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THE ASSOCIATION
OF THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
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FORMAL OPINION 2003-03
CHECKING FOR CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
Topic: Conflicts of Interest; Recordkeeping, Policies, and Systems for
Conflicts-Checking Purposes
Digest: Under DR 5-105(e) of the New York Code of Professional Responsibility,
all law firms must keep records and must have policies and systems in
place to check for conflicts of interest to the extent necessary to render
effective assistance to the lawyers in the firm in avoiding imputed conflicts
under DR 5-105(d) based on current or prior engagements. What records
the firm must keep, and what policies and systems the firm must implement,
depends on a number of factors, including (a) the size of the firm, (b)
where the firm practices, and (c) the nature of the firm’s practice.
Code: DR 5-105(d); DR 5-105(e)
Question
What records must a law firm keep, and what policies and systems must
a law firm implement for checking proposed engagements against current
and previous engagements, to comply with New York’s mandatory conflict-checking
rule, DR 5-105(e)?
Opinion
On May 22, 1996, effective immediately, the Appellate Divisions adopted
DR 5-105(e) of the New York Code of Professional Responsibility. In essence,
the rule requires every New York law firm to keep records and implement
policies and systems that effectively assist the firm in complying with
New York’s imputed conflicts rule, DR 5-105(d), with respect to
conflicts caused by the firm’s current and previous engagements.
DR 5-105(e) was drafted by the courts sua sponte. It was not based on
any formal proposal by the Bar. It was adopted as part of the package
of new and amended rules (also including DR 1-102 and DR 1-104) that
made law firms as entities subject to discipline in New York. The requirements
of the rule are not well defined or understood. The New York State Bar
Association has not adopted any Ethical Considerations to explain DR
5-105(e); not a single court case has discussed the rule; and only one
bar association ethics committee opinion has discussed DR 5-105(e) at
any length—see N.Y. State Opinion No. 720 (1999), 1999 WL 692571.
The rule is unique to New York—no other jurisdiction has adopted
a rule anything like it—so other jurisdictions provide minimal
guidance. At least one article has been written about the rule—see
Roy Simon, Checking for Conflicts Under DR 5-105(e), New York Professional
Responsibility Report, November 2002—but little formal guidance
is available about the rule and its requirements. Accordingly, this Committee
has been asked to render guidance to the Bar regarding the requirements
imposed on law firms by DR 5-105(e).
Discussion
The three sentences of DR 5-105(e) (which we quote verbatim below but
break into separate paragraphs for greater clarity) provide as follows:
• “A law firm shall keep records of prior engagements, which
records shall be made at or near the time of such engagements and shall
have a policy implementing a system by which proposed engagements are
checked against current and previous engagements, so as to render effective
assistance to lawyers within the firm in complying with DR 5-105(d).”
• “Failure to keep records or to have a policy which complies
with this subdivision, whether or not a violation of DR 5-105(d) occurs,
shall be a violation by the firm.”
• “In cases in which a violation of this subdivision by
the firm is a substantial factor in causing a violation of DR 5-105(d)
by a lawyer, the firm, as well as the individual lawyer, shall also be
responsible for the violation of DR 5-105(d).”
The text of DR 5-105(d), to which DR 5-105(e) refers four times, provides
as follows:
“While lawyers are associated in a law firm, none of them shall
knowingly accept or continue employment when any one of them practicing
alone would be prohibited from doing so under DR 5-101(a), DR 5-105(a)
or (b), DR 5-108(a) or (b), or DR 9-101(b) except as otherwise provided
therein. ”
This opinion will focus only on the first sentence of DR 5-105(e), with
particular emphasis on the type and quality of records that a law firm
must keep and the policies and systems the law firm must implement for
checking proposed engagements against current and previous engagements.
What is a “law firm”?
Because DR 5-105(e) applies only to a “law firm,” we begin
by briefly exploring the scope of the term “law firm.” The
New York Code of Professional Responsibility (the “Code”)
(at 22 N.Y.C.R.R. § 1200.01) defines the term “law firm” as
follows:
“‘Law firm’” includes, but is not limited to,
a professional legal corporation, a limited liability company or partnership
engaged in the practice of law, the legal department of a corporation
or other organization and a qualified legal assistance organization.”
