Ohio State University Moritz College of Law | |
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Parent school | Ohio State University |
Established | 1891 |
School type | Public law school |
Parent endowment | $7.4 billion |
Dean | Kent Barnett |
Location | Columbus, Ohio, United States 39°59′46″N83°00′29″W / 39.99611°N 83.00806°W |
Enrollment | 561 |
Faculty | 80 |
USNWR ranking | 26th (tie) (2024) [1] |
Bar pass rate | 91.95% (2024 first-time takers) [2] |
Website | moritzlaw.osu.edu |
ABA profile | officialguide.lsac.org |
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The Michael E. Moritz College of Law is the law school of Ohio State University, a public land-grant research university in Columbus, Ohio. Founded in 1891, the school is located in Drinko Hall on the main campus of the Ohio State University in Columbus. The school is accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA) and is a charter member of the Association of American Law Schools.
According to the college's official 2023 ABA-required disclosures, 93.4% of the Class of 2023 obtained full-time, long-term, and bar passage-required employment 10 months after graduation. [3]
The board of trustees of the Ohio State University officially sanctioned a law school in June 1885 after approving a resolution introduced by trustee Peter H. Clark, an early African-American civil rights activist. [4] However, it was not until October 1891 that the law school was formally opened to 33 students, including 1 woman, in the basement of the second Franklin County Courthouse. [4] Marshall Jay Williams, a Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court served as the first dean of the law school and lectured for two years before resigning in 1893. [4] In 1896, the University elevated the law school to its present-day College of Law status.
In 1903, the College of Law moved to Page Hall, its first permanent building on the main campus of the University (now home to the John Glenn College of Public Affairs), named in honor of Henry F. Page, a prominent Ohio attorney who had left his estate to the University. [4] Over the next four decades, the College of Law experienced rapid growth under the successive leadership of deans William F. Hunter, Joseph H. Outhwaite, John Jay Adams and Herschel W. Arant. [4] The College of Law continued under the successive leadership of deans Gregory H. Williams, Nancy H. Rogers, Alan C. Michaels, Lincoln L. Davies and now Kent Barnett.
The modern-day building that now houses the Moritz College of Law since 1958, Drinko Hall, is named after attorney and College of Law benefactor John Deaver Drinko, former Managing Partner of BakerHostetler in Cleveland, Ohio. Drinko graduated from the College of Law in 1944 and received a Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1991. In 2001, the College of Law received a $30 million donation from benefactor Michael E. Moritz, former partner of BakerHostetler in Columbus, Ohio. Moritz received his undergraduate degree from the Ohio State University Fisher College of Business in 1954 and law degree from the College of Law in 1961, where he graduated at the top of his class. At the time, it was the largest single gift to the Ohio State University. The donation provided full-tuition grants with stipends to 30 law students, 4 endowed faculty chairs, 3 service awards for students, and a fund for use by the dean.[ dead link ] [5] The College of Law completed a supplemental campaign to raise an additional $30 million to match Moritz's gift and make further improvements.
For the class entering in 2024, Moritz College of Law accepted 29.4% of applicants, with 26.33% of those accepted enrolling. The average enrollee had a 166 LSAT score and 3.89 undergraduate GPA. [6]
U.S. News & World Report ranked the Moritz College of Law's full-time Juris Doctor program tied for the 26th best law school in America in 2024 and 9th among all public law schools. [7] The College's Program on Dispute Resolution was named #1 in the nation with nine other programs in the top 50. Above the Law ranked the Moritz College of Law as the 41st best law school in America in 2024. [8]
According to professor Brian Leiter's "Scholarly Impact Score" that is based on about 500 participants and nearly 70,000 votes on paired comparisons, the Moritz College of Law faculty ranked tied for 34th in scholarly impact in 2024. [9] Specifically, professor and Heck-Faust Memorial Chair in Constitutional Law, Ruth Colker, was 18th of the top 20 most-cited legal scholars between 2016 and 2020 for critical theory in focusing on society and culture to attempt to reveal, critique, and challenge power structures. [10]
The Ohio State Moritz College of Law publishes five legal journals: [11]
The Moot Court & Lawyering Skills Program includes intramural competitions and inter-scholastic teams covering various areas of the law. The Moot Court and Lawyering Skills Governing Board is responsible for organizing and administering four intramural competitions: the Herman Moot Court Competition, Colley Trial Practice Competition, the Representation in Mediation Competition, and the Lawrence Negotiations Competition. The Moot Court Board is a student-run organization that oversees and assists various Moot Court teams that compete nationally against other schools. [17]
The Drug Enforcement and Policy Center (DEPC) examines the impact of modern drug laws, policies and enforcement on personal freedoms and human well-being, giving sustained attention to analyzing the rapid evolution of marijuana laws and the impacts of reform efforts. The center focuses on conducting and supporting interdisciplinary, evidence-based research, scholarship, education, community outreach and public engagement on the myriad issues and societal impacts surrounding the reform of criminal and civil laws prohibiting or regulating the use and distribution of traditionally illicit drugs.
