Summer 2016 | Page 12

Maring Receives SBAND Distinguished Service Award The SBAND Distinguished Service Award is the most prestigious award the association bestows. It honors a member of the profession who has provided outstanding service to the state and legal community over an extended career. The Distinguished Service Award plaque, which hangs outside the North Dakota Supreme Court, is intended to permanently honor recipients and remind lawyers and the public of their dedication and work. This year’s award was presented to Mary Muehlen Maring, a retired North Dakota Supreme Court Justice who spent nearly 18 years serving on the state’s top court. Prior to her appointment to the North Dakota Supreme Court, she worked for 20 years as a civil trial attorney in both Minnesota and North Dakota. She now works as a mediator at Klein Maring Mediation, where she meets with parties to a dispute to build communication in search of a mutually agreeable resolution. In her acceptance speech, which is transcribed below, she spoke of a responsibility to service as a lawyer that goes beyond the clients and courts, and encouraged those in the profession to step into leadership and service roles. “Thank you so much for this honor. The mission of the State Bar Association is to promote justice and to serve the lawyers and the people of the State of North Dakota. The mission is in line with what the Preamble to the ND Rules of Professional Conduct and the ND Aspirations of Professionalism and Civility say about the responsibilities of a lawyer. We are citizens ‘having special responsibility for the quality of Justice.’” My reference to these rules and aspirations is meant to be a reminder that we have responsibilities that go beyond those owed to clients and the courts. We have a responsibility to volunteer our time and energy to the various committees and sections of the State Bar Association. We are needed –from helping low-income people gain access to justice, to helping members of our profession who face addiction, to serving on a committee that improves our justice system. There are so many ways we can serve. My involvement in Bar Association activities began in 1975. In 1979, I was asked to be the chair for the newsletter for the Young Lawyers Section of the Minnesota State Bar Association. I was hesitant, but at the urging of my good law school friend Sheryl Ramstad I said ‘yes.’ That encouragement started me on my path of service to both the Minnesota and North Dakota Bar Associations. Encourage each other to become involved. Older lawyers please encourage younger lawyers. Law firms encourage your lawyers to be active and recognize the value of the time that is put into Bar Association involvement. I was fortunate that the first law firm I joined encouraged and supported involvement in the Bar Association. No one does anything alone. There are always others to encourage us and believe in us. I am one of those lucky people who have had these people in my life. Great parents, good friends, people who encouraged me to step into leadership roles, and then there is my partner of 40 years, my husband, David, who is my biggest supporter and fan. I left him alone many weekends to take care of our two sons when I was off to one meeting or another. I do believe leadership is developed. I encourage you to grab all the opportunities that come your way to lead. Remember you do not need to be the president or chair to be a leader. Our careers as lawyers are both challenging and rewarding –more rewarding, however, if we become involved in service to our profession and our community. I challenge you to live up to your responsibilities to our profession. (L to R) Aubrey Fiebelkorn-Zuger, Distinguished Sevice Award Winner Mary Muehlen Maring, and former SBAND President Joe Wetch. 12 THE GAVEL Forty-one years after graduating from law school, I can tell you, without reservation, I am proud to be a lawyer. I am proud to be a member of the legal profession. And as David L. Peterson said when he received this very award, ‘I cannot imagine any other profession or occupation that could have been more enjoyable for me than this one.’”