As I noted in my prior post, I recently received this year's edition of Super Lawyers Rising Stars, a magazine identifying the Rising Stars in the Texas legal profession. Though I questioned the purpose of such ratings as Super Lawyer and Rising Star when such ratings appear to be primarily by lawyers of lawyers for lawyers supported by lawyer advertising, I also pointed out that I did not really question the qualification of those lawyers named.
I perhaps have a greater question as to why other attorneys are not also included, as I find it difficult to discern why one lawyer I know is considered a Super Lawyer while another lawyer that I consider just as if not more competent in his or her practice area falls short.
And lest you think this is sour grapes, I will tell you that I have my own resume padder. Martindale-Hubbell, another rating service by lawyers of lawyers for lawyers which describes itself as "the gold standard in attorney ratings" (again a direct quote from its website), has granted me an AV-Preeminent rating, for whatever that is worth.
I will tell you that Super Lawyers is owned by Thomson Reuters while Martindale-Hubbell at one time was owned by the same company that owns LexisNexis, though it is somewhat difficult to determine if there is a remaining link between Martindale-Hubbell and LexisNexis. Thomson Reuters and LexisNexis are both major suppliers of legal materials and services to lawyers, so there is perhaps some incentive to pump up some lawyers with ratings that they can use on their resumes.
Both Super Lawyers and Martindale-Hubbell maintain websites by which any member of the public who might stumble upon them can search for a lawyer in a particular geographic region or type of practice. Interestingly, Martindale-Hubbell appears to include all lawyers in its searchable data, whether a particular lawyer has a good rating, a bad rating, or no rating at all through their service. It appears that Super Lawyers only includes those lawyers that it has given a rating of Super Lawyer or Rising Star; however, it does not appear to matter if such rating is current or not as a search of various lawyers turned up lawyers who have received no rating since a decade ago. I suppose once you are super or rising you are considered good enough to be included in their search data forever, but if you never make the grade you are forever excluded.
Super Lawyers and Martindale-Hubbell are certainly not the only lawyer ratings services or attempts. There are other rating services. I know my own firm's website indicates the firm has a designation of "best" from U.S. News & World Report.
At various times in the past, there have been other more localized ratings, either statewide or even more local. I think perhaps Texas Monthly magazine may have done this in the past and perhaps still does. I believe so has and perhaps does D Magazine. I recall even the Dallas Morning News and other local newpapers or magazines having provided some type of rating in the past if not continuing to do so.
Instead of some type of designation such as Super Lawyer, Rising Star, or AV-Preeminent, these ratings appear to just use such superlatives as best, outstanding, or top lawyers.
And it is one such localized rating that explains why I am not upset for not being super. A few years ago, I was glancing through the names of the best or top lawyers in Dallas, I believe in the Dallas Morning News. Among those lawyers I noticed a name of a well-known and well-respected lawyer who unquestionably based on reputation would be considered to qualify for such a designation. The only problem was that he had died several months before.
I figured if I was not by that time a better lawyer than one who was presumably no longer practicing and not even alive, then what difference did it really make anyway.