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Chapter IV Financing Legal Services
A. The Role of the Marketplace
Brobeck Phleger & Harrison v. Telex Corp
Facts: Telex engaged Brobeck as "the best available
lawyer" to file petition for certiorari after the
Tenth Circuit reversed its favorable $259.5 million
judgement, and affirmed a $18.5 million
counterclaim.
Brobeck was hired on a mixed contingency basis,
with the final line saying that the contingency fee
would be not less than $1 million.
When it became clear that the Supreme Court was
about to decide the case, the parties settled.
Brobeck sent a bill for $1 million. Telex claims
the fee is excessive, will not pay. Brobeck sues
for the fee.
Held: The contract for the fee was not "so unconscionable
that 'no man in his senses and not under a delusion
would make on the one hand, and as no honest and
fair man would accept on the other.'"
Although the minimum fee was very high, the filing
of the petition did give Telex the leverage to push
settlement.
Action: Fee upheld.
Jones v. Amalgamated Warbasse Houses
Facts: Counsel represented minority persons who were
denied publicly subsidized housing. Defendant
settled, and agreed to pay attorney's fees, which
came to about $129/hour.
The district court, on its own, reduced the amount
which defendant should pay plaintiff's counsel to
about $75/hour. Defendant had not applied for
this, and since the relief settled on was only
injunctive, this did not increase the plaintiff's
award.
Held: Second Circuit said that it was proper to review
fee settlements, and that while "a presumption of
regularity [should be afforded, it may be overcome
when there is good reason, such as] public
perception of appropriateness of fees, and the
range of awards allowed in similar cases."
Action: Upheld on appeal.
B. Unethical Fees
Rule 1.5
DR 2-106
Bushman v. State Bar of California
Facts: Bushman was representing Cox. Bushman insisted on
$5,000 retainer because opposing counsel Chern
typically generated "a paper war," plus $60/hour
fee.
The case was resolved by stipulation of the
parties. Chern charged a total of $300 plus costs.
Bushman, on the other hand, claimed he spent 100
hours on the case, but would only charge $2,800
plus costs.
Held: Fee was excessive, exorbitant, unconscionable.
Only routine matters were taken care of by Bushman.
Bushman failed to substantiate his claim of 100
hours. The court noted that opposing counsel spent
less than six hours on the case.
Ordered: One year suspension from practice of law.
Note cases: (110-111)
Attorney Grievance Commn. of Maryland v. Korotki
Held: Contingency rate increased form one third to three
quarters after retainer warrants suspension.
[After retainer, client is presumed to have less
bargaining power]
Rule 1.8(a)
Rosquist v. Soo Line R.R.
Held: Even where fee is arranged before retainer, and
where the fee contract is not challenged by the
parties, court may appraise the fee for conformance
with the reasonable standard of the Code of Ethics.
Proc: Limited later by United States v. Vague.
United States v. Vague
Facts: Judge ordered return of fees (already paid) which
he considered, on his own, unreasonable. Lawyer
refused, and judge held him in civil contempt.
Held: Misuse of contempt power because there was no
threat to the authority of the courts.
Rosquist distinguished because this was just
between the lawyer and the judge, not a party.
Proc: Distinguished by United States v. Strawser.
United States v. Strawser
Facts: Lawyer hired to represent defendant, $47,000 fee.
Defendant lost on trial, wants lawyer to represent
him on appeal. Lawyer asked for more money, so
defendant asked court to supply appellate counsel,
which prompted a hearing.
Held: Fee too much.
Vague inapplicable because in Vague, judge
unnecessarily jumped in, but here, trial judge
needed to resolve fee issue to determine whether
lawyer was required to continue representing
defendant.
E.C. 2-19
Rule 1.5 (b), (c)
C. Contingent Fee and Statutory Limits
Intro notes: (112-113)
Can be all contingency or mixed.
Can be based on contingency other than winning a case.
Gives lawyer interest in case, but okay.
Rule 1.8(j)
DR 5-103(A)
Should give option of traditional fee arrangement.
Rule 1.8(e)
DR 5-103(B)
McKenzie Construction, Inc. v. Maynard: contingency fee
yielding 13x usual hourly rate is okay.
Florida's version of Rule 1.5 requires that lawyer to
inform clients as to right to bargain.
Statutory Fee Ceilings (114-117)
Roa v. Lodi Medical Group
Facts: Statutory fee schedule for malpractice cases was
40% of first 50,000, 33% of next 50,000, etc.,
sliding down.
Held: 1. Does not infringe in right to counsel.
2. Not thus impossible for victim to retain
counsel.
3. It does make the interests of the client and
the attorney diverge, but does not create an
actual conflict.
Fineberg v. Harney & Moore
Held: Client may not waive statutory limits on fee.
Walters v. National Assoc. of Radiation Survivors
Held: (Law upheld) - when representing veteran against
Veteran's Administration for death or disability
related matter, may only receive fee of $10.
Matthews v. Eldrige (cited by Walters)
Held: [In considering a fee limiting statute] A court
should consider the private interest that will be
affected by the official action, the risk of
erroneous deprivation of the interest, the probable
value of procedural safeguards, and the
government's value in adhering to the present
system.
United States Dept. of Labor v. Triplett
Facts: Lawyers get their fees for representing particular
coal miners from the agency or court (by statute).
The Dept. of Labor rule allows fees "reasonably
commensurate with the necessary work done."
Triplett charged 25% recovery.
Lwr Ct: Limitation on counsel fees unconstitutional.
S.Ct.: Supreme Court overturned, saying that there was no
evidence that the victims of Black Lung were unable
to retain counsel, or that the cause of such
inability is due to the fee system.
Prohibitions in Criminal and Matrimonial Cases (117-119)
DR 2-106(C)
EC 2-20
Rule 1.5(d)
Reasons (Matrimonial):
1. State interest in leaving money with family
2. Since court can order fee shifting, less wealthy
spouse does not need such incentive for counsel.
3. Conflict of interest, e.g, as against
reconciliation
Reasons (Criminal):
1. Encourage wrong plea bargain, if fee is contingent
on acquittal
2. Interest in a particular dispositions may encourage
improper behavior in a lawyer
D. Minimum Fee Schedules
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar
Facts: Petitioners were buying a house. This required a
title examination. Petitioners asked one lawyer
for a price, and received a quoted minimum fee from
the State Bar fee schedule. They then tired to get
a lawyer to beat the fee. No lawyer they contacted
would. Petitioners brought this action against the
State Bar for price fixing, violation of the
Sherman Act.
Questions:1. Was there price fixing?
2. Was this interstate commerce?
3. Is this exempt form Sherman Act as a "learned
profession?
4. Is this state action, and therefore exempt
from Sherman Act (Parker v. Brown)?
Held: 1. Fee schedule is not purely advisory. After
all, everyone adhered to it without asking any more
questions. Further, there could be professional
discipline for violation. (YES)
2. [was interstate commerce] (YES)
3. No explicit exemption for "learned
professions". Lawyers cannot adopt anti-
competitive practices with impunity. (NO)
4. State Bar is a state agency by law. The
question is whether this action was required by the
State acting as sovereign. The State did not
require this. The anti-competition activities
would have to be compelled by the State to be
exceptional. (NO)
Antitrust and Legal Ethics
FTC v. Superior Court Trial Lawyers
Facts: Lawyers boycotted, refusing to represent indigent
clients unless given a raise.
Held: Boycott not politically motivated, but
economically, so not protected by 1st Amend.
Bates v. State Bar of Arizona
Held: Arizona's prohibition on legal services advertising
does not violate Sherman Act, because it was state
action (affirmative command of the Arizona Supreme
Court).
Hoover v. Ronwin
Facts: Applicant failed the bar, claimed the pass rate was
decided not on competence but on desirable number
of practicing lawyers.
Held: Action was determined by Arizona Supreme Court,
state action, therefore exempted.
E. Court Awarded Fees
1. Determination of Amount
City of Riverside v. Rivera
Facts: Police broke up party with allegedly unnecessary
force. π's sued for violation of civil rights and
won ($33,350). π's also sued for attorney's fees
($245,456.25 based on hourly rate) under 1988. ■
contends the fee award should be proportionate to
the damage award.
Issue: Is an award of attorney's fees under 42 USC 1988
"unreasonable" if it exceeds the damage award?
Held: 1. Hensley v. Eckerhart suggested a lodestar
method for attorney's fees under 1988 - hourly
rate times hours, as long as hours were reasonably
expended. Other factors which can be considered
include results obtained (good or bad).
2. The fee statute (1988) is designed to give
incentive to take these cases. Civil rights cases
involve vindication of many nonpecuniary rights,
including national interests, so the fee award need
not be proportionate to the damages alone.
3. The hours were reasonably spent.
Dissent (Burger): Nonsense - these attorneys had just
graduated when they started this suit. Too much.
Dissent (Rehnquist): The hours were no reasonably spent
[analysis of hours p.136-137]. Only a few of the claims
succeeded. In any case, reasonableness of a fee depends
on the amount of the recovery, unless, for e.g., bad
faith conduct of opposition, or identifiable benefit for
third parties.
Pennsylvania v .Delaware Valley Citizens Council (p. 140)
Held: An increase in a fee award due to risk of non-
recovery should only be done in exceptional cases,
that without such enhancement, π would have had
trouble getting council.
Blanchard v. Bergeron
Held: While 1988 does not put a ceiling on reasonable
council fees, it cannot be used to invalidate a
contingent fee arrangement which yields a greater
amount than would have been awarded under 1988.
2. Settlement Conditioned on Fee Waiver
Evans v. Jeff D.
Issue: Must statutory authorized fees be assessed under
the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act, or may
π waive?
Facts: Attorney working for civil rights case accepts
settlement in which fees are waived by π.
Held: Fee waivers are not per se prohibited. If it were,
many π's could not settle. However, π should
reasonably get something for this waiver.
Dissent (Brennan): This makes things harder on π's to get
relief. Just because Congress did not mention fee
waivers does not mean they are okay. The majority asked
if fee waivers were "inconsistent" with the Fees Act.
They should have asked if it "furthered" the purpose of
the Fees Act (access to council). π's have no interest
in the fees since they can't pay them anyway. If waivers
are permitted, they will always be requested in any
settlement. Bottom line - no lawyers for these π's.
F. Mandatory Pro Bono Plans
David Luban, Lawyers and Justice: An Ethical Study
Arguments about pro bono
Con: Its redistributive, and should be taken care of through
taxation.
Pro: Community cannot afford to pay for the pro bono.
Con: Lawyers "cut up and disposed of" by public needs.
Pro: Not a threat to a lawyers integrity - just a little
sacrifice.
Con: If community cannot afford it, it should not be offered.
Pro: Lawyers are licensed - its part of the license.
Con: Nobody else is licensed (e.g. grocers) and asked to give
away free services (e.g. food).
Pro: Lawyer is unique-cannot exist without state participation
in professionalized adversary system. Further, lawyer
benefits from unique monopoly.
Finally, lawyer is unique in that when the poor lacks it,
it is uniquely hurt. When a rich person gets a lawyer,
the rich person gains advantage over everyone else. When
a rich person gets food, that's all she gets.
G. Syndicating Lawsuits
Idea: Sell shares in the possible award from a suit, and
use that money to fund the actual litigation.
Cases are split.
Killian v. Millard
Held: Syndication agreement okay.
Refac International v. Lotus Development Corp.
Facts: π acquired 5% interest in a patent in exchange for
a promise to sue infringers and fund the
litigation.
Held: π was not real party in interest, so this was a
violation of New York champerty law.
H. Who Gets the Money?
Within a Firm
Partners split revenues and make money from associate time.
Division of Fees Outside Firms
Code DR 2-107(A) requires that lawyers not together in a firm
receive fees in proportion to the work done.
Model Rules Rule 1.5(e) allows the split to be according to
the services performed by each lawyer.
In any case, client must know.
In re "Agent Orange" PL Litigation
Facts: Lawyer needed cash to pursue claims. Six other
attorneys put up $200,000 each, for $600,000 in
return, the remaining split according to work done.
Held: Distribution of fees must be somehow related to
work done. Also, beware of conflict of interest in
class actions. The test: when the fee agreement is
made, will the class be hurt by the fact that
counsel will be paid by some method other than work
done?
Chapter XVI Marketing Legal Services
A. Defining the Borders:
Bates and Ohralik
Bates v. State Bar of Arizona
Facts: Ad published by law firm advertising reasonable
fees, some specific fees for specific services.
Arizona forbade legal advertising.
Argument: Arizona had these claims: 1) ads encourage
commercialism, 2) are inherently misleading, 3)
stir up litigation, 4) increase cost of
representation, 5) encourage bad legal work, 6)
difficult to monitor against abuse.
Held: All claims rejected, as this is protected free
commercial speech. States may, however, prohibit
false or misleading ads.
Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Assn.
Facts: Lawyer heard that acquaintance had car accident.
Lawyer visited victim in hospital and at home,
offered his services, and got them to sign a
contract for representation. Lawyer also visited
injured passenger and solicited her as well
(successfully). Clients wish to repudiate counsel.
Held: States may prohibit in person solicitation (DR 2-
103(A), 104(A). Solicitation often requires
immediate response, places pressure on client,
unlike ads. Further, there is no chance to have a
Bar review the statements being made, as there may
be for ads. The State may make such rules even
merely as prophylactic measures.
B. Defining the Center:
Zauderer, Shapero, and Peel
1. Targeted Advertisements
Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel
Facts: Lawyer placed ad, targeted for users of the Dalkon
Shield IUD.
Claim: 1. DR 2-101(B) (requires that ads be dignified,
no pictures),
2. DR 2-103(A) (recommending employment of
himself as a lawyer),
3. DR 2-104(A) (accepting employment after giving
unsolicited advice).
4. DR 2-101(B)(15) (ad which mentions contingent
fees must state whether court costs are deducted)
Rule: Commercial speech which is not false or misleading
and does not concern illegal activities may be
restricted only for a substantial state interest.
Held:1. Nothing wrong with self-recommendation.
2. Nothing wrong with a targeted ad.
3. This will not stir up litigation.
4. A prophylactic is not needed, as these ads are no
worse than those for other professions, and
undignified behavior is not so likely to happen as
to require one.
5. Nothing per se wrong with pictures. They get the
same commercial speech protections.
* 6. The State may require that the manner of charging
the court costs must be disclosed. Disclosure
requirements are not unconstitutional "as long as
[they] are reasonably related to the State's
interest in preventing deception of consumers."
Dissent (O'Connor): Legal services are much more complex than
other services, and a rule preventing lawyers from
accepting clients after giving them unsolicited advice
would properly protect clients by preventing pressure
from eager lawyers.
2. Targeted Mail
Shapero v. Kentucky Bar Assn.
Facts: Lawyer sent letter to house owners who he knew were
being foreclosed, saying that he knew so and might
be able to help.
Issues: May the state prohibit sending truth non-deceptive
letters to potential clients known to face
particular problems?
Test: "The relevant inquiry is not whether there exist
potential clients whose "condition" makes them
susceptible to undue influence, but whether the
mode of communication poses a serious danger that
lawyers will exploit any such susceptibility."
Held: 1. This is not like in person solicitation. Just
like an ad, it can be put aside and forgotten
about.
2. No evidence that this will be any harder to
monitor than ads, so no prophylactic is merited.
3. No matter how big the type is, and how much
the letter speculates, it cannot be the same as a
lawyer standing before you.
Dissent (O'Connor): Being a lawyer means tempering your
"selfish pursuit of economic success by adhering to
standards" that do not apply to other professions.
Because they are given unique license to the esoteric,
they must maintain a special arms-length distance.
Zauderer was wrong, so this should be wrong too.
Personalized letters can put much pressure on the
receiver.
3. Claims of Special Expertise
Peel v. Attorney Registration and Disc. Comm'n of Ill
Facts: Peel held himself as certified by the National
Board of Trial Advocacy, a private organization
(normally a state function).
Held: Since this is not misleading or false, nothing
wrong.
Concur (Marshall): State might require that lawyer make it
clear that the certification organization is a private
one.
C. Defining the Methodology (821-824)
This section is discussion of the previously discussed
decisions, compares and asks questions.
D. Defining the Rules (824-829)
Radio and Television - Protected?
Some states limit television and radio ads beyond generic
messages (no music, no dramatizations). The Supreme
Court has not explicitly extended the protection given
written ads.
Can the State Require Disclaimers?
Note that Zauderer lost on the disclaimer issue, for
failing to state that clients would be liable for costs.
Marshall said state might require disclaimers for
accreditation. The Supreme Court seems to favor
requirements which add to the information disseminated.
Can Legal Ads Carry Endorsements?
CA used to prohibit this, but changed their rule. New
York allows the use of client testimonials.
E. Solicitation by Public Interest and Class Action
Lawyers
In re Primus
Facts: Primus (ACLU lawyer) learned that pregnant women on
Medicaid were being threatened with sterilization.
Primus went to speak to a group of women. Mary
Etta Williams, who had been sterilized, was
present. The ACLU told Primus they were going to
fund suits, so Primus wrote Williams. Williams'
doctor required a release from liability, so
Williams told Primus she was not going to sue.
Claim: Primus was reprimanded for the letter under DR 2-
103(D)(5)(a),(c) (client solicitation by non-profit
organization allowed only if purpose is not
rendition of legal services) and DR 2-103(A)(5)
(prohibiting lawyer from seeking employment from
whom they have given unsolicited advice).
Case: NAACP v. Button held that NAACP was free to express
itself and associate without it being considered
improper solicitation. Later decisions upheld this
protection of "associational freedoms".
Held: ACLU, like NAACP, uses its funds to assist in
litigation, but only where "substantial civil
liberty questions are involved." Litigation is,
for ACLU, "a form of political expression." Primus
would not have even gotten any money from the suit.
The actions here benefit from the protection of
associational freedoms, so to curtail them, a state
must show a compelling interest and that the means
are closely drawn to avoid unnecessary
infringement.
Ohralik held not to apply; for political
association, state must exercise greater precision
in prophylactic measures.
Dissent (Rehnquist): There is no principled distinction
here. Ohralik could have said he "associating
politically" too. The behavior, not the characterization
of the behavior, should be scrutinized. Button works for
organizations, but for lawyers?
Communication with Class Members
Gulf Oil Co. V. Bernard
Held: The court may not per se restrict
communications between representing counsel
and potential class members.
Kleiner v. First Nat. Bank of Atlanta
Facts: Court ordered defense counsel not to contact
potential class members for a certain period
while they decided whether or not to be part
of the class. Relying on Gulf Oil, they did
anyway, and many potential members did opt
out. Defense and counsel were fined.
Held: The court's order was narrowly drawn to avoid
infringing on 1st amendment speech. This
order was not prohibited; fines upheld.Conflicts of Interest
I. Concurrent Conflicts of Interest■Chapter 5
Ethical rules that seek to prevent concurrent conflicts primarily seek to ensure
attorney loyalty, whereas protection of confidences is the dominant goal of
successive conflict rules.
Concurrent Conflicts: the lawyer has his loyalties divided between two or
more clients (e.g., lawyer representing co-defendants in a case may find that
each wants to point the finger at the other, lawyer representing two parties
wishing to enter into a contract may find that he can■t draft a clause one way or
another without disadvantaging one client or the other■see other examples
Gillers at 179); the lawyer has personal interests at odds with those of your
client.
See EC 5-1; Rule 1.7 cmmt.
Successive Conflicts: Hypo: a lawyer represents A in defending a patent; later
the lawyer represents B in suing A on the ground that the patent is no good.
Loyalty■Does the lawyer■s duty of loyalty to A continue after the
representation? While the Code does not take an explicit position on loyalty
with successive conflicts, the Rules contemplate that the duty of loyalty
survives the end of the relationship. See Rule 1.9 & cmmt ■Adverse
Positions■. Client Confidences■The lawyer will have likely gained
confidential information during the representation of A; if the lawyer reveals
this information on B■s behalf he may violate DR-401 and Rule 1.6(c).
See generally Rule 1.6.
Related Issue: If it is concluded that a lawyer is disqualified from representing
a client because of a concurrent or successive conflict, should a lawyer with
whom the first lawyer is affiliated be permitted to accept the representation?
Regarding imputed or vicarious disqualification see DR 5-101(B), 5-102, & 5-
105(D); Rules 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, and 3.7.
What happens if an attorney is caught in a conflict? (1) Discipline (although
ethics boards recognize that the technical nature of conflicts makes them
inappropriate candidates for discipline); (2) Disqualification; (3) Rule 11
sanctions; (4) Malpractice liability.
A. Attorney-Client Conflicts
1. Business Interests
Goldman v. Kane (Mass Ap. Ct. 1975)
Atty lends client, a graduated law student, $30 k (used to p
urchase a boat) secured by mortgage in
exchange for certain real and personal property and a promise to
repay. Atty sells the property for $50 k and repossesses the boat
upon default.
Held: ■The law looks with great disfavor upon an attorney who
has business dealings with his client which result in gains to the
attorney at the expense of his client.■ When an atty bargains
with a client in a business trans., and the trans. is later called
into question, the Ct will subject it to close scrutiny■the atty
must show:
(1) that the trans. was in all respects fairly and equitably
conducted;
(2) that the Atty fully and faithfully discharged all his
duties to his client, not only by refraining from
misrepresentation, but by active diligence in seeing that
the client was fully informed of the nature and effect of
the trans. and the client■s own rights and interests in the
subject matter involved; and
(3) that the Atty saw to it that the client either received
independent advice in the matter or that the Atty gave the
client such advice as the Atty would have given the client
had the client entered into the trans. with a stranger.
Justification: By requiring the client to get independent advice
or its virtual equivalent when an Atty deals with a client in a
business trans to the atty■s advantage the presumed influence of
the Atty-client relationship has been neutralized.
A Lawyers Financial Interest
Deals with Clients
See Rule 1.8(a) & DR 5-104(A).
Rule 1.8(a)(2) prohibits certain transactions between a
lawyer and a client unless the client is ■given a
reasonable opportunity to seek the advice of independent
counsel,■ but does not require that the lawyer advise the
client to seek independent counsel (however, the cmmt
says that it is ■often advisable■). Rule 1.8 & DR 5-
104(A) do not apply to deals between lawyers and
individuals other than clients unless there is some kind of
fiduciary relation between the parties. Cf. In re Imming
(Ill. 1989) (Held■A lawyer who enters into a business
deal is bound to observe the general dictates of the ethics
code even though the atty is not acting as a lawyer at the
time).
A transaction between Atty and client will be scrutinized
much closer if it was entered into after an Atty-client
relationship was established.
Rat■l: After payment of a retainer to the atty, the client
and the atty have a fiduciary relationship, therefore, the
client will probably expect that the atty will be defending
the client■s interests; also, the atty may have had access to
client confidences. Most courts would not perceive this
transaction as being arm■s length.
KMA Associates (Fla. 1985)
Held■Atty had to prove by clear and convincing
evidence that the entire agreement between atty and client
was fair. All doubts would be resolved in favor of the
client.
Pollock (Mass. 1984)
Held■Ct declined to require an Atty to suggest
independent counsel in every case, however, it did
recognize the value of independent counsel in rebutting
any presumption of undue influence.
Abrams (NY. 1st Dept. 1979)
Held: Law firm could not sue on an agreement entered
into with a client unless the firm could ■establish absence
of fraud . . . and that all terms were fully understood by
the client.■
Interests Adverse to Clients:
There are also limits on the lawyer■s financial interests
with others if they could compromise the lawyer■s loyalty
to clients.
Rule 1.8(a) forbids a lawyer to knowingly ■acquire an
ownership, possessory, security or other pecuniary interest
adverse to a client.■
2. Media Rights
Rule 1.8(d) & DR 5-104(B) forbid lawyers to acquire publicity
rights to a story based on the subject of a representation before
the conclusion of the representation.
What if criminal defendant assigns the rights to his story to a
lawyer before the conclusion of the representation and is later
convicted?
Two focuses: (1) The convicted defendant may seek to vacate
the judgment alleging that the assignment created an
impermissible conflict of interest. However, the defendant must
prove that the conflict was not only possible but actual (difficult
burden). (2) The lawyer is subject to discipline regardless of
whether the conflict was actual or merely possible.
Maxwell (Cal. 1982)
Held■A criminal defendant has a due process right to promise
counsel media rights to the defendant■s story id the defendant
knowingly waives the consequent potential conflict. Beware of
this case■s holding as it may have been undercut by later US SCt
cases construing the 6A Right to Counsel.
NY Opinion 606 (1990)
Held■A prosecutor could not sell the rights to her story prior to
the conclusion of the case because of possible conflicts of
interest between the lawyer■s greed and her undivided loyalty to
the client. The potential conflict disappears after the case.
Criticism: In a celebrated case, it is possible that the lawyer■s
decisions during the trial may be influenced by the promise of
financial remuneration at the end.
3. Financial Assistance and Proprietary Interests
DR-103(B): Atty may advance the costs of litigation and related expenses so long as
the client remains ultimately liable for them.
Rule 1.8(e): Atty may advance the costs of litigation and related
expenses and make repayment of those expenses contingent on
the outcome of the matter, or do away with repayment entirely if
the client is indigent.
Neither 103(B) nor 1.8(e) permit the Atty to advance any money
other than court costs or expenses of litigation (i.e., no living or
medical expenses).
In re Brown (Or. 1984)
Held■Atty suspended from practice under DR 103(B) for
advancing $361 to client for living expenses.
Md. Atty Grievance Comm■n (Md. 1989)
Held■Atty publicly reprimanded for giving a client money to
travel to a medical treatment facility. Rat■l■The rule is directed
at avoiding the acquisition of an interest in litigation through
financial assistance to a client. Clients should not be influenced
to seek representation based on the ease with which monies can
be obtained from law firms and attys.
D.C. Opinion 179 (1987)
Held■It was not unethical for an atty to acquire a partnership
interest in the company that the lawyer represented in an
application for a govt license because the interest would be of no
value unless the govt application was approved. Therefore, it
was like a contingent fee and proper so long as it was
reasonable.
D.C. Opinion 195 (1988)
Held■It is unethical for an atty to accept all rights to a client■s
patent as security for his fee in prosecuting the patent (the rights
to the patent would revert back to the client upon payment of the
fee).
Rat■l■Because the client■s liability here was not contingent on
the success of the atty■s application, the lawyer was receiving a
proprietary interest in the litigation in violation of DR-103(B).
Rand v. Monsanto (7th Cir. 1991)
Held■In class actions, DR-103(B) is inconsistent with FRCP 23
and therefore DR-103 does not apply to class actions. Therefore,
the class representative need not advance the rather exorbitant
expenses of such litigation. Note: there is no conflict with rule
1.8(e) because that rule permits liability for expenses to remain
contingent on outcome.
4. Fee■Payor Interests
Rule 1.8(f), 5.4(c) and DR-107(A)(1) permit a third party to pay
for the representation of a client by the atty under certain
circumstances: (1) the client must consent to the arrangement;
(2) the payor must not interfere with the lawyer■s independence
of professional judgment or with the client-atty relationship; and
(3) the lawyer must protect the client confidences. Note:
Whether or not the fee payor is a client of the lawyer, the fact
that the fee payor is paying for the services and the ammt paid
will not likely be privileged.
Concern: This kind of triangular relationship may create
conflicts between the payor and the person for whom the
services are being performed.
Wood v. Georgia (U.S. 1981): Defendants were sent to
jail after failing to pay the fines imposed for their
conviction for distributing obscene materials. Defendant■s
lawyer was hired and paid by the defendant■s employer.
Held■Where a constitutional right to counsel exists, 6A
holds that there is a correlative right to representation that
is free from conflicts of interest. If counsel■s basic
strategic decisions were influenced by the interests of the
employer who hired him then the due process rights of
defendants were violated. The Ct vacated the conviction
and remanded for a determination of whether a conflict of
interest actually existed.
B. Client■Client Conflicts
1. Criminal Cases■Defense Lawyers
Invalidation of Conviction
Cuyler v. Sullivan (US 1980) (Powell)
Held■The mere potential of a conflict of interest
in representation is not sufficient to invalidate a
conviction. A defendant who shows that a
conflict of interest actually affected the adequacy
of his representation need not demonstrate
prejudice in order to obtain relief (i.e., invalidate
the conviction).
Rat■l■The potential for a conflict of interest
exists in every multiple representation situation, so
to hold that mere potential of a conflict is
sufficient to invalidate a conviction would end
multiple representation. Because multiple
representation may do the defendant substantial
good, the Ct was unwilling to endorse a rule that
would virtually do away with multiple
representation. Ct does not require trial cts to
initiate inquiries into the propriety of multiple
representations on their own (pre-FRCrim.Proc.
44).
Post Cuyler Developments:
Burger v. Kemp (US 1987)
Held■The Ct will presume prejudice only
if the defendant demonstrates that counsel
actively represented conflicting interests
and that an actual conflict of interest
adversely affected his lawyer■s performance
Disqualification of Defense Counsel
Wheat v. United States (US 1988) (Rehnquist, 5-4
decision)
Held■A DCt must be allowed substantial latitude
in refusing defendant■s waiver of conflicts of
interests not only in those cases where an actual
conflict may be demonstrated before trial, but in
the more common case where a potential for
conflict of interest exists that may or may not
burgeon into an actual conflict as the trial
progresses. The DCt must recognize a
presumption in favor of defendant■s chosen
counsel, but that presumption may be overcome
not only by showing an actual conflict but by
showing a serious potential for conflict. Effect of
Decision■Prosecutors may use Wheat to
disqualify a defense atty in a multiple
representation where a pre-trial potential for
conflict exists and the defendant has waived the
potential conflict. See, e.g., Gillers at 203.
Appealability of Criminal Disqualification
Orders
Pretrial orders disqualifying criminal
defense counsel are not subject to
immediate appeal under 28 U.S.C. 1291.
Therefore, the defendant will have to
proceed to trial with another lawyer (unless
is otherwise available through mandamus
or certified question). Flanagan v. United
States (US 1984). If defendant is
convicted following the disqualification of
his atty, he will be able to raise the
disqualification order on appeal.
Note that if a prosecutor is disqualified, the
disqualification is not an issue for appeal of an
acquittal of defendant. In re Grand Jury (7th Cir.
1989).
The Joint-Defense Privilege
Evidence rules often bestow a privilege on
conversations between one of two clients and the
lawyer for another client relating to a matter of
common interest. See Proposed FRE 503(b).
United States v. Schwimmer (2d Cir. 1989)
(common interest rules protect communications
between a client and an accountant for a co-
defendant when the communication was intended
serve the joint interests of both defendants;
irrelevant that no litigation was in progress).
When no joint-defense purpose is shown, the
privilege will not apply. United States v. Lopez
(10th Cir. 1985); Gov■t of Virgin Islands (3d Cir.
1982).
Other issues: Who may waive the privilege?
May one co-defendant waive the privilege for the
other defendant and disclose the previously
privileged communications? See discussion below
2. Criminal Cases■Prosecutors
Young v. United States (US 1987) (Brennan)
Plaintiff in a previous civil proceeding had won a TM
infringement action against defendant and was awarded
injunctive relief. When the defendants violated the
injunction, plaintiff■s counsel secured an order to show
cause why the defendant should not be held in contempt
of court. Plaintiff■s counsel was appointed to serve as
special prosecutor and later won a conviction.
Held■DCt does have the power to appoint private
counsel to prosecute a criminal charge. But, counsel for
a party that is a beneficiary of a ct order may not be
appointed as prosecutor in a contempt action alleging a
violation of that order.
Rat■l■Because the role of the criminal prosecutor is to
seek justice not to convict, both federal law and
professional ethics forbid prosecutors from representing
the government in an action in which they, their family,
or their business associates have an interest. Therefore,
the prosecutor in a criminal contempt matter cannot have
an interest in the order upon which the contempt is based.
In this case the prosecutor was put in the position of
serving two masters: justice and the plaintiff.
Lyman (NY 1990)
Held■A part-time prosecutor was censured where he
represented clients in civil matters while simultaneously
investigating or prosecuting those matters criminally.
FTC v. American National Cellular (9th Cir. 1989)
FTC had obtained a restraining order against defendant
that defendant had allegedly violated. The ct appointed
FTC attorneys to act as special prosecutors in the ensuing
contempt proceeding.
Held■The FTC, as an independent agency, was not a
private party and Young was not controlling. But, the ct
did note that under certain circumstances a govt atty may
lack the impartiality or the appearance of impartiality that
our system of justice demands of prosecutors. The fact
that the FTC attys handling the prosecution were different
from those that handled the underlying civil suit.
3. Civil Cases
Fiandaca v. Cunningham (1st Cir. 1987)
Held■An atty may not represent two clients when a
settlement offer made to one is contrary to the interests
of the other. Class counsel■s duty of loyalty to the class
required it to present the defendant■s settlement offer to
the class, to explain its costs and benefits, and to ensure
that the offer received full and fair consideration by the
members of the class. Rule 1.7(b) provides: ■A lawyer
shall not represent a client if the representation of that
client may be materially limited by the lawyer■s
responsibilities to another client . . . the lawyer
reasonably believes the representation will not be
adversely affected and the client consents after
consultation.■
Imputed Conflicts
Rule 1.10(a) and DR 5-105(D) impute conflicts
among all affiliated lawyers (there are some
exceptions, mainly in the area of successive
representation). DR 5-105(D) imputes all
conflicts without exception, but exceptions have
been made. Rule 1.10(a) exempts from
imputation all the conflicts listed in Rule 1.8,
except those in 1.8(c). These rules may work
special hardship on legal services organizations
(usually only one in a community) that represent
poor and indigent clients.
Borden (DC App. 1971)
Held■A legal services organization that was
representing the wife in a divorce case was
appointed by the court to represent the husband in
the same case. On appeal, the ct reversed the
appointment on the view that it was possible for
the husband to obtain outside representation and
that the legal services organization was no
different than a law firm. Accord ABA Informal
Opinions 1418 (1978), 1233 (1972)
Standing
Issue: Who has standing to raise a conflict of interest
question? Ct, client, or opposing counsel?
Original Appalachian Artwork (ND Ga. 1986):
Only clients can allege a concurrent conflict of
interest.
Fiandaca: Allows nonclient to allege the conflict
on the theory that if an atty is violating an ethical
rule the ct should know.
In re Appeal of Infotechnology (Del. 1990): The
ct stated that nonclients do not ordinarily have
standing to assert an opposing lawyer■s conflict.
But, drawing on the cmmt to Rule 1.7(a), the ct
held that the nonclient would have standing only
when the nonclient could demonstrate that
opposing counsel■s conflict somehow prejudiced
nonclient■s rights. The nonclient litigant does not
have standing to enforce a mere technical
violation of the rules. Nonclient had the burden
of showing by clear and convincing evidence that
a conflict existed and that it would prejudice the
fairness of the proceeding.
May a Lawyer Act Adversely to a Client on an
Unrelated Matter?
Rule 1.7 cmmt: Ordinarily an atty may not do so.
Cinema 5 v. Cinerama (2d Cir. 1976): Plaintiff■s
lawyer was disqualified because a partner of the
plaintiff was representing defendant on an
unrelated matter. Held■The substantial
relationship test is not a sufficiently high standard
to determine whether an atty should be
disqualified. Where the relationship is a
continuing one, adverse representation is prima
facie improper, and the atty must show that there
will be no actual or apparent conflicts in loyalties
or diminution in the vigor of his representation
IBM v. Levin (3d Cir. 1978): CBM represented
Levin in an antitrust action against IBM while at
the same time CBM (different attys) represented
on various unrelated matters. CBM argued that
no adverse effect to IBM would result from
CBM■s representation of Levin. Held■It is likely
that some adverse effect on an atty■s independent
judgment may result from the atty■s adversary
posture to the client in another legal matter.
What about suing a subsidiary of an entity that
you otherwise represent?
Rule 1.7 cmmt: ■[A] lawyer representing
an enterprise with diverse operations may
accept employment as an advocate against
the enterprise in an unrelated matter if
doing so will not adversely affect the
lawyer■s relationship with the enterprise or
conduct of the suit and if both clients
consent upon consultation.■
If the subsidiary is merely the alter ego of
the parent then all bets are off (the
subsidiary would be viewed as the same
entity of the parent). Teradyne (ND Cal.
1991).
Appealability of Civil Disqualification Orders
An order granting or denying a motion to
disqualify civil counsel is not subject to
immediate appeal as of right in federal ct.
Richardson-Merrell (US 1985). But, mandamus
remains a possible route to review a
disqualification order. (9th Cir. 1988).
Malpractice Based on Conflicts
Remedy for conflicts of interest:
1. Disqualification and remand■Fiandaca
2. Discipline■Apostle
3. Malpractice liability■Simpson
Simpson v. James (5th Cir. 1990): Attys
represented both the seller and buyer in the sale of
a business. When the deal fell through, atty, who
had been seller■s atty prior to the sale, stated that
he would be unable to represent her in the
impending bankruptcy (seller ultimately got
nothing in the bankruptcy). See Gillers at 223 for
all of the facts (2 pages of them). Held■Liability
may not be premised solely on the fact that an
atty represented both the buyer and the seller;
after full disclosure by the atty, it may be proper
in some circumstances for an atty to represent
both sides in a real estate transaction. The ct
affirmed, as not being unreasonable, the jury■s
decision to hold the atty■s negligent for their acts
arising out of the conflict of interest between the
buyer and the seller.
Waiving Conflicts
DR 5-105(C): Allows a lawyer to represent
multiple interests otherwise disallowed by DR
105(A), (B) ■if it is obvious that he can
adequately represent the interest of each client and
if each consents to the representation after full
disclosure.■
EC 5-15: In litigation, an atty should never
represent multiple clients with differing interests;
yet, there are a few situations where an atty would
be justified in representing in litigation multiple
clients with potentially differing interests.
Rule 1.7: Prohibits an atty from representing a
client if:
1. the representation will be ■directly
adverse to another client (1.7 (a)); or
2. ■the representation of that client may be
materially limited by the lawyer■s
responsibilities to another client■ (1.7 (b)).
However, in either case the atty may
proceed with the representation if he
reasonably believes that no representation
will be adversely affected and the client
consents after consultation. Rule 1.7 (a),
(b).
Levine v. Levine (NY 1982)
Held■An atty may represent both spouses in the
preparation of a separation agreement so long as
there has been: full disclosure between the
parties, not only of relevant facts but also of their
contextual significance; and there has been an
absence of inequitable conduct or other infirmity
that might vitiate the execution of the agreement.
Is There a Client■Lawyer Relationship?
If there is no relationship between the client and the atty then the atty owes the client
no duty. The existence of such a relationship may depend on the reason why you are
asking.
Glueck v. Jonathan Logan (2d Cir. 1981)
Atty represented client in a breach of employment
contract case against former employer. The atty■s
firm also represented a trade organization, of
which the defendant-employer was a member, in
collective bargaining.
Held■Because the defendant was only a vicarious
client of the firm, the firm would not be
disqualified unless ■the subject matter of the suit
is sufficiently related to the scope of the matters
on which the firm represents the association as the
create a realistic risk either that the plaintiff will
not be represented with vigor or that unfair
advantage will be taken of the defendant.■ Ct
found that trial ct could have identified such risks
because of the relationship the firm had with
defendant■representing the defendant in
employment negotiations may provide the firm
with info as to defendant■s policies or practices.
Fund of Funds (2d Cir. 1977)
Firm represented plaintiff in actions arising in
connection with alleged securities violations.
Firm was aware that the investigation of plaintiff■s
claims may unearth accusations against another
present client. Firm worked with Co-Firm on the
actions. When it became clear that there was an
action against Firm■s client, Co-Firm was
appointed by Firm to handle that claim. Firm■s
files and associates were used by Co-Firm in the
action against Firm■s client.
Held■Co-Firm was the ■understudy■ of Firm and
was therefore limited by the same fiduciary
responsibilities that would have prevented Firm
from suing the client directly. Note that the court
did not hold that the co-counsel relationship alone
merited disqualification of the co-counsel. Only
where the co-counsel is acting as an extension of
Firm in advancing suit against one of Firm■s
clients is disqualification appropriate.
Confidentiality in Multiple Representation
General Rule: When an atty acts for two or more
parties having a common interest, neither party
may exercise the atty-client privilege in a
subsequent controversy with the other. This is
true even where the atty acts jointly for two or
more persons having no formalized business
arrangement between them. Garner v.
Wolfinbarger (5th Cir. 1970).
Wortham & Van Liew (Cal. 1987)
Held■Atty for a general partnership defendant
must oblige discovery request of one the plaintiff
partners regarding transactions engaged in by the
partnership.
Rat■l■The Ct relied on the rule that joint clients
do not enjoy the atty-client privilege in a civil
action against one another. The Ct also stated that
the lawyer■s fiduciary obligation to the partners
required him to reveal to each partner all matters
concerning the partnership even absent a ct order.
Doesn■t such a rule present a conflict
between the atty■s duty of confidentiality
and the duties of loyalty and keeping the
client informed?
New York State Opinion 555
(1984)
Held■The confidentiality duty is
superior to the duty to inform.
New York City Opinion 86-2
(1986)
Held■A lawyer retained by the
general partner to represent the
limited partnership should reveal to
the limited partners the general
partner■s misconduct toward the
partnership over the general
partner■s objection.
What happens if following a joint
representation one of the clients wishes to
reveal privileged information and the
others object?
In re Grand Jury Subpoenas (4th
Cir. 1990) & John Morrell (8th Cir.
1990)
Held■No party to the joint defense
privilege (also referred to as the
■common interest■ rule) may waive
it without the consent of the others.
Polycast Technology (SDNY 1989)
Held■There may exist two kinds
of joint privilege: the joint atty-
client privilege which the parties
retain their right to waive without
the consent of the other parties; and
the joint defense privilege which
may not be waived without the
consent of all co-defendants. The
joint defense privilege covers
conversations between actual or
potential co-defendants and counsel
for any common defense purpose;
actual or potential litigation is a
necessary prerequisite for the joint
defense privilege.
The Insurance Triangle
Public Service Mutual Insurance Co v. Goldfarb
(NY 1981)
Facts■Dentist held a professional malpractice
policy that would indemnify him for any costs
arising out of a claim or suit based upon
■malpractice, negligence, mistake, assault, or
undue familiarity.■ Dentist was previously
convicted for 3d degree assault for sexually
assaulting one of his patients. In the present civil
suit, the insurer wants to know: if it would have
to pay under the policy for damages to the victim;
and if it has to defend the defendant.