The center was founded in 2017 following a $4.5 million gift from the Charles Koch Foundation. [18] The center also received a $5 million gift from the Menard Family and Menard Inc. In addition to these gifts, DEPC receives funding from a number of research and project grants.
In 2024, the overall bar examination passage rate for Moritz College of Law first-time examination takers was 91.95%. [19] The Ultimate Bar Pass Rate, which the ABA defines as the passage rate for graduates who sat for bar examinations within two years of graduating, was 95.08% for the class of 2022. [2]
According to the college's official 2023 ABA-required disclosures 93.4% of the Class of 2023 obtained full-time, long-term, bar passage required/JDA/professional employment ten months after graduation. [3]
Ohio was the main employment destination for 2023 Moritz College of Law graduates, with 73% of employed 2023 graduates working in the state. [3]
As of 2022, 33.9% of student receive a full-tuition scholarship, the highest percentage among all American law schools. [20]
The Moritz Merit Scholarship Fund was established in 2001 by Michael E. Moritz '61. The Fund provides for 30 annual full tuition plus stipend scholarships. The scholarships are designed to attract and train a select group of students with outstanding academic and personal histories in a variety of areas including academia, business, law, government, and public interest. In recent years, the Moritz family has criticized Ohio State for not providing the full 30 scholarships (many years less than 15 scholarships were given), mismanaging the investments (the value of the endowment had fallen to $20 million) and using the scholarship fund to pay for university operating expenses in violation of the endowment agreement. [21]
The Robert K. Barton Memorial Scholarship Fund was established in 1968 by golf legend and Ohio State University alumnus Jack Nicklaus. The Scholarship was established in memory of his good friend and Moritz College of Law alumnus Robert K. Barton '62, one of central Ohio's top amateur golfers and law partner of former Ohio Governor and fellow Moritz alumnus John W. Bricker. Barton, his wife Linda, and another couple were killed when their private plane crashed en route to watch Nicklaus play in the 1966 Masters Tournament. [22]
Deans of Moritz College of Law | ||
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Name | Tenure | |
Kent Barnett | 2024–present | |
L. Camille Hébert (acting) | 2024 | |
Lincoln L. Davies | 2019–2024 | |
Alan C. Michaels | 2008–2019 | |
Nancy H. Rogers | 2001–2008 | |
Gregory H. Williams | 1993–2001 | |
Francis X. Beytagh | 1985–1991 | |
James E. Meeks | 1978–1985 | |
L. Orin Slagle | 1974–1978 | |
James C. Kirby | 1970–1974 | |
Ivan C. Rutledge | 1965–1970 | |
Frank R. Strong | 1952–1965 | |
Jefferson B. Fordham | 1947–1952 | |
Harry W. Vannemen (acting) | 1946–1947 | |
Arthur T. Martin | 1940–1946 | |
Herschel W. Arant | 1928–1939 | |
Alonzo H. Tuttle (acting) | 1926–1928 | |
John Jay Adams | 1909–1926 | |
George W. Rightmore (acting) | 1908–1909 | |
Joseph H. Outhwaite | 1905–1907 | |
William F. Hunter | 1893–1905 | |
Marshall Jay Williams | 1891–1893 |
The Moritz College of Law has 80 faculty members. Notable current faculty members include:
![]() | This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy.(August 2023) |
The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law has approximately 11,000 alumni across the United States. Selected notable alumni include: