If you believe that you may have materially erred in a current client’s representation, your duty of communication under Rule 1.4 requires you to inform the client.
That’s the unsurprising conclusion that the ABA’s Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility reached in its latest opinion, issued April 17.
Of note, though, is that
The concept of “unbundled” legal services is laid out in
Here’s a year-end reminder to in-house counsel: make sure that you are properly registered and licensed, or you may run into disciplinary problems. An Ohio lawyer who worked in a company’s law department learned that the hard way earlier this month, when she received a
One of 2017’s biggest legal trends is the upswing in law firm merger activity.
If the clerk of courts e-mails you an order that your client must pay $1 million in attorney fees to the opposing party, but your spam filter catches the e-mail and then deletes it after 30 days without alerting you, and you therefore fail to appeal the order in time — well, your client may
Putting your law firm name on coffee mugs and
Hot on the heels of the publicity for
Being inexperienced can contribute to getting into disciplinary trouble, but it can also be a mitigating factor in a bar disciplinary case. That’s the message of a
Just last month, we wrote about a
Practicing law out of a “virtual law office” (“VLO”), without being tied to the overhead expense of a brick-and-mortar facility, is increasingly attractive to lawyers in many stages of their careers: junior lawyers hanging out their shingles in a tough market; senior lawyers who want to keep practicing, but in a flexible format; and mid-career