This definition of course encompasses large law firms, corporate legal
departments, governmental legal departments, and non-profit law firms.
We also believe that a solo law practice, whether or not it is organized
as a professional corporation or a limited liability company, is a “law
firm” within the meaning of DR 5-105(e).
In addition, since the definition of “law firm” in the Code “is
not limited to” traditional law firms and legal departments, the
term has been applied for conflicts purposes to other practice arrangements.
For example, as this Committee and other ethics committees have opined,
lawyers in some practice arrangements must check for conflicts of interest
as if they were a single law firm. See, e.g., ABCNY Opinion No. 80-63
(1980) (two firms that shared offices could not represent opposing parties
in litigation because of the “strong likelihood” that the
separate law firms could not maintain the confidences and secrets of
their respective clients); N.Y. County Opinion No. 680 (1990), 1990 WL
677022, *2 (“Even though lawyers who share office space are not
partners, they may be treated as if they were partners for some purposes
under the Code (particularly the provisions for vicarious disqualification
in the event of a conflict of interest)” if they share confidential
information.) ABCNY Opinion No. 1995-8 (1995) (when law firms are “of
counsel” to each other one-unit conflicts checking is required);
ABCNY Formal Op. 1996-08, 1996 WL 416301, *3 (“‘of counsel’ relationships
are treated as if the ‘counsel’ and the firm are one unit”).
We think DR 5-105(e) applies to these “constructive” law
firms as well as to more traditional firms. In short, we believe DR 5-105(e)
applies to a wide range of practice arrangements. We concentrate the
remainder of this opinion on private law firms, but the principles and
concepts discussed here apply in some fashion to other types of law firms
as well, including the legal departments of corporations and government
agencies.
Fundamentals of DR 5-105(e)
The essence of the first sentence of DR 5-105(e) is to require every
law firm to do two things: (1) create a record of each new engagement
at or near the time the engagement commences; and (2) have a policy implementing
a system for checking proposed engagements against current and previous
engagements. The rule does not specify what records a firm must keep,
or what type of policy and system a firm must implement to check proposed
engagements against current and previous engagements. Rather, the rule
indicates simply that whatever systems are adopted should “render
effective assistance to lawyers within the firm” in complying with
their obligation to avoid conflicts that would violate DR 5-105(d).
At a minimum, to assist in complying with DR 5-105(d), we think that
all firms should have mechanisms for assisting lawyers in identifying
and resolving two types of conflicts arising from current or previous
engagements that are expressly covered by DR 5-105(d):
• Conflicts among current clients, whether the conflicts arise
before or during the engagement – see DR 5-105(a) and (b); and
• Conflicts with former clients, including the former clients
of laterals and their former firms – see DR 5-108(a) and (b).
DR 5-105(d) also embraces conflicts that arise under DR 9-101(b) when
a private law firm hires lawyers who formerly served as public officers
or employees. However, because conflicts with former government lawyers
are complicated by laws and rules governing grand jury secrecy, the secrecy
of investigative information acquired by the government, governmental
privileges, and other factors that make public officers and employees
substantially different from private lawyers, this opinion does not address
systems for checking the conflicts of former public officers and employees.
What kind of system is required to check for conflicts with current
and former clients will turn on the nature of each law firm. In particular,
the specific measures that DR 5-105(e) requires will depend on factors
such as: (a) the size and structure of the firm; (b) the nature of the
firm’s practice; (c) the number and location of the firm’s
offices; (d) the relationship among the firm’s separate offices;
and (e) other characteristics of the law firm and its operations. The
records, policies, and systems will vary from law firm to law firm. But
all law firms, whatever their particular characteristics—large
or small, urban or rural, litigation or transactional, governmental or
private—must keep certain minimum records and implement certain
minimum policies and systems suitable to provide effective assistance
to the firm’s lawyers in avoiding conflicts arising from current
or former engagements and that will be imputed to the firm under DR 5-105(d).
Recordkeeping Requirements
The first sentence of DR 5-105(e) begins with a mandate for recordkeeping.
It provides, in part, that a law firm “shall keep records of prior
engagements … made at or near the time of such engagements….” The
expressly stated purpose of this recordkeeping requirement is to assist
lawyers in the firm in avoiding conflicts of interest that will be imputed
to the entire firm under DR 5-105(d) (discussed above). The rule raises
a number of questions, which we address one at a time.
