Ethics
Opinion No. 93-1
Preparation
of a Client's Legal Pleadings in a Civil Action Without Filing an Entry
of Appearance.
The Ethics
Committee has been asked whether the preparation of legal pleadings in
civil litigation for pro se litigants constitutes the unethical practice
of law. In the Committee's opinion, a lawyer may ethically limit the scope
of his representation of a client, but the lawyer should notify the client
clearly of the limitation of representation and the potential risks the
client is taking by not having full representation. When an attorney limits
the scope of his representation, an attorney-client relationship is still
created between the attorney and the client, with all the attendant duties
and responsibilities called out in the Professional Canons.
The attorney
requesting the ethics opinion states that he is helping many pro se litigants
prepare their own child support modification motions. (endnote 1) Many
of these litigants, he states, are unable to obtain legal counsel due to
their poor financial condition. Assistance with their self-help efforts
presents one of their few options for access to the courts. EC 2-33 stresses
the legal profession's commitment to making high quality legal services
available to all. Attorneys are encouraged to cooperate with qualified
legal assistance organizations to provide pro bono legal services on behalf
of the poor. Canon 6 of the Code of Professional Responsibility further
provides that a lawyer should represent a client competently and zealously.
When an attorney undertakes the representation of any client, that client
should receive a high quality of legal service. The Committee is essentially
asked to address the interplay between these ethical and professional considerations
when a lawyer provides legal services to a pro se litigant without entering
an appearance in the litigation in question. The Committee concludes that
such assistance is not unethical when conducted under the guidelines set
forth below.
According to
the facts before the Committee, the attorney assists in the preparation
of pleadings only after fully describing this limited scope of his assistance
to the client. With this understanding, the client then proceeds without
legal representation into the courtroom for the hearing. The client may
then be confronted by more complex matters, such as evidentiary arguments
concerning the validity of the child support modification, or new issues
such as child custody or visitation to which he may be ill-prepared to
respond. The client essentially elects to purchase only limited services
from the attorney, and to pay less in fees. In exchange, he assumes the
inevitable risks entailed in not being fully represented in court. In the
Committee's view, it is not inappropriate to permit such limitations on
the scope of an attorney's assistance.
A non-profit
legal assistance organization may limit the scope of representation to
its clients. For example, non-profit legal assistance organizations that
provide free legal services to low income clients may offer, in lieu of
representation in court, a class on pro se divorce to individuals seeking
simple uncontested divorces and may also offer such classes to individuals
with more complicated divorce matters provided that all clients are fully
advised of risks involved in pro se representation. ABA Opinion 90-18 (July
31, 1990).
Also, the Virginia
Bar Association has recognized that a lawyer may assist pro se litigants
in the preparation of discovery requests, pleadings or briefs without entering
an appearance. (endnote 2) Opinion 1129 (Virginia 1988). Such assistance
creates an attorney-client relationship, however, and the attorney must
therefore comply with the Code of Professional Responsibility. The attorney
is responsible to the client for the attorney's conduct during the course
of the professional relationship, however limited. Within the agreed scope
of the representation, the attorney must provide the client with all counseling
necessary to make informed decisions.
(corrected
copy 5/25/93)
Amended by
the Alaska Bar Association Ethics Committee on March 4, 1993.
Adopted by
the Board of Governors on March 19, 1993.
Endnotes:
-
The Committee
is aware that attorneys may get involved in preparing pleadings and filings
for clients outside the area of domestic relations, and for purposes which
are not as worthy. Behind the veil on anonymity, an attorney can assist
in "ghostwriting" matters for the client without the apparent threat of
sanction. However, if an attorney "ghostwrites" something for a client
which the attorney could not ethically sign, either because of constraints
of the civil rules or the Professional Canons, he or she has engaged in
unethical behavior. DR 1-102(A)(2) prohibits an attorney from circumventing
a disciplinary rule "through actions of another." Subsection (A)(4) prohibits
an attorney from engaging "in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit
or misrepresentation." See also 7-102(A)(1)-(7). If an attorney
prepares or assists in the preparation of a pleading to be signed by a
pro se litigant, they are under the same ethical constraints as if they
were to sign the pleading with their own name.
-
Some jurisdictions
require an attorney who prepares pleadings or documents for a pro se litigant
to disclose his or her assistance to opposing counsel and the court on
the face of the document. See N.Y. Bar Assoc. Opinion 1987-2 (1987).
The requirement is premised on the belief that non-disclosure of such assistance
would be misleading because pro se litigants may, and often times do, receive
preferential treatment from the court. Upon reflection, the Committee is
not certain that this belief is well founded. The committee believes that
judges are usually able to discern when a pro se litigant has received
the assistance of counsel in preparing or drafting pleadings. In that event,
the Committee believes that any preferential treatment otherwise afforded
the litigant will likely be tempered, if not overlooked.
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