Held■The dentist would not be covered under the
policy if during the civil trial it was adduced that
he intentionally injured the victim, but he would
be covered under the policy if his intentional act
had unintended consequences. Since the victims
civil complaint can be construed as a claim for
injuries unintentionally caused by defendant■s
intentional action, the defendant may seek
indemnification from his insurer. Even though
the insurer may ultimately not have to indemnify
defendant, it still must defend him in the civil
action because a claim within the stated coverage
has been made. Because the insurer■s interest in
defending the defendant in the lawsuit is in
conflict with the defendant■s interest■the insurer
does not have to pay if it is shown that the
defendant intentionally injured the victim (if this
is shown then the defendant has to pay)■the
defendant is entitled to defense of his own
choosing with the insurer paying the bill. See
Gillers at 238 & n.*.
The Obligation to Defend
When the complaint against an insured
alleges conduct that may or may not be
within the policy, or when it seeks
damages above the policy limits, the
interests of the insurer and the insured may
begin to diverge.
C. The Advocate■Witness Rule
DR 5-101(B): An atty ■shall not accept employment in contemplated or
pending litigation if he knows or it is obvious that he or a lawyer in his
firm ought to be called as a witness.■ Unless . . . see exceptions in
rule.
DR 5-102(A): After employment of atty, if ■a lawyer learns or it is
obvious that he or a lawyer in his firm ought to be called as a witness
on behalf of his client, he shall withdraw from the conduct of the trial
and his firm . . . shall not continue representation in the trial.■ Same
exceptions as DR 5-101(B).
DR 5-102(B): If after accepting employment for a client in a
contemplated or pending litigation the lawyer learns that he or a lawyer
in his firm may be called as witness by another party, the lawyer may
continue the representation unless it is apparent that his testimony is or
may be prejudicial to the client.
Rule 3.7: Unless an exception applies, a lawyer is prohibited from
acting ■as advocate at trial if the lawyer is likely to be a necessary
witness.■ Note the rule applies only to advocacy and not pre-trial work
and also does not draw a distinction between who calls the witness.
Rule 3.7 only imputes the conflict in the limited circumstances in 3.7
(b).
The Advocate-Witness rule is mandatory and cannot be waived by a
client. Thus, a client whose lawyer has testimony favorable to the
client cannot keep the lawyer and waive the testimony. Rat■l: 1.
Reluctant to damage good relations with the client, the atty may against
his better judgment defer to the client■s wish for representation; 2. The
party will generally be guided in its decision by the atty; 3. The client
will generally be reluctant to forego the assistance of familiar counsel or
to incur the expense and inconvenience of retaining another lawyer.
Remember that there are exceptions to the rules■see above.
The Advocate■Witness Rule in Criminal Cases
Defense Counsel■The rule applies to defense counsel
notwithstanding the defendant■s willingness to waive counsel■s
testimony. US v. Arrington (2d Cir. 1989).
Prosecutors■The rule applies generally to prosecutors whether
before a jury or before a judge at a suppression hearing. US v.
Johnson (7th Cir. 1982).
II. Successive Conflicts of Interest■Chapter 6
A. Private Practice
Analytica v. NPD Research (7th Cir. 1983) (Posner)
Held■A lawyer may not represent an adversary of his former client if
the subject matter of the two representations is substantially related (the
lawyer will be disqualified if this happens). Posner defines
■substantially related■ to mean if a lawyer could have obtained
confidential information the first representation that would have been
relevant in the second. The substantial relationship test does not require
that the client confidences actually be revealed.
The Substantial Relationship Test
Rule 1.9(a)
Cornish (Cal. 1989)
If there was even one confidential communication in the prior
relationship that relates to the current dispute, a basis for
disqualification exists.
Bridge Products (ND Ill. 1990)
A firm that has conducted a preliminary interview with a client
may not thereafter represent the client■s adversary on the subject
of the interview unless the firm has instructed the prospective
client that information received will not be treated as
confidential.
Evans v. Artek (2d Cir. 1983)
Three conditions for successive disqualification: 1. moving party
must be a former client; 2. there must be a substantial relation
between the subject matter of the prior representation and the
issues in the present lawsuit; and 3. the atty whose
disqualification is sought had access to, or was likely to have
access to the relevant privileged info in the course of the prior
representation.
USFL v. NFL (SDNY 1985)
It is the congruence of factual matters rather than areas of laws
that establishes a substantial relationship.
Government of India (2d Cir. 1978)
Because of the ct■s concern over the client■s right to counsel of
choice, the loss of time and money when counsel is disqualified,
and the fact that disqualification complicates and lengthens
litigation, the 2d Circuit strictly interprets the substantial
relationship test. Disqualification will be ordered only when the
issues in the present and prior case are identical or essentially
the same. Therefore, conduct that may be unethical and grounds
for discipline will not necessarily result in disqualification
because different considereations apply.
The Successive Duty of Loyalty
Another goal, besides confidentiality, behind successive conflicts
rules is atty loyalty. Loyalty to a client is endangered if the
possibility exists that a lawyer will change sides later in a
substantially related matter. Trone v. Smith.
Rule 1.9(a) & cmmt: ■The second aspect of loyalty to client is
the lawyer■s obligation to decline subsequent representations
involving positions adverse to a former client arising in
substantially related matters.■ Note that the cmmt says that this
conflict is not imputed to the atty■s firm.
The Consequences of Disqualification
Analytica, Rule 1.1(a), and DR 5-105(D) disqualify all lawyers
in a firm from opposing a client when any lawyer in the firm
represented the client in a substantially related matter.
Disqualification, not knowledge, is imputed. See extended
discussion below part B.
When a lawyer is disqualified and the client hires the new
counsel, the new firm will want to receive the disqualified firm■s
files■is it OK? An opposing party may argue that this turnover
gives the new counsel the benefit of suspect work. However,
absent an identifiably tainted item courts will order the turnover
of the files.
Who is a Client?
Analytica: An entity is treated as a client or a client equivalent
if it provides to a lawyer confidential data, the kind of which the
entity would have provided an atty if it had retained one.
Westinghouse: Entity was not a formal client but because entity
provided confidential information to the firm so that the firm
could do work for a trade association that the entity was a
member, the entity was a client for successive conflicts purposes.
When is the Client-Atty Relationship Over?
Law firms may not escape the stricter concurrent conflict rules
by simply withdrawing form the representation and converting a
current client is not a former one. Unified Sewerage v. Jelco
(9th Cir. 1981).
A law firm may withdraw from representation for the reasons
listed in DR 2-110 and Rule 1.16. A law firm■s own economic
interest in dropping one client to pick up a more desirable client
is not a reason contemplated by these rules.
Standing and Waiver
Courts are split as to whether a nonclient has standing to seek
disqualification based on a successive conflict.
Concurrent conflicts may sometimes be waived.
Successive conflicts may always be waived. Rule 1.9(a).
Conflicts in Class Actions
In re Agent Orange (2d Cir. 1986):
Class counsel switched from representing class members
supporting a settlement to those opposing it.
Held■The rules for disqualifying an atty who switches sides in
a litigation cannot be mechanically applied in a class action. A
motion to disqualify an atty that has switched from representing
the class to representing a faction of it must be balanced against
several factors. These include: the extent of the information that
the atty received, its availability elsewhere, its importance to the
issue at hand, and any prejudice that may result from applying
that info; the costs involved in the faction getting new counsel;
and the factual and legal complexity involved in the litigation . .
. .
B. Imputed Disqualification and Migratory Lawyers
Schiessle v. Stephens (7th Cir. 1983)
Held■There is a three part test for determining whether a lawyer who
leaves one law firm has infected the firm that the atty has migrated to
such that the firm must be disqualified from representing a client that
opposes a client represented by the atty■s former firm.
1. Does a substantial relationship exist between the subject
matter of the prior and the present representations? If yes then .
. .
2. Has the atty rebutted the presumption that confidences were
shared with him at his former firm regarding the client at issue?
If no then . . .
3. Has the atty rebutted the presumption that confidences
learned at the previous firm have not been shared at the new
firm? If no then the atty■s new firm must be disqualified.
The Ct held with respect to 3 above that the atty could rebut the
presumption of shared confidences by demonstrating that
institutional mechanisms were employed to insulate against the
flow of confidential info (i.e., Chinese Walls). Rat■l:
Prophylactic measures eliminate the harm the rule fears; attys
need to be able to move freely among firms without the risk of
impeding the new firm■s present clients (also serves to protect
clients from the inconvenience and expense of procuring new
counsel).
Presumptions in Imputed Disqualification
While it is generally accepted that an atty may rebut the
presumption of shared confidences at his prior firm, the position
of the Schiessle ct with respect to 3 is not as popular.
Rule 1.9 cmmt rejects screening as a method of rebutting the
presumption. Accord Cheng v. GAF (2d Cir. 1980); DC, NY, &
NJ Ethics Rules. Rat■l: If the third part of the test was
rebuttable then the client may find himself opposed by a law
firm one of whose members has relevant confidential
information gained in a prior affiliation. The screening method
is insufficient to convince the client that its confidences are
being honored.
Note the difference when the only conflict to a prior client is
one of loyalty. The Model Rules provide that where a migratory
lawyer is disqualified only because of loyalty to a former client,
the disqualification will not be imputed to the other lawyers in
the new firm. Rule 1.9 cmmt.
What happens if a lawyer leaves a firm and the firm wants to
take on a new client that would have a materially adverse
interest to those of a former client of the formerly associated
atty? Rule 1.10(b) permits the firm to represent the new client
even if the matter is the same or substantially related to that of
the former client. Once the would be disqualified lawyer leaves
the firm, the firm is purged of the infection and can therefore
represent the new client. A firm could seek to get rid of the
infected atty (or a client that presents a conflict to a prospective
client) by firing the atty (hoping the client would go with the
atty it dealt with). Hartford Accident (SDNY 1989) (distinguish
this from the case of the firm withdrawing from representing a
client and its ensuing restrictions, see above).
Rebutting the Presumptions
Rebutting the first presumption: If an atty can clearly and
effectively show that he had no knowledge of the clients
confidences, disqualification is unnecessary. Freeman (7th Cir.
1982). Problem arises when, if you are the atty trying to
disqualify the migratory atty, you cross-examine the migratory
lawyer. Can you cross-examine without revealing the
confidential information.
Rebutting the second presumption: In a jurisdiction where you
are allowed to rebut the second presumption (i.e., not in the 2d
Cir., NY, or NJ), the party seeking to avoid disqualification must
prove that the firm took effective steps to protect against leaks
of confidential information (screening, Chinese Walls, etc.).
C. Government Service
Armstrong v. McAlpin (2d Cir. 1980)
SEC atty left SEC to work in private practice for a firm that was
representing a person that the SEC atty had investigated while at the
SEC. The firm took efforts to screen the atty from the ongoing
litigation.
Held■It is not per se grounds for disqualification that an atty involved
in a government investigation joins a private firm involved in litigating
the same matter. If a ct finds a prior government atty to be effectively
screened from the private litigation then disqualification is unnecessary.
Policy reasons for decision: absent such a rule government attys would
have a hard time getting work in the private sector and, in turn, the
government would have a hard time getting attys to work for it.
The Revolving Door in the Model Rules
There may be a legitimate concern that former government
employees not be able to profit from information learned in their
government positions. General Motors (2d Cir. 1974).
Rule 1.11(a) rejects this concern (partially): the lawyer may
represent a private client in a matter in which the atty personally
and substantially participated as a government employee so long
as the government agency consents after consultation. But the
lawyer may still be disqualified if the atty acquired confidential
government about a person while in service and sought to
represent a client with interests adverse to that person. See Rule
1.11(b).
Similar rules apply for an atty going from private practice to
public employment. Rule 1.11(c).
Note that many jurisdictions have statutes controlling
postdeparture work.
What is the meaning of ■Matter and■ ■Substantial Responsibility■?
DR 9-101(B): ■A lawyer shall not accept private employment in
a matter in which he had substantial responsibility while he was
a public employee.■
■Matter■: The term contemplates that there be a discrete
isolatable transaction between a party or set of parties.
The same issue of fact involving the same parties,
lawsuit, litigation, situation . . . is the same matter. ABA
Formal Opinion 342 (1975).
■Substantial Responsibility■: It contemplates a
responsibility requiring the official to become personally
involved to a material degree in the investigative or
deliberative processes regarding the transaction or facts in
question.
PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
Class 6: Chapter VII-- Ethics in Advocacy
I. Truth and Confidences-- Client Perjury Problem
A. Conflict exists between whether a laywer's duties of confidentiality and
loyalty shall be superior to any duty the lawyer would otherwise have to
correct a fraud on the court or whether instead the lawyer as an officer
of the court has a duty to correct such frauds notwithstanding that doing
so will reveal a client's confidences.
1. The Model Rules provide that correction of fraud should prevail
over client confidentiality.So, if client refused to rectify the
wrong, then the lawyer must disclose knowledge of the wrong.
See Rule 3.3
a. First, lawyer should "remonstrate with the client."
Remonstrate means the lawyer must tell the client that he
was wrong and that he must now rectify the wrong.
b. If client refuses to rectify wrong, lawyer should seek to
withdraw or disclose the relevant information.
2. The Code provides that confidentiality should prevail over
correction of client's perjury. See DR 7-102(B)(1). Lawyer
shall reveal the fraud, except when information is protected as a
privileged communication.
3. Nix v. Whiteside: Held that there is no violation of 6th Amend.
right to effective assistance of counsel when lawyer refuses to
cooperate with criminal ■ in presenting perjured testimony.
Lawyer successfully dissuaded client from committing perjury.
II. Fostering Falsity
A. Cross Examining "Truthful" Witnesses
1. Tragic Fire- Great Cross Examination by Max Steuer
Although the general rule is that lawyers do not ask witnesses to
repeat harmful testimony b/c repetition reinforces bad impact,
here repetition was used to show that testimony was a prepared
recital of facts rather than a spontaneous recollection of actual
events.
2. Letter to the Editor: criticism of Steuer's approach: conclusion
fails to consider that the witnesses did not speak English and
that they barely survived a traumatic fire.
B. Arguing for False Inferences:
1. Professor Subin's position: It should be improper for an
attorney who knows beyond a reasonable doubt the truth of a
fact to attempt to refute that fact through evidence,
impeachment, or argument.
2. Professor Mitchell's position: It is acceptable to present evidence
or testimony that is not itself false in order to accredit a false
theory or to raise doubt about the prosecution's case.
3. Subin's response to Mitchell's position:
Mitchell's presentation is flawed: his closing argument is
designed to persuade the jury of the existence of facts he knows
not to be true. While it is not a lie, it creates a false impression
which amounts to the same thing.
4. The Code and Model Rules proscribe false statements of facts
but not false inferences. There is nothing in the ethical
standards prohibiting counsel from leading the jury to a false
finding.
C. Literal Truth
In Bronston v. United States, the witness testified under oath truthfully
and completely on its face. It did not matter that he intended to evade
and mislead. It is responsibility of cross examination to flush out the
whole truth.
D. Coaching
Witness preparation is ethical b/c in matters of complexity, memories
need to be refreshed, ordered, stimulated and papers or diaries need to
be reviewed. But, the process often extends beyond helping organize
what witness knows and moves in direction of helping witness to know
new things.
E. Exploiting Error
1. DR 7-101 requires counsel to represent client zealously but
within boundaries of legal and ethical rules.
2. DR 7-102(4) prohibits counsel from using perjured testimony or
false evidence but it is acceptable to call a witness who will
present truthful testimony.
F. Silence
1. Silence is permissible as long as lawyer does not assist another
in committing a crime or fraud subject to rule 3.3(a)(4) and (b).
2. Rule 3.3(a)(2) prohibits misrepresentations by omissions. The
rule requires lawyers to speak up to prevent a fraud on the court
when the substantive law makes silence actionable.
III. Misstating Facts, Precedent, or the Record
A. The Code and Rules forbid lawyers to make false statements of fact or
law. See DR 7-102(A)(5) and Rule 3.3(a)(1).
Wyle v. R.J.Reynolds: deliberate ignorance constituted knowledge of the
truth.
B. Obligation to Reveal Adverse Legal Authority
1. Rule 3.3(a)(3) and DR 7-106(B)(1) provide that lawyer must
disclose legal authority that he knows is directly adverse to his
client's position.
2. Jorgenson v. County of Volusia (1988): appellants filed a memo
of law that failed to cite two clearly relevant adverse cases.
They defended that the cases were not cited b/c they were not
controlling. However, this violated DR 7-106(B)(1). District
court imposed rule 11 sanctions. Court affirmed.
C. Obligation to Reveal Client has No Case?
1. Anders v. California: Court held that an appointed lawyer who
moved to withdraw after concluding that indigent ■ had grounds
for appeal had to include a discussion why issue lacked merit.
2. McCoy v. Ct. of Appeals of WI: lawyers must not only cite the
cases, statutes and facts of record to support conclusion that
appeal is meritless but also include brief statement of why these
citations lead attorney to believe that conclusion.
3. Affirmative steps are required to avoid mistaken conclusions and
to ensure counsel's diligence.
IV. Destruction or Concealment of Physical Evidence
A. Code does not directly preclude an attorney from advising a client to
destroy possible evidence.
1. Code does refer to situations in which destruction of evidence is
illegal.
2. DR 7-102(A)(3) provides that "lawyer should not conceal or
knowingly fail to disclose that which he is required by law to
reveal."
3. Attorneys have ethical and legal duties not to tolerate perjury or
fabricate evidence, but they don't have a duty to volunteer
material facts.
B. People v. Meredith (1981): Held that if defense counsel leaves the
evidence where he finds it, his observations derived from privileged
communications are insulated from revelation. If however, counsel
removes the evidence to examine it or test it, the original location and
condition of that evidence loses the protection of the privilege (b/c such
act deprives the prosecution of an opportunity to observe the evidence
in its original location or condition).
C. Could Nixon have destroyed the Tapes?
1. If destroyed the tapes b/c necessary to prevent secret exchanges,
probably ok.
2. Destruction in light of future subpoena is obstruction of justice
and illegal-can't destroy it
D. ABA's Advisory Solution (4-4.6: Physical Evidence)
Disclose evidence if required by law or court order or else return item
to original source, but if item is contraband (in and of itself illegal) and
no case is pending, then may advise client to destroy it, but if case is
pending, then destruction is obstruction of justice. Otherwise, lawyer
should disclose or deliver the item to the authorities.
E. Spoliation of Evidence
In some jurisdictions, destruction of evidence may not only have
evidentiary consequences, it may also be a tort.
F. Subpoenas to Criminal Defense Lawyers
1. The gov't has increased its use of subpoenas of criminal defense
attorneys to testify before the grand jury. The gov't seeks
information on amount of fee paid to attorney, whether it was
paid in cash, and whether client or third party paid it b/c this is
relevant in light of RICO.
2. United States v. Klublock (1987): the court adopted a rule that
was later codified as Rule 3.8(f).
G. Fee Forfeitures
1. Caplin & Drysdale v. United States (1989): S.Ct held that
forfeiture statute does not include an exemption for assets that ■
wishes to use to pay an attorney. ■ does not have right to
attorney of his choice; only to adequate representation. The
statute is consistent with the 5th and 6th amendments.
2. United States v. Monsanto (1989): Held that assets in a ■'s
possession may be frozen before convicted based upon a finding
of probable cause to believe that the assets are forfeitable.Class 7: Chapter XIII-- Control of Quality:
Remedies for Professional Failure
I. What is Malpractice?
A. Liability to Clients
1. Who is a client?
Togstad v. Vesely (1980): The wife was the lawyer's client b/c
she sought his legal advice and lawyer assumed to give his
professional opinion on the matter. Her claim is based on theory
that he breached duty of care. BREACH: failure to do research,
to disclose about statute of limitations, to consult a specialist in
the field, and to contact her to tell her there was no case
constituted a breach of duty. Must also show causation and
damages.
2. Scope and Duration of Relationship
a. Scope: Jackson v. Pollick: lawyer must accept the claim
in order for it to be within the scope of his
responsibilities.
b. Duration: Lama v. Shearman & Sterling: Duty to advise
client exists if it is established that such advice will be
rendered.
3. Appointed Lawyers
Ferri v. Ackerman: Appointed lawyer must observe same level
of care as paid lawyers-- no immunity.
(But, prosecutor has absolute immunity).
B. Breach of Fiduciary Duties
1. Duty of loyalty requires lawyer to avoid conflicts of interest. If
client suffers loss as result of lawyer's conflict, client can
recover in malpractice.
2. Duty of confidentiality requires fiduciary not to use confidences
to client's disadvantage.
3. Sex with Clients: issue arises often in divorce cases where
attorney initiates intimate relationship with vulnerable female
client. Some courts refuse to find breach of duty. But, in
McDaniel v. Gile held that lawyer caused intentional infliction of
mental distress and malpractice b/c lawyer had special
relationship with client and was in position of power over her.
C. Third Parties as Client-Equivalents
Classic example is Drafting of Wills: a third party (intended
beneficiary) seeks to hold attorney liable for lack of care in performing
legal service. Lawyer claims owed third party no duty: and this
defense may or may not work. There is no general rule.
a. Vanguard v. Martin: Held that lawyer for mortgage lender was
liable to purchaser of real property for failure of ordinary care
b/c purchaser was among the class of nonclients which as a
natural and probable consequence of the attorney's actions could
be injured.
b. Fox v. Pollack: court refused to impose duty on lawyer for one
party to the opposing unrepresented party who claimed that the
agreement the lawyer prepared did not accurately reflect the
parties' oral understanding. Court held the other party was not
the intended beneficiary of the lawyer's service.
D. Vicarious Liability
1. All partners liable for partner's wrongful acts within scope of the
partnership business even if other partners are unaware of those
acts.
a. Dresser v. Digges: lawyer overcharged client and all
partners held liable b/c billing was within scope of firm's
business and b/c should have supervised this.
b. Sheinkopf v. Stone: 1st Cir. declined to hold law firm
liable for fraud of partners b/c no evidence that
investment created an attorney client relationship with the
firm and b/c partner's actions were not in the ordinary
course of firm's business.
II. Proving Malpractice
A. Expert Testimony
1. Wagenmann v. Adams (1987): Generally, in an action for legal
malpractice, expert testimony is needed to establish both the
level of care owed by the attorney and the alleged failure to
conform to that benchmark. However, an exception is made
when the malpractice is so gross or obvious that laymen can rely
on ordinary knowledge to recognize negligence. In this case, ■
committed malpractice that was so gross that expert testimony
was not required.
2. Waldman v. Levine: lawyer did do something, but just not
enough to conform to standard of care required, thus held lawyer
committed malpractice.
3. Beattie v. Firnschild: proof of a violation of DR does not relieve
π of obligation to present expert testimony, thus court did not
make finding that committed malpractice.
B. Place of Ethical Rules in Actions Against Lawyers
1. Miami Int'l Realty v. Paynter: Held that an expert witness may
base his opinion on a state code of professional responsibility.
2. Fishman v. Brooks: violation of code or rules is not itself an
actionable breach of duty to client.
3. Carlson v. Morton: attorney who breaches ethical duty owed to
client may not be liable to client if lawyer's conduct does not
violate civil law standard.
4. Lazy Seven Coals Sales v. Stone: Code is not designed to create
a private cause of action for infractions of rules but is designed
to establish a remedy that is disciplinary in nature.
C. Causation
1. Must prove that lawyer's breach caused damages.
2. Must show that but for lawyer's negligence, the underlying case
would have ended more favorably for the former client. Some
jurisdictions only require that the malpractice be a material and
substantive cause of loss, not the proximate (but for) cause.
3. Causation in Criminal Cases
Carmel v. Lunney: Held that π must allege his innocence in
order to state a cause of action for legal malpractice arising from
negligent representation in a criminal proceeding. As long as
determination of client's guilt remains undisturbed, no cause of
action will lie against the attorney.
E. Damages or Injury
1. Client must prove lawyer's default caused a loss.
2. Many, but not all, jurisdictions decline to recognize
noneconomic injuries.
3. Courts are divided over whether the client's recovery ought to be
reduced by the fee the lawyer would have earned had not acted
negligently.
That is, if client was damaged by $30,000, some courts say the
judgment should be reduced the $10,000 that the lawyer would
have received had he acted properly, others disagree.
III. Beyond Malpractice: Other Grounds for Attorney Liability to Clients and
Third Parties
A. Greycas v. Proud (1987): ■, Proud, wrote letter for brother without
exercising any care at all. He was held liable to Greycas, one adverse
to his brother as a result. Even though Greycas is one adverse to his
client, the adversarial or non-adversarial aspect of the parties
relationship is not significant if there is a duty owed. A reasonable
lawyer would have found out if other liens were made before writing
the letter- but Proud used no such care to see that the information was
correct. Since Proud made representations which induced reliance to
Greycas' detriment, Proud is liable.
B. Expanding Universe in Professional Liability
1. Consumer Protection Laws
Guenard v. Burke: client was allowed to invoke state law
forbidding unfair practices in trade in connection with action
against former attorney. Court assumed that the practice of law
was a trade within the meaning of the statute.
2. Fraud and Negligent Misrepresentation
a. Dupont v. Brady: former client charged former counsel
with securities and common law fraud.
b. Cressweel v. Sullivan & Cromwell: π charged that ■ firm
had fraudulently and negligently withheld documents
during litigation and as a result π settled for less than
they would have been able to collect. But, judge held π's
lawyer should have discovered these facts.
c. Even New York, a jurisdiction that demands privity
before a lawyer can be held liable to another for a
professional error, has permitted negligent
misrepresentation claims against lawyers.
3. Errors of Law
Lawyers who misrepresent the law may be liable to their clients
but not to third parties unless the third party is treated as a
client.
4. Helping Fiduciaries Breach their Duties
Albright v. Burns: Lawyers who assist fiduciaries in violating
their duties to beneficiaries may be held liable to the
beneficiaries if harm was foreseeable.
5. Government Lawyers
Gov't lawyers may be held liable for breach of duty despite
general rule of immunity.
6. Inducing Breach of Contract
If X induces Y to breach K with Z, Z may sue X for
interference. But, if X had a fiduciary relationship with Y, then
X has defense--fulfilling his duty to protect his principal's
interests. 7. Violation of Escrow Agreement
a. Escrow agreement involves holding property or cash
pursuant to an agreement b/t two parties, one of whom is
usually the lawyer's client.
b. When lawyer acts as escrow agent, lawyer assumes
responsibilities that transcend the attny-client relationship.
8. Abuse of Court Process
one common tort is malicious prosecution-- that is, prosecution
without probable cause and for an improper purpose.
9. Ethical Violations
Barker v. Henderson: charged lawfirm that aided and abetted in
violation of rule 10b-5. Held that lawfirm was guilty of
malpractice in the advice it gave the Foundation but securities
law do not impose liability for ordinary malpractice. Court
rejected liability on grounds of deception as well.
IV. Discipline
A. Purposes of Discipline
1. remedy for professional failure
2. vindicates public's interest in preventing unethical behavior
3. Factors to consider in determining sanctions:
nature of offense, need for deterrence, reputation of the bar,
protection of public and clients, expression of condemnation,
justice to respondent.
B. Sanctions
1. Disbarment: indefinite or permanent exclusion from the bar.
2. Suspension: right to practice in the bar is denied for specific
period of time
3. Censure: public reprimand
C. Acts Justifying Discipline
1. In Re Warhaftig: trust accounts were abused- lawyer took
money from client's accounts before he had legal right to the
money. Even if money was returned and no harm done (so no
malpractice), court ordered disbarment.
2. In Re Austern: lawyer knowingly assisted his client in conduct
involving dishonesty and misrepresentation (funded an escrow
account with a worthless check). Even though no damages, his
conduct in furthering a transaction that was fraudulent violates
DR 7-102(A)(4), (7). He was under a duty to withdraw from
representation and the court ordered sanction of public censure.
3. In Re Colin: lawyer knowingly attempted to evade income tax
in violation of Tax Code. Court ordered public censure b/c he
was also separately punished for his crime.
4. Sexual Relations with Clients
a. Committee on Professional Ethics v. Hill: Lawyer
engaged in sexual activity with client, at suggestion of
client that sex be payment for legal services.
Commission found sex with client in a divorce action
constituted unethical conduct regardless of whether sex
was for payment. Court suspended lawyer for three
months.
b. Should lawyers be forbidden to have sexual relations with
clients? California Bar recommends rule in which a
member shall not require or demand sexual relations,
employ coercion, intimidation or undue influence or
continue representation of client with home he has sexual
relations with if it causes incompetent performance of
legal services.
c. Private consensual sexual activity almost never leads to
discipline even though it may offend community
standards.
5. Lawyer's Private Life: Crimes like tax evasion or use of drugs
even though unrelated to practice of law can lead to discipline.
6. Racist and Sexist Conduct
a. Courts are increasingly willing to discipline lawyers for
racist or sexist conduct in connection with public roles.
b. People v. Sharpe: lawyer stated in hallway: "I don't
believe either of those chili-eating bastards" and the court
imposed public censure b/c public officials need to avoid
statements that can be perceived as racially prejudicial.
7. Failure to Report another Lawyer's Misconduct
a. DR 1-103(A) requires that a lawyer voluntarily report any
disciplinary violation by another lawyer to the authorities.
b. Affirmative duty of whistle-blowing applies to lawyers in
same firm or in another firm.
c. Judges are subject to this "squeal rule"
d. The rules limit the reporting of misconduct to conduct
that raises a "substantial question as to another lawyer's
honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer.
e. The Code does not have a parallel limitation but it does
excuse reporting if the knowledge is privileged, but not if
it is just a secret.
f. In re Himmel (1988): First court where a disciplined
lawyer was charged with nothing but failing to report
another lawyer's misconduct b/c the knowledge of the
violation was a secret but not a confidence. Under the
Code, reporting was obligatory. Under the Rules, get
opposite result--the information would have been
confidential and thus not obligated to report without the
client's permission.
E. Disciplinary Procedures
1. In re Ruffalo: S.Ct. described that lawyer subject to discipline is
entitled to procedural due process: safeguards of notice and a
hearing.
2. Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel: S.Ct. held that the
appellant was afforded notice and an opportunity to respond and
thus the due process requirements were satisfied.
3. Other due process rights include: opportunity to confront the
evidence against the respondent attorney and to cross examine
witnesses; the right to present witnesses and argument on one's
own behalf; the right to assert the privilege against self
incrimination; and the right to have the facts determined and the
sanction imposed by an impartial body.
F. Readmission to the Bar
1. Disbarment is not necessarily permanent.
2. In considering whether attorney shall be readmitted, courts weigh
public interest, prior character and standing of attorney,
attorney's mental and moral qualifications, reason attorney was
disbarred in first place, conduct while disbarred, length of time
the disbarment lasted, whether restitution was made, attorney's
fitness to practice law, and evidence that he has reformed. PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
CASEBOOK NOTES
PAGES 1 - 70
A. Elements of the Client-Lawyer Relationship
1.Confidentiality (Rule 1.6; DR 4-101, 7-102): Generally,all privileges are
ethically protected information butnot all ethically protected information is
privileged.
a. Ethically protected information
i. Code: "confidences"
ii. Rules: "secrets"
b. Privileged information
i. Rules of evidence, common law, statutes
ii. Information communicated for the purpose ofobtaining
legal advice
c. In re James M. Pool: Attorney got the keys to theclient's safe
deposit box by striking a dealwiththe prosecutor, who then
search the box. Theattorney was disbarred for disclosing the
confidential information to the prosecutor withoutthe client's
consent.
d. Upjohn v. United States
i. Questionnaires given to the company's employees at the
request of the attorney are privileged.
ii. Client = entity, not the individuals
iii. Communication is privileged, not the underlyingfacts
iv. Entity can waive privilege, not an employee
e. Exceptions: Self-defense; Collection of fees;
Waiver; Crime-Fraud; Public Policy; Identity andfees (p. 38) are
generally not privileged becausethey are not information
conveyed for the purpose of obtaining legal advice. However,
Rule 1.6 is very broad and seems to include fees and client
identity.
g. Rule 1.6(b)(1) states "may reveal;" in N.J. andFla., the statute
states "must reveal."