1. What are “records”?
To get one preliminary point out of the way quickly, we think the term “records” refers
to written or electronic records. Information inside a lawyer’s
head that has not been written down does not qualify as “records.” Thus,
even solo practitioners must keep written or electronic records to comply
with DR 5-105(e).
Moreover, those records must be maintained in a way that allows them
to be quickly and accurately checked for possible conflicts. Thus, the
mere fact that the law firm has information about clients and engagements
written down in the individual files pertaining to each matter does not
satisfy the “records” requirement. It is simply not realistic
to think that a law firm can search through every paper file and folder
to look for conflicts each time the firm considers a proposed new engagement.
However, if the law firm opens electronic files on all of the law firm’s
clients and prospective clients, and if those records are electronically
searchable (as all word processing programs and law practice management
programs appear to be), then those electronic files will qualify as “records” for
purposes of DR 5-105(e). In other words, the key characteristic that
qualifies information as “records” under DR 5-105(e) is that
the information can be systematically and accurately checked when the
law firm is considering a proposed new engagement.
2. When must the required records be made?
DR 5-105(e) provides that the required records of prior engagements “shall
be made at or near the time of such engagements....” We think this
language is largely self explanatory. If the records are made at the
inception of a new engagement, that obviously satisfies the rule. If
the records are not made at the inception of a new engagement, however,
DR 5-105(e) allows them to be made “near” the time the engagement
begins. To satisfy that alternative requirement, we think the records
must ordinarily be made in time to assist in checking for conflicts by
the next time a proposed new engagement comes along. In many law firms,
proposed new engagements (including new matters for existing clients)
come along every day or every few days. Thus, we think DR 5-105(e) requires
that law firms make the necessary records within days, not weeks, after
commencing a new engagement. The best practice is to make the records
at the time engagements commence, but the rule allows some leeway by
using the word “near.” In addition, even though it is not
required by DR 5-105(e), the best practice would also be to update the
records periodically with additional parties or other pertinent information,
for example where a complaint is amended to add new parties or where
there are other developments with respect to a matter that might create
a conflict under another rule. However, the Committee expresses no view
in this opinion on whether other rules require such updating.
3. How far back in time must records go?
DR 5-105(e) took effect on May 22, 1996. Since that date, law firms have been
obligated to “keep records of prior engagements....” However, nothing
in the rule suggests that law firms were required to develop a comprehensive
list of prior engagements going backward in time from May 22, 1996. As a practical
matter, the rule contemplated only that law firms would begin keeping records
of all engagements (including engagements already underway on May 22, 1996)
starting on the rule’s effective date. With these records in place the
firm can determine whether it needs to fill in gaps in past records to provide
effective assistance to the firm in avoiding conflicts.
4. How must the records be organized?
Merely recording information about current and previous engagements will not
accomplish anything unless the information is readily accessible. The Committee
therefore believes that the required records must be kept in a way that permits
efficient access to the information they contain. Many methods are possible,
but one straightforward method would be to list clients and former clients
(perhaps alphabetically) and to list engagements undertaken for each client
(perhaps in chronological order) under each client name. Regarding adverse
parties, a firm should probably maintain a list, cross-referenced to the client
and matter in which the adverse parties were involved. But a law firm may use
any method that makes it possible for the firm to check the records in a timely
fashion, and the type and organization of the records may depend largely on,
among other things, the software and search engine employed to create and check
the records.
5. What records must a law firm keep?
Unfortunately, DR 5-105(e) is silent about the type of records that a firm
must maintain. It says only that the records are to provide “effective
assistance” to lawyers within the firm in avoiding new engagements that
would create a conflict of interest based on other current engagements or previous
engagements. We therefore now address what records we think DR 5-105(e) requires.
The nature of the records needed to render effective assistance to lawyers
in the conflict clearing process will vary depending on the size, structure,
history, and nature of the law practice at issue. An example of a law firm
near one end of the spectrum is a solo practitioner, concentrating solely in
plaintiffs’ personal injury matters, who has just begun to practice law.
