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Professional Responsibility and Ethics (LAW 747)

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  1. Course Overview & Materials
    Syllabus - LAW 747
    5 Topics
  2. Topics
    1. Introduction & Background
    10 Topics
  3. 2. Admission to the Practice of Law
    8 Topics
  4. 3. Introduction to the Standard and Process of Lawyer Discipline
    17 Topics
  5. 4. Malpractice
    21 Topics
  6. 5. Unauthorized Practice of Law
    16 Topics
  7. 6. Duty to Work for No Compensation (Pro Bono)
    13 Topics
  8. 7. Decision to Undertake, Decline, and Withdraw from Representation; The Prospective Client
    15 Topics
  9. 8. Division of Decisional Authority Between Lawyer and Client
    7 Topics
  10. 9. Competence, Diligence, and Communication
    8 Topics
  11. 10. Duty of Confidentiality: Attorney-Client Privilege and Work Product Doctrine
    18 Topics
  12. 11. Duty of Confidentiality: Rule 1.6 and its exceptions
    22 Topics
  13. 12. Advising Clients – Both Individual and Corporate
    12 Topics
  14. 13. Conflict of Interest: Concurrent Client Conflict
    19 Topics
  15. 14. Conflict of Interest: Conflicts Between A Client and the Lawyer’s Personal Interest
    9 Topics
  16. 15. Conflict of Interest: Former Clients
    13 Topics
  17. 16. Communication Between Lawyers and Represented/ Unrepresented Persons
    7 Topics
  18. 17. Billing for Legal Services: Fees, Handling Client Property (Settlement Proceeds and Physical Evidence)
    19 Topics
  19. 18. The Decision to File/Prosecute a Claim; Litigation & Negotiation Tactics
    14 Topics
  20. 19. Lawyer’s Duties to the Tribunal
    10 Topics
  21. 20. Duties of a Prosecutor; Limits on Trial Publicity
    12 Topics
  22. 21. Solicitation & Marketing: Constitutional & Ethical Issues
    18 Topics
  23. 22. Law Firm Administration Issues
    8 Topics
  24. 23. Judicial Ethics
    35 Topics
  25. Course Wrap-Up
    What Did We Learn?
Lesson Progress
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As a lawyer you may be interested in volunteering to help folks on a limited basis.  For example, there is a program called Wills for Warriors where lawyers volunteer to assist vets prepare their wills.  In addition, you might want to volunteer at a telephone bank that provides limited representation for those that call in.  This is how the Comment to Rule 6.5 describes how these programs work:  “In these programs, such as legal-advice hotlines, advice-only clinics or pro se counseling programs, a client-lawyer relationship is established, but there is no expectation that the lawyer’s representation of the client will continue beyond the limited consultation.”[1]  The problem is that a lawyer represents these clients – even if the scope of the representation is merely to provide some preliminary thoughts on the client’s problems.  No lawyer wants to compromise representation of an existing client (because of a conflict of interest) due to participation in these limited representation volunteer opportunities. 

Although we have not covered conflicts of interest yet, consider this scenario:  an associate from a firm is assisting in a call-in legal clinic.  One of the clients has a landlord-tenant issue.  The associate advises the client that he had a potential claim against the landlord and gives advice on how to best pursue the claim.  When associate gets back to the firm, she learns that her firm represents the landlord in landlord/tenant disputes.  Under ordinary conflict of interest analysis, the lawyer and the firm would be prohibited from going adverse to the firm’s client (the landlord) if a case is brought by the tenant.  The ABA felt this outcome would discourage lawyers from engaging in assisting others in the call-in scenario (rule 6.5 is not limited to low income clients or pro bono representation).  Therefore, Rule 6.5 changes the presumptions regarding conflict of interest in these situations.

Rule 6.5 adopts a unique approach to evaluating conflicts of interest. Recognizing that representation contemplated by the Rule makes it difficult/impossible for a lawyer to perform a conflict check before every representation, the rule says that that conflict of interest rules only apply if the lawyer “knows” that the limited-scope representation would result in a conflict of interest for the lawyer or for her law firm at the time the lawyer provides the limited representation.[2]   


[1] ABA Rule 6.5, Comment [1].

[2] Rule 6.5(a)(1)-(2) and Comment [3].