tools. Any item that may provide the
    applicant with inforrnation or access to information other than the
    applicant's own knowledge is prohibited, including but not limited to notes,
    cell phones, backpacks, purses, wallets, cameras, electronic or wireless
    devices, or timing devices. The Board may prohibit any item not
    specifically referenced at any time, including at the examination session.
    Possession of a prohibited item in the examination may be treated as a
    cheating incident, and examination proctors are authorized to confiscate
    any unauthorized item.
    3.     use answers or information from other applicants while taking the
    examination;
    4.     provide answers or information to other applicants taking the examination;
    5.     read questions on the examination prior to the announcement to begin the
    examination;
    6.     continue to answer any question after the announcement to stop when the
    session has ended;
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    7.    remove any multiple-choice, machine-scored exarnination question from
    the exarnination room, or otherwise communicate the substance of any of
    those questions to others, including applicants or persons who are
    employed by or associated with bar review courses;
    8.    rernove any essay questions, scrap paper, or other materials from the
    examination room, or otherwise communicate the substance of any of those
    questions to others, including applicants or persons who are employed by or
    associated with bar review courses;
    9.    cornprornise the security or the integrity of the Uniforrn Bar Examination;
    or
    10.   disregard any instruction given by the Bar Admissions Administrator
    during the course of the exarnination or cause generalized disruption of the
    examination.
    B.   It is the Board's policy that the Uniform Bar Examination administration and
    related conduct of a Montana Bar applicant be beyond reproach. Applicants are at
    all times to maintain a professional attitude toward other applicants, proctors, and
    other exarnination personnel. Conduct that constitutes a violation of these Rules,
    the Rules for Admission, or any rules or instructions provided by examination
    personnel rnay result in imrnediate disqualification to sit for and in ejection from
    the examination. Cheating or taking any action that disrupts or compromises the
    security or integrity of the Uniform Bar Examination rnay result in immediate
    disqualification to sit for and in ejection from the examination.
    Rule 106 — Impoundment,Investigation, and Appeal.
    A.   Impoundment of Examination Results. If the Board or the Bar Admissions
    Administrator has cause to believe an applicant has violated any of the rules of
    conduct set forth above, the applicant's bar exarnination papers and results may be
    impounded pending investigation by the Board.
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    B.   Investigation by the Board of Bar Examiners Subcommittee.
    1.   The Bar Adrnissions Administrator shall refer any concern regarding
    violation of the Rules of Conduct to a subcornmittee of two rnembers of the
    Board for further investigation. In such investigation, the Bar Admissions
    Adrninistrator or the subcornmittee may obtain information that relates to
    the applicant's conduct, administer oaths and affirmations, and compel by
    subpoena the attendance of witnesses and the production of books, papers,
    and documents. The subcommittee may require sworn taped interviews
    with an applicant to clarify information or to facilitate the investigation.
    2.   If it appears to the subcommittee that there is credible evidence that would
    establish an applicant's violation of any rule of conduct, the Bar
    Admissions Administrator shall serve written notice on the applicant by
    certified mail stating with particularity the facts upon which the alleged
    violation is based.
    3.   The applicant shall file a verified answer with the Bar Admissions
    Adrninistrator within thirty days of service of the notice. The answer rnust
    identify with specificity the alleged violations disputed by the applicant and
    set forth any evidence that can contradict the charges. The applicant may
    request a hearing before the Board of Bar Exarniners. The applicant shall
    supply an original and seven copies of all materials to the Board's office.
    4.   ln the event the applicant does not submit a written answer as provided in
    Rule 106 B.3., the Board shall deem the facts set forth in the written
    charges to be established. The charges shall become part of a permanent
    file of the Commission on Character and Fitness. The applicant may not
    reapply for admission for at least three years from the date the Board
    confirms the violation.
    5.   If an applicant files an answer but does not request a hearing, the Board
    Chair shall appoint a committee made up of Board members other than the
    two members assigned to investigate the claimed violation. The committee
    must consist of no fewer than three and no more than 5 members. If there
    is an insufficient number of Board members available for appointment, the
    Chair may appoint a mernber of the State Bar of Montana in good standing
    to sit as a rnernber of the cornrnittee. Thc cornmittee shall review the
    evidence gathered by the Bar Admissions Administrator, the two-member
    subcornmittee, together with the subrnission received from the applicant,
    and render a final decision by a majority vote of its members.
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    C.   Hearing.
    1.     If the applicant requests a hearing, the hearing panel rnust consist of a
    majority of the members of the Board who did not serve on the
    subcommittee appointed by the Bar Adrnissions Administrator. A majority
    of the hearing panel shall make the final decision.
    2.     The Board shall notify the applicant in writing of the date, tirne, and place
    of the hearing and of the applicant's right to be represented by counsel at
    the hearing, to exarnine and cross-exarnine witnesses, and to present
    evidence.
    3.    The applicant shall supply a list of witnesses, including addresses and
    phone numbers, and all supporting documentation including any evidence,
    affidavits, and exhibits the applicant determines are necessary to support
    the applicant's position at Ieast ten days prior to the hearing. The applicant
    shall supply an original and seven (7) copies of all materials to the Board's
    office.
    4.    The hearings before the Board must be open to the public unless the
    applicant requests that they be private and the panel chair finds that the
    demands of the applicant's individual privacy clearly exceed the merits of
    public disclosure and rules that the hearing be closed.
    5.    The Rules of Evidence need not be observed. The Board rnay take
    evidence in other than testimonial form and rely upon records and other
    materials furnished to the Board in response to its investigation. The Board
    may determine whether evidence to be taken in testimonial form will be
    taken in person at the hearing or upon deposition, but in either event all
    testimonial evidence must be taken under oath. The Board shall maintain a
    complete record ofthe hearing.
    6.    The hearing panel shall determine by a preponderence of the evidence
    whether the applicant violated the exarnination rules of conduct.
    D.   Findings and Decision.
    1.   The Board shall issue a written decision which shall be served upon the applicant
    by certified mail and reported to the Commission on Character and Fitness.
    2.   In its decision the Board may take one or more of the following actions:
    a.    void the results ofthe examination taken;
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    b.   transmit a written report of the matter to bar admission authorities in any
    jurisdiction;
    c.   take such other action as the Board deems appropriate.
    E.   Supreme Court Review.
    1.   The final decision of the Board is conclusive unless a verified Petition for
    Review is filed by the applicant with the Montana Supreme Court within
    thirty days following service of the decision upon the applicant. The record
    of the hearing before the Board must be transcribed at the applicant's
    expense and provided to the Court. A copy of the Petition for Review and
    the hearing transcript must also be served upon the Board.
    2.   Within thirty days of receipt of the Petition, the Board shall transmit the
    entire record to the Clerk of the Supreme Court with a response to the
    Petition fully advising the Court as to the Board's reasons for its decision,
    and admitting or contesting any assertions made by the applicant in the
    Petition.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 11-0244

Filed Date: 10/6/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2017