Such a law firm has relatively few clients and former clients and may need
only the simplest written records to jog the lawyer’s memory sufficiently
to recognize and avoid conflicts. Toward the other end of the spectrum, presenting
different and more complex problems, is an established law firm with hundreds
of lawyers practicing in multiple domestic and foreign offices. Such a firm
typically has thousands or tens of thousands of clients and former clients,
many of them large corporate clients with affiliates and subsidiaries and with
names that may have changed over time. In such a firm, fairly complex records
will be needed to check effectively for conflicts. Somewhere in the middle
of the spectrum are law firms with five or ten or twenty lawyers that have
been in business for a decade or more. The nature of the records needed to
check for conflicts in these mid-sized firms will depend on many factors.
As an initial matter, we note that several options are theoretically open regarding
recordkeeping requirements. One option is a standard recordkeeping requirement
specifying in detail the precise data that all firms must keep. We reject that
option because it would ignore the substantial differences among firms. An
alternative option is to adopt a variable recordkeeping requirement so that
the nature of the required records depends on the size and nature of the law
firm, its practice, and its lawyers. We adopt that option because a variable
requirement takes into account the differences among firms and recognizes that
firms may have to change the nature of their records as they grow and change.
However, this Committee is not capable of specifying in detail the nature of
the records that each type and size of firm must keep. Rather, we specify in
general terms only the rock-bottom minimum records that we think all law firms
must keep, no matter how small or specialized. But we caution that as law firms
grow larger and more complex, they will find it increasingly difficult to fulfill
their conflict checking duties unless they keep more than the minimum records
that we believe are mandated by DR 5-105(e). (We address additional desirable
information that might be maintained toward the end of the opinion, when we
discuss systems for checking particular types of conflicts.)
Against this background, and for the reasons given below, the Committee believes
that the following records are the minimum that any lawyer or private law firm
must keep in order to comply with DR 5-105(e):
1. Client names. The full and precise name of each client the firm currently
represents.
2. Adverse party names. The precise names of parties involved in a matter whose
interests are materially adverse to each party the firm represents.
3. Description of engagement. A brief description of each engagement or prospective
engagement.
With this basic information at hand, a law firm should be able to detect most
potential conflicts involving clients or former clients before accepting any
proposed new engagement. With less information in its records, many conflicts
could not be detected. For example, without the client information, the remaining
firm data would be useless in assisting lawyers in avoiding conflicts. Without
adverse party information, a firm could not determine whether it was already
acting adversely to the interests of a person or entity it later might seek
to represent. Without a brief description of each engagement, a law firm could
not judge whether a proposed new engagement would create conflicts with former
clients. Of course, after identifying a potential conflict, a law firm may
need to conduct factual and legal investigation to determine whether a prohibited
conflict actually exists or is likely to develop. But the basic information
outlined above should render effective assistance to most firms in putting
them on notice that possible conflicts exist and that further study may be
required.
We have not interpreted DR 5-105(e) to require records of the financial, business,
property, or personal interests that may create conflicts under DR 5-101(a).
Personal conflicts are not current or previous “engagements,” so
they are not within the scope of DR 5-105(e). We do not address whether any
other provision of the Code requires a law firm to check for conflicts arising
under DR 5-101.
Regarding records of prior engagements, we note that since March 4, 2002, a
new court rule entitled “Written Letter of Engagement” (22 N.Y.C.R.R.
Part 1215) has required all New York lawyers to provide written letters of
engagement to clients in every matter where fees are expected to be $3,000
or more unless the client has previously paid the attorney for services “of
the same general kind” or the matter is a domestic relations matter (in
which case a written retainer agreement is required – see 22 N.Y.C.R.R. § 1400.3).
For firms that do not have many repeat clients, such as firms that handle personal
injury work, the written engagement letters required by Part 1215 will, in
the normal course, identify the client and describe the nature of the representation
in enough detail to satisfy the basic recordkeeping requirements we have set
out above. (The firm will either have to record adverse parties separately
or add that information to the engagement letters, however.) More elaborate
engagement letters may also define who is not the client (e.g., “The
firm does not represent any of the client’s affiliates or subsidiaries” or “The
firm represents you but not your spouse even though you and your spouse own
your home as joint tenants”). Indexing or cataloging engagement letters
may be one way to keep records of prior engagements at or near the time of
the engagements. But engagement letters will not provide information about
each new engagement if firms do not issue new engagement letters to clients
who have previously paid for legal services of the same general kind, or for
clients whose matters were never expected to generate $3,000 or more in legal
fees.