2. Agency
a. Retainer should be defined as far as reasonablypossible
b. Taylor v. Illinois: Defense attorney willfullyviolated rule on
witnesses presented at trial. As a sanction, the judge refused to let
the defendant call a witness who would have helped the
defendant.
i. Majority: Since the lawyer has full authorityto manage
the case, the client must accept the consequences of the
attorney's actions.
ii. Dissent: Where a criminal defendant is notpersonally
responsible for the discovery violation, alternative
sanctions are proper and deter further deliberate violations.
c. Cine 42nd St. Theatre v. Allied Artists: Wheregross
professional negligence is found, the court may issue the full
range of sanctions. The plaintiff's claim for damages was
dismissed.
d. Vicarious admissions: U.S. v. McKeon held thatinformation
given by an attorney (which the attorneypresumably got from the
client) is evidence which can be used against the defendant, even if
the information is used in the attorney's openingstatement. The
attorney was disqualified because he could be called as a witness
at the trial (that the gave him false information which he relayed
through an opening statement). Harsh sanction upheld for
attorney.
3. Fiduciary
a. Arises after the formation of the attorney-clientrelationship
because (1) client begins to rely on the attorney's integrity,
fairness, and judgment; (2) attorney may have information which
gives her an unfair advantage in negotiations; (3) feearrangement
makes client dependent on attorney
4. Loyalty and Diligence
a. Loyalty requires the lawyer to pursue, and be freeto pursue, the
client's objectives unfettered by other conflicting responsibilities or
interests.
b. Diligence requires the lawyer to pursue the client'sinterest
without undue delay.
5. Duty to Inform
a. Keep client's reasonably informed so that the clienthas the
information necessary to make decisions
b. Attorney is obligated to communicate settlementoffers and plea
bargains
B. Autonomy of Attorneys and Clients
1. Lawyer's Autonomy
a. Jones v. Barnes
i. Majority: Defense counsel assigned to prosecutean
appeal from a criminal conviction does not have a constitutional
duty to raise every nonfrivolous issue requested by the
defendant.
ii. Dissent: 6th Amendment states that the attorneyis to
assist the client and therefore the attorney should raise every
claim requested.
b. People v. White: It is within the appellate court'sdiscretion
whether to accept pro se briefs filed bydefendants whose appellate
attorneys fail to include requested nonfrivolous issues in their
briefs.
2. Client's Autonomy
a. Olfe v. Gordon: Expert testimony is not required to show that
the agent (attorney) violated his duty by negotiating a contract
for a second mortgage the client specifically instructed him only
to negotiate a first mortgage.
b. Certain decisions belong to the client, e.g.civil: settlement,
stipulations to facts or law, appeals; criminal: pleas, whether to testify,
presence at trial, waiver of jury trial, appeals,submission of
lesser included offenses to the jury
C. Terminating the Relationship
1. Termination by the Client
a. For any reason or no reason
b. Assigned counsel cannot be fired, but the client canrequest the
court to assign new counsel
c. Not too close to or during trial
d. Cannot be used as a means to delay trial
2. Termination by the Lawyer (Rule 1.16 and DR 2-110)
a. Permissive withdrawal for "professional reasons,"e.g. the lawyer
reasonably believes that the clientis using the lawyer for criminal or
fraudulent action
b. Lawyer can withdraw or threaten to withdraw if theclient's
objective is repugnant or imprudent
c. Unreasonable financial burden on lawyer
d. In above situations, lawyer can withdraw even if thewithdrawal
will have a material adverse effect on the client's interests
e. Lawyer can withdraw for no reason if the withdrawaloccurs
with no material adverse effect on the client's interests
f. Lawyer has a duty to withdraw in certain situationsbecause of
the conduct or anticipated conduct of herclients CHAPTER III
PROTECTING THE CLIENT-LAWYER RELATIONSHIP
AGAINST OUTSIDE INTERFERENCE
Pages 71 - 100
A. Communicating with Another Lawyer's Clients
1. Rule 4.2 and DR 7-104(A)(1)
a. Conditions
i. Representative capacity
ii. Knowledge (which can be inferred)
iii. Subject
iv. Exceptions: Consent or authorized by law
v. Forbidden conversation through a third party
b. No Contact Rule: Cannot communicate with anotherparty about the
subject matter of a case
2. Civil Matters (page 73)
a. Straightforward if parties are individuals
b. Niesig v. Team I
i. The court adopts an alter ego test which defines "party" to
include corporate employees whose acts or omissions in
the matter under inquiry are binding on the corporation
or imputed to the corporation for purposes of its liability, or
employees implementing the advice of counsel.
ii. In this case, the employee-witnesses could beinterviewed
informally because they were mere witnesses.
iii. Applies to current employees only
iv. The concurring judge favors the control grouptest, which
was rejected in Upjohn.
c. Scope of secrecy
i. Some prohibit communication on any subject within a
current employee's scope of employment, but Niesig does
not prohibit contact with former employees
d. Violation of the rule may lead to disqualificationor the suppression
of evidence
e. Government as a party
i. Balance desirability of affording thegovernment as a party
the same kinds of protection against uncounseled concessions
of interest afforded other parties anddesirability of ensuring
largely unrestricted public access to government as a check
against mismanagement and malfeasance
ii. In criminal cases, the defense counsel are freeto speak to
witnesses including the complainant/victim although the
witnesses may refuse 3. Criminal Matters
a. United States v. Hammad
i. Holding: In light of the purposes of the Codeand the
exclusionary rule, suppression may be ordered in the trial
court's discretion. However, in this case, the district
court abused its discretion in
suppressing the evidence.
ii. The Supreme Court rejects the government'sargument that
state ethics rules should not apply to federal agents (like the
Thornburgh Memorandum).
b. Ethics and Crime Fighting
i. United States v. Dennis held that if a defenselawyer's
conversation with a government witness violated the ethical rule,
then the sanction, absent serious prejudice to the witness ortaint
to the trial, should be disciplinary action, not a limitation of the
cross- examination.
ii Rules 3.3(a)(1) and 4.1(a) forbid a lawyer fromlying to
courts or others. Hammad turned on the fact that the
subpoena was false as a basis for finding an ethical violation.
B. Improper Acquisition of Confidential Information
1. Spirit of the ethical rules precludes an attorney fromacquiring,
inadvertently or otherwise, confidential orprivileged information.
2. When a lawyer for one client tries to debrief an expertretained by the
other side.
3. Sanctions
a. Disqualification
b. Suppression of the evidence
4. Powers v. Chicago Transit Authority held the lawyer incontempt and then
dismissed the case when the lawyer refused to identify the source who gave
him a decisive memo in the action. Since the source of the memo was
essential to the case, the court did not abuse itsdiscretion.
5. United States v. Ofshe
a. Prosecutor's conduct was found by the trial court tobe
reprehensible because he used a defendant's attorney as an informant
to prosecute the defendant for other drug violations (Prosecutor = Turow)
b. The Justice Department's inquiry cleared Turow
Chapter IX - Lawyers for Entities
Who is the client:
Rule 1.13(a) defines the relationship between the parties by stating: "A lawyer employed
or retained by an organization represents the organization acting through its duly
authorized constituents."
A "corporate attorney" owes a duty to act in accordance with the interests of the corporate
entitiy itself. Thus, a corporate attorney may not serve the corporation in a particular
matter and then represent a plaintiff in a suit against it or its officers in a substantially
related matter.
Evans v. Artek Systems (2d Cir. 1983) - Held that an individual member of management
or the board of directors has the right to seek the advice of an attorney who does not
represent the corporation as an entity but instead can represent the plaintiff in an
individual capacity. The question of whether an attorney-client relationship exists
between the corporation and that attorney depends upon whether the dissident was acting
for himself or a separate group rather than for the corporation in consulting outside
counsel.
Rule 1.13(d) directs a lawyer to "explain the identity of the client when it is apparent that
the organization's interests are adverse to those of the constituents with whom the lawyer
is dealing."
Rule 1.13(e) permits joint representation of an organization and its constituents subject
to the concurrent conflict provisions of Rule 1.7.
- in a stockholders derivative action outside counsel must be retained to represent one of
the parties in the suit because of the conflict of interests created.
Whistleblowing and Retaliatory Discharge:
Balla v. Gambro, Inc. (Ill. 1991) - Held that, generally, in-house counsel does not have
a claim under the tort of retaliatory discharge. The rule that a client may discharge his
attorney at any time, with or without cause, applies equally to in-house counsel. Also,
this rationale does not leave in-house attorneys with a choice of either reporting grave
company improprieties and risk being discharged or complying with the employer's
wishes and risk loss of a professional license or criminal sanctions. In-house counsel
does not have such a choice because they must always abide by the Rules of Professional
Conduct.
Rule 1.13(b) and (c) deal with corporate counsel "whistleblowing." Basically, if the
lawyer knows that an officer, employee, or other person associated with the organization
is engaged in action or intends to engage in action that is detrimental to the corporation
or a violation of law that is likely to be imputed to the corporation the lawyer shall
proceed as is reasonably necessary in the best interest of the organization. The lawyer
should:
1) ask reconsideration of the matter;
2) advise that separate legal opinion on the matter be sought;
3) refer the matter to a higher authority in the organization - "go up the corporate ladder."
If despite the lawyers actions the highest authority that decides on the matter insists upon
action, or a refusal to act, that is clearly a violation of law and is likely to result in
substantial injury to the organization, the lawyer may resign in accordance with Rule 1.16.
Chapter XV - Free Speech Rights of Lawyers
Lawyer's free speech issues arise when a lawyer speaks to the press on a case (usually
in litigation) with which he is associated and when a lawyer criticizes a judge or the
courts.
Rule 3.6(a) - A lawyer shall not make an extrajudicial statement that a reasonable person
would expect to be disseminated by means of public communication if the lawyer knows
or reasonably should know that it will have a substantial likelihood of materially
prejudicing an adjudicative proceeding.
Gentile v. State Bar Of Nevada (1991) - Held that Nevada's Rule 177, almost identical
to ABA Rule 3.6, was void for vagueness in that it did not provide fair notice to those
to whom it was directed. Regardless, the Court also held that there was no evidence that
petitioner knew or should have known his remarks created a substantial likelihood of
material prejudice nor that there was a bais for finding that the speech presented a
substantial likelihood of material prejudice. Rather, petitioner sought only to stop a wave
of publicity he perceived as prejudicing potential jurors against his client and injuring his
client's reputation in the community.
Matter Of Holtzman (N.Y. 1991) - The charge was based upon a public release by
petitioner charging a Judge with judicial misconduct in relation to an incident that
allegedly occured in the course of a trial on criminal charges of sexual misconduct. The
court held that petitioner engaged in conduct that adversely reflected on her fitness to
practice law in releasing a false accusation of misconduct against the Judge. The guiding
priciple is whether a reasonable attorney, familiar with the Code and its ethical strictures,
would have notice of what conduct is proscribed. Here, petitioner knew or should have
known that such attacks are unwarrrented and unprofessional, serve to bring the bench
and bar into disrepute, and tend to undermine public confidence in the judicial system.
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