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ColumnsScruplesfall 2003 vol.9
no. 2 Return
to Contents The Ethics of Referral Feesby Ellen Lockwood, CLAS, RPCanon 5 of the Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility
A legal assistant shall not solicit legal business on behalf of an attorney. Rule 7.03(b) of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct states in part: A lawyer shall not pay, give, or offer to pay or give anything of value to a person not licensed to practice law for soliciting prospective clients for, or referring clients or prospective clients to, any lawyer or firm . . . In addition, Comment 1 of Rule 5.04 of the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct states: The provisions of Rule 5.04(a) express traditional limitations on sharing legal fees with nonlawyers. The principal reasons for these limitations are to prevent solicitation by lay persons of clients for lawyers and to avoid encouraging or assisting nonlawyers in the practice of law. (Emphasis added.) These rules do not mean you cannot refer someone to an attorney.
On the contrary, most of us have been approached by friends
and acquaintances to recommend an attorney.1 The difference
is that you cannot solicit or seek out business for an attorney.
Solicitation may be face-to-face, written, or by phone. Solicitation
by nonlawyers is not allowed in Texas because of the high
likelihood that it will be done improperly and that attorneys
will use nonlawyers to circumvent the solicitation rules for
attorneys. A person who has possession of crime victim or motor vehicle accident information that the person obtained or knows was obtained from a law enforcement agency may not use the information to contact directly a person who is a crime victim or who was involved in a motor vehicle accident or a member of the person’s family for the purpose of soliciting business from the person or family member and may not sell the information to another person for financial gain. Tex. Bus. & Com. C. § 35.54(b) (Vernon 2003) Canon 2 of the Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility of the Legal Assistants Division of the State Bar of Texas states: A legal assistant shall not perform any of the duties that attorneys only may perform or do things which attorneys themselves may not do. Paralegals therefore have an additional ethical prohibition
to soliciting clients for attorneys since attorneys are prohibited
from most solicitations. Ellen Lockwood, CLAS, RP, is the Chair of the Professional Ethics Committee of the Legal Assistants Division, a position she has held since 1997. She is Treasurer of LAD and a past president of the Alamo Area Professional Legal Assistants in San Antonio. You may contact her at 210.832.3382 or ellenlockwood@clearchannel.com.
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