While much additional information could be maintained to assist in the conflicts
research process, it is difficult to argue that DR 5-105(e) requires information
beyond the basic information necessary to put lawyers on notice that a potential
problem exists. What law firms do with that basic information—what “system” they
use to check for conflicts—is a separate and more difficult question,
to which we now turn.
Policies and Systems for Checking for Possible Conflicts
In addition to mandating that law firms keep records, DR 5-105(e) requires
every law firm to have “a policy implementing a system by which proposed
engagements are checked against current and previous engagements,” again
with the stated aim of rendering “effective assistance to lawyers within
the firm in complying with” DR 5-105(e)’s purpose to avoid conflicts
arising from current or previous engagements.
1. What is a “system”?
An initial question is: What is a “system” within the meaning of
DR 5-105(e)? The wording of DR 5-105(e) is curious: While the rule requires
law firms to maintain “records of prior engagements,” it does not
expressly require the law firm to check those records when checking proposed
engagements for conflicts. Rather, DR 5-105(e) simply requires a law firm to
establish a policy and system “by which proposed engagements are checked
against current and prior engagements...” (We do not believe that the
word “policy” adds anything significant to the word “system,” so
we focus only on the meaning of the word “system.”) Taken literally,
a “system” for checking proposed engagements against current and
previous engagements would not necessarily require checking the written records.
No doubt some solo practitioners use a “system” of consulting their
memories alone, and some small law firms (and perhaps even some mid-sized law
firms) use a “system” of talking to a partner with a good memory
or asking around the firm (orally or via email or memo) to find out whether
anyone knows of a conflict with a proposed engagement.
This Committee does not believe that any of those relatively informal methods
of checking for conflicts would qualify as a “system” within the
meaning of DR 5-105(e). Rather, we think DR 5-105(e) requires that a “system” of
checking for conflicts within the meaning of DR 5-105(e) must include systematically
consulting the “records” that must be kept to satisfy the opening
clause of the rule. Less formal methods of checking for conflicts may of course
be used (and may have to be used) to supplement a systematic check against
those records, but we think it would be pointless to require a law firm to
maintain written “records” but not require the law firm to consult
those records as part of its conflict checking “system.”
2. Essential elements of a “system.”
We have just said that a “system” must include systematically consulting
the “records” required by DR 5-105(e). What else must a system
include to meet the requirements of DR 5-105(e)?
Because law firms vary in size, structure, practice areas, and history, the
systems that will provide “effective assistance” in checking for
conflicts within the meaning of DR 5-105(e) will depend on many factors. Sole
practitioners and very small firms (five lawyers or less, all practicing in
a single location) may not need to do much more than check their records and
consult with other lawyers in the firm about any questions triggered by the
records. As firms grow larger and build up a larger base of prior engagements,
and as their practices grow more diverse, law firms may need to install software
systems to check the records for conflicts rather than checking the records
in a rudimentary fashion. See Pennwalt Corp. v. Plough, Inc., 85 F.R.D. 264
(D. Del. 1980) (law firms should make maximum use of technology to aid in avoiding
conflicts). Some firms will be able to use commercial software programs “off-the-rack,” but
other firms, especially those with larger or more complex practices, may need
to seek technical assistance to tailor the software program to the firm’s
particular needs.
If consulting the records leads to missing too many potential conflicts, and
thus is not providing “effective assistance” to the firm in ferreting
out conflicts with current and previous engagements, the firm will need to
supplement the records check. Small firms may be able to do this through personal
communications among key partners (or all partners) at the firm, either in
writing or orally. Larger firms, especially those with more than one office,
may need to supplement their records with email, formal written memos circulated
throughout the firm, or other communication methods—electronic and traditional—designed
to reach lawyers who may have relevant information about possible conflicts.
Many law firms (perhaps most firms) will be able to satisfy DR 5-105(e) by
implementing a system that checks only the basic information that the rule
requires (client names, adverse party names, and brief description of each
engagement), supplemented by other types of communications and records checks
to resolve any questions and detect certain types of conflicts not readily
discoverable through a records check alone. In larger or more complex practices,
however, an effective system will depend not only on a check of the records
database but also on the ability of lawyers in the firm to communicate with
others in the firm who have relevant information, to gain access to the firm’s
client files or other information regarding particular engagements, and to
obtain more information readily upon request.
