<SPAN name="XXX"></SPAN>
<h1 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Chapter XXX</h1>
<h2 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">A New Code of Laws</h2>
<p>Dru selected another board of five lawyers, and to
them he gave the task of reforming legal procedure
and of pruning down the existing laws, both State
and National, cutting out the obsolete and useless
ones and rewriting those recommended to be retained,
in plain and direct language free from useless legal
verbiage and understandable to the ordinary lay citizen.</p>
<p>He then created another board, of even greater ability,
to read, digest and criticise the work of the other
two boards and report their findings directly to him,
giving a brief summary of their reasons and recommendations.
To assist in this work he engaged in an advisory capacity
three eminent lawyers from England, Germany and France
respectively.</p>
<p>The three boards were urged to proceed with as much
despatch as possible, for Dru knew that it would take
at least several years to do it properly, and afterwards
he would want to place the new code of laws in working
order under the reformed judiciary before he would
be content to retire. The other changes he had in
mind he thought could be accomplished much more quickly.</p>
<p>Among other things, Dru directed that the States should
have a simplification of land titles, so that transfers
of real estate could be made as easy as the transfer
of stocks, and with as little expense, no attorneys’
fees for examination of titles, and no recording fees
being necessary. The title could not be contested
after being once registered in a name, therefore no
litigation over real property could be possible. It
was estimated by Dru’s statisticians that in
some States this would save the people annually a
sum equal to the cost of running their governments.</p>
<p>A uniform divorce law was also to be drawn and put
into operation, so that the scandals arising from
the old conditions might no longer be possible.</p>
<p>It was arranged that when laws affecting the States
had been written, before they went into effect they
were to be submitted to a body of lawyers made up
of one representative from each State. This body could
make suggestions for such additions or eliminations
as might seem to them pertinent, and conforming with
conditions existing in their respective commonwealths,
but the board was to use its judgment in the matter
of incorporating the suggestions in the final draft
of the law. It was not the Administrator’s purpose
to rewrite at that time the Federal and State Constitutions,
but to do so at a later date when the laws had been
rewritten and decided upon; he wished to first satisfy
himself as to them and their adaptability to the existing
conditions, and then make a constitution conforming
with them. This would seem to be going at things backward,
but it recommended itself to Dru as the sane and practical
way to have the constitutions and laws in complete
harmony.</p>
<p>The formation of the three boards created much disturbance
among judges, lawyers and corporations, but when the
murmur began to assume the proportions of a loud-voiced
protest, General Dru took the matter in hand. He let
it be known that it would be well for them to cease
to foment trouble. He pointed out that heretofore
the laws had been made for the judges, for the lawyers
and for those whose financial or political influence
enabled them to obtain special privileges, but that
hereafter the whole legal machinery was to be run absolutely
in the interest of the people. The decisive and courageous
manner in which he handled this situation, brought
him the warm and generous approval of the people and
they felt that at last their day had come.</p>
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