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December 2001 |
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Classifieds Letters Display Ads Archives Article Index Dec '01 Issue Latest Issue MSBA Home Page |
![]() By Edward J. Cleary |
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Suggested links: Website of Minnesota's Lawyers Professional Responsibility Board |
One of the first lessons we are
taught in law school is the paramount importance of keeping information
confidential that is acquired in the course of the representation
of a client. Above all else, we are taught, a client must be
able to trust her attorney without reservation. Consequently,
if an attorney, either intentionally or negligently, reveals
client confidences, a breach of trust occurs that undermines
the attorney-client relationship, both now and into the future.
On the other hand, some nonlawyer members of the public view attorneys as coconspirators, willing to keep quiet for a price, thus indirectly facilitating wrongdoing. Unless and until they, or a loved one, need the services of an attorney, these critics fail to see a need for such secrecy and view arguments made in support of confidentiality as morally bankrupt. The legal profession has attempted to balance these competing interests over the decades, by providing that an attorney may reveal client confidences under certain carefully delineated circumstances. The individual states have taken the lead by attempting to modify the absolute prohibition against revealing client confidences; meanwhile, the American Bar Association's House of Delegates has blocked, for the most part, proposals to provide for significant exceptions to this duty in the Model Rules of Professional Conduct on a number of occasions, most recently in August of 2001. |
![]() Edward J. Cleary is director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Respnsibility. He has practiced both privately and as a public defender for 20 years and is past president of the Ramsey County Bar Assocation. His book, Beyond the Buring Cross, won a national award in 1996. |
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"many states,
allow disclosure to rectify the consequences of a client's criminal
or fraudulent act" |
Currently, ABA Model Rule 1.6 allows permissive disclosure
of confidential communications in only two instances: 1. to prevent
a client from committing a criminal act that is likely to result
in "imminent" death or substantial bodily harm; or,
2. to establish a claim or defense or to respond to allegations
on behalf of the lawyer in a controversy between lawyer and client
or to establish a defense to a criminal charge or civil claim
against the lawyer resulting from the client's conduct. The Ethics
2000 Commission sought to amend this rule in several significant
ways. The proposed 1.6 provided for permissive disclosure to
prevent the "reasonably certain" death or substantial
bodily harm of another; to prevent the client from committing
a crime or fraud that would be reasonably certain to result in
substantial injury to the financial interests or property of
another (using or having used the lawyer's services in furtherance
of the fraud); or to prevent, mitigate or rectify a substantial
injury to the financial interests or property of another resulting
from or reasonably certain to result from the crime or fraud
(again, using or having used the lawyer's services). Variations
on these recommended amendments were defeated in the early 1980s
and early 1990s in the ABA House of Delegates. The same tired arguments that have been made by opponents to these recommendations over the past two decades once again carried the day at the ABA House of Delegates this past August. Contrary to the parade of horribles trotted out by opponents of these measures, such dire outcomes have not been experienced by the majority of the states that currently permit disclosure of confidences related to the substantial injury to the financial interests or property of another or, like Minnesota, that permit a lawyer to reveal the intention of a client to commit any crime. In addition, many states, again like Minnesota, allow disclosure to rectify the consequences of a client's criminal or fraudulent act. Not only isn't the sky falling, but the argument that lawyers will have increased liability due to these changes hasn't been borne out. Indeed, as one commentator has pointed out, "to say that a lawyer can't disclose these acts . . . opens him or her to major lawsuits." In one instance, a leasing company "issued $100 million in securities after securing bank loans with forged leases. After one of the firm's lawyers was told he could not disclose the information under the confidentiality rules, the law firm was sued for tens of millions of dollars by victims of the fraud."8 The defeated proposals would have been a step in the right direction, neither threatening the attorney-client relationship nor subjecting lawyers to increased liability. All the heated rhetoric and bombastic arguments have little basis in fact. Lawyers are not whistleblowers by nature and would only use these permissive disclosure exceptions when they were forced to by their otherwise arguable complicity in the illegal and/or fraudulent conduct of their client. The deletion from 1.6 of the requirement of "imminent" death before permissive disclosure of client confidences is a necessary change. The chair of the ABA Commission on Evaluation of the Rules of Professional Conduct (Ethics 2000 Commission) E. Norman Veasey, chief justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, called the vote against the other two proposed amendments to 1.6 "unfortunate" and a "setback."9 He has indicated that the proposals may be resubmitted at the ABA midyear meeting in February of 2002. If Minnesota's experience with these rule provisions is any indication, the changes are not only long overdue but, if enacted, will not have the dire consequences predicted by those whose arguments against these provisions ring hollow. Theoretically, the ABA should lead the way for the states in formulating ethical precepts. When it comes to confidentiality and permissive disclosure, the ABA is bringing up the rear. 1. Ethics 2000 Commission: Chair's Introduction and Executive
Summary, p.4. |
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