You seem heavily invested in trying to score a semantics win and not that invested in the underlying consideration...but no, again, justice isn't a thing any more than health. It's an outcome or state and my answer stands for the reasons given here:Actually, executing people for capital crimes is dispensing justice, but giving a person a new kidney is not dispensing good health.
Neither health nor justice are things dispensed. Rather, good health and the peaceful enjoyment of right are states to be pursued and protected. A physician uses his art to bring someone in ill health to the closest approximation of good health that he can. Similarly, the legal system and practitioners endeavor to place injured parties in as close a proximity to the state they should have enjoyed but for the malfeasance or irresponsibility of another party.Doctors do not dispense good health.
Which is a spin off from your peculiar:
By and large that's simply not true. Miscarriages of justice are what you disproportionately court when you don't have learned practitioners involved and even when you do it's not a given, which is why in our system of justice and equity we have weighted presumptions and an involved system of appeals.Lawyers are completely unnecessary in order for justice to be served.