Reinheitsgebot - 500 Years of the Law of Beer

Happy International Beer Day! In honor of the day, our blog post features a ancient law from medieval Germany that has influenced how this popular adult beverage has been crafted over the last half millennium!

 

Bavarian Dukes Wilhelm and Ludwig, who issued the original German Beer Purity Law in 1516.

Reinheitsgebot - Ancient German beer law that still holds sway

Celebrating its 500th anniversary this year is the Bavarian beer purity law known as Reinheitsgebot. The law was issued by the Dukes Wilhelm and Ludwig of Bavaria in 1516 to ensure that beer was brewed with only three ingredients - barley, hops, and water. Whether it was done to promote public health (yes, beer was a health food in the 1500s) or to drive down the price of wheat to make bread more cheaply, the lasting effects of the law are undeniable. Today, the American brewery Sam Adams proudly reports on its website that it's Boston Lager was the "first American beer sold in Germany" after passing Reinheitsgebot regulations in 1985!

For more on Reinheitsgebot, visit In Custodia Legis, a blog from the Law Library of Congress, and the Smithsonian Magazine, from the Smithsonian Institution.

An Introduction to Poké-Law

A Goldeen splashing around outside the Harris County Law Library

Anyone who’s not living under a rock (or Rock-type Pokémon, if that be the case) has heard plenty in the last few days about Pokémon Go, the augmented reality game breaking download records and causing the worst outbreak of Pokémon fever since the late ‘90s. As a response to the millions of players trying to become Pokémon masters, the Harris County Law Library would like to spotlight a few of the potential legal issues raised by the app:

“I was trying to catch an Eevee” is not a legal defense

If you’re trying to be the very best, “like no one ever was,” make sure you respect property rights. Criminal trespass in Texas occurs when a person enters or remains in or on the property of another, without effective consent and the person (1) had notice the entry was forbidden and (2) received notice to depart but failed to do so. Tex. Penal Code § 30.05 (West 2015). The offense is a misdemeanor. Texas also recognizes civil causes of action for trespass where an unauthorized entry to property results in injury to the property owner’s possessory interests. In cases where the entry was inadvertent, the defendant may still be liable if they failed to exercise a duty of reasonable care (e.g., accidentally driving your car off the road into someone’s yard because you spotted a Pikachu). So heed the warnings of police and don’t look for Pokémon in any place where you don’t have permission to be.

(On this note: While the law library is open to the public for legal research, please don’t use the library for any other purpose. Your local Harris County Public Library branch is a much better Pokémon hunting ground.)

Know Your Rights as a Pokémon Trainer

Like any other app on your phone, players trying to catch ‘em all are subject to the software manufacturer’s Terms of Service. Unfortunately, like most other TOSs, these terms are rarely actually read, and can have serious legal ramifications if a dispute arises. The Pokémon Go TOS contains an “Agreement to Arbitrate” clause that strips users of their rights to participate in class action suits against developer Niantic Labs or to have a trial by jury. If users want to retain these rights, they must email Niantic within 30 days of agreeing to the TOS with an “Arbitration Opt-out Notice.” More information on opting out can be found in this article by The Consumerist.

This is only the beginning of Pokémon Go’s impact on the legal system, as lawyers grapple with the challenge of applying existing laws to new digitally augmented environments. Be safe when out looking for Pokémon, and happy hunting!

Access to Justice, New and Noteworthy Items Around the Web

Today’s blog post is a look at resources around the Web. What services exist for those in need of civil legal aid? Who is working in Texas and across the nation to provide these services, and what can be done to further their cause? What alternatives to traditional legal aid already exist and which efforts are most successful? Do law schools, legal clinics, and incubator programs have a role to play? How can technology be employed to help self-represented litigants navigate the justice system? And what is driving this increasingly dire need for legal services to the poor? What can be done to help?

The Harris County Law Library has compiled this brief list of resources to help answer these questions. We invite you to explore the topic further. We will update this list with subsequent blog posts in the near future, making sure to provide the latest coverage about this growing area of concern.

Organizations - Texas

Texas Access to Justice Foundation

TexasLawyersHelp.org

TexasLawHelp.org

Texas Legal Services Center

LegalAidResearch.org

Organizations - National

National Center for Access to Justice

National Coalition for a Right to Civil Counsel

National Legal Aid and Defender Association

Public Welfare Foundation

Self-Represented Litigation Network

Recent Media Coverage

Access to Justice: Is Civil Gideon a Piece of the Puzzle?

The Defenders: What does the future of legal services for the poor look like?

How to Solve the Housing Crisis: More Lawyers

Lawyers: Bulwark against Inequality and Gentrification?

Legal Aid With a Digital Twist

One More Way the Courts Aren’t Working for the Poor

States Look to Provide Lawyers for the Poor in Civil Cases

Recently Published Reports

Blazing a Trail: The Fight for Right to Counsel in Detention and Beyond

The Justice Index 2016

Miranda Monday: Mirandizing Family Justice

Throughout the month of May, the Harris County Law Library is celebrating Law Day and the historic Miranda v. Arizona ruling of 1966. This decision, which established our right to remain silent when questioned by the police, is a cornerstone of our freedom and, for the last 50 years, an essential safeguard in guaranteeing procedural due process under the law.

Commemorating this decision and the fundamental rights it guarantees, including the protection against self-incrimination, is important. We at HCLL are committed to safeguarding justice and to reducing the barriers that impede equitable outcomes. We embrace all efforts that increase access to the legal system, especially for those in the greatest need, and we fully support any initiatives that improve expediency and fairness in the delivery of legal services. One such effort, which is slowly making a foothold in Texas, is the Family Justice Center initiative. (Bexar County, Hays County, and Tarrant County all have well-established FJC programs.)

Originating in San Diego, the Family Justice model was designed to increase efficiency and eliminate fragmentation in the delivery of legal services for victims of family violence. According to the program's design, combining governmental and community-based agencies under one roof allows for greater efficiency and better coordination of services, resulting in more effective intervention strategies for those in need of domestic relief.

At the same time, however, those who provide intervention services, including police, prosecutors, social workers, safety advocates, and medical personnel, are required to report any instances of violence, leading to a very problematic conflict of interest: the same duty that obligates these professionals to report abuse also grants them de facto authority to open criminal cases against the perpetrators, ostensibly in the best interests of their clients, but often in opposition with the confidentiality to which their clients are entitled.

A brilliant article by UC-Irvine law professor Jane K. Stoever explores this very conflict and raises the need for extending Miranda-like protections to those involved in the FJC system. Her article, "Mirandizing Family Justice," is worth a careful read. In academia, journalism, and politics, much has been written on the expansion of Miranda rights to civil matters.  As discussed in a previous Miranda Monday post, these protections are typically limited to criminal situations despite recent arguments in favor of the need for civil safeguards. 

 

ACCESS TO JUSTICE: ONLINE RESOURCES FOR BRIDGING THE JUSTICE GAP

Last fall, the Obama administration established the White House Legal Aid Interagency Roundtable or LAIR, a federal initiative designed to close the justice gap for those in need of legal assistance. Subsequently, the Access To Justice movement has been gaining momentum and garnering the attention of both state and local governments as well as the national media. In addition to this effort, a number of other organizations have taken up the cause for those in need. Among these organizations are the following:

Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP)

The Justice Index (2016)

LegalAidResearch.org

National Center for Access to Justice

National Equal Justice Library

National Legal Aid and Defender Association

Voices for Civil Justice

White House Legal Aid Interagency Roundtable Toolkit