We believe that most firms afford access to information relevant to client
engagements (except to the extent certain files have been screened off from
particular lawyers). We also believe that virtually all large firms make it
easy for a lawyer in the firm to communicate with other lawyers in the firm
by email or other means. The more difficult question is the third element:
What other information must be readily available upon request to supplement
the basic records that all firms must keep? We turn to that complex question.
Systems for Checking Particular Types of Conflicts
In this section we discuss special considerations that may affect the system
a law firm uses to check for conflicts arising under DR 5-105 and DR 5-108.
We note, however, that we believe that the fact that a law firm is disqualified
from a matter under these (or any other) rules does not necessarily mean that
the law firm violated DR 5-105(e), and, furthermore, that keeping records required
by DR 5-105(e) is not, in and of itself, a defense to a disqualification motion
under DR 5-105, DR 5-108, or any other rules.
1. Conflicts with current clients.
The law is well established in New York that a law firm may not oppose a current
client in any matter—even a totally unrelated matter—unless the
law firm satisfies the “disinterested lawyer” test and obtains
the informed consent of each client affected by the conflict. See, e.g., DR
5-105; Cinema 5, Ltd. v. Cinerama, Inc., 528 F.2d 1384 (2d Cir. 1976). Moreover,
whenever two or more of a law firm’s current clients are involved in
the same litigation or transaction, even on the same side, the potential for
conflict – and for a violation of DR 5-105(d) – is present. The
records that include the names of all current clients, plus information available
to the person checking the proposed engagement for conflicts, should usually
be sufficient. That information will ordinarily be enough to alert the firm
to investigate potential conflicts that arise when a law firm is opposing a
current client, or when more than one current client is involved in the same
transaction or litigation. However, concurrent client conflicts come in so
many varieties that no single system of checking for conflicts will detect
them all. We therefore address here some special situations that illustrate
the practice-specific nature of conflict-checking systems.
(a) Corporate family conflicts.
When a law firm desires to oppose an entity that belongs to a current client’s
corporate family (e.g., an affiliate, subsidiary, parent, or sister corporation
of a current corporate client), a concurrent client conflict may arise. Whether
such a conflict is disqualifying will depend on many factors, including the
relationship between the two corporations and the relationship between the
work the law firm is doing for the current client and the work the law firm
wishes to undertake in opposition to the client’s corporate family member.
See, e.g., Discotrade Ltd. v. Wyeth-Ayerst Int’l, Inc., 200 F. Supp.
2d 355 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (granting motion to disqualify); JPMorgan Chase Bank
v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 189 F. Supp. 2d 20 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (granting motion
to disqualify); Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogeneration Partners L.P. v. PMNC, 254
A.D.2d 447, 679 N.Y.S.2d 312 (2d Dep’t 1998) (denying motion to disqualify);
see generally ABA Formal Opinion No. 95-390 (1995) (no automatic disqualification
when a law firm opposes a corporate client’s affiliate); N.Y. County
Opinion 684 (1991), 1991 WL 755940 (attorney may, under certain circumstances,
accept employment in a matter adverse to a subsidiary of a corporate client
if the adverse action would not materially affect the corporate client’s
interests).
We would not require a law firm to maintain records showing every corporate
affiliate of every current client. However, if a law firm frequently represents
corporations that belong to large corporate families, then the firm should
have some system for alerting the firm to potential conflicts with the members
of the corporate client’s family. One possibility is to explore the corporate
family tree of proposed new adversaries to determine whether the adversary
is related to other current clients of the firm. This search may require the
law firm to maintain its own database of corporate family members; or the firm
may decide to use a commercial service for that purpose; or the firm may directly
ask its current clients. If the firm discovers a potential conflict with a
corporate family member, the firm can conduct the appropriate research to determine
whether the current client’s consent is necessary. Not all law firms
need such a system, but some kind of system will be necessary to render effective
conflict-checking assistance to firms whose clients have many affiliates, subsidiaries,
and other corporate relatives. (The same research will often be required to
determine whether a proposed engagement will create a conflict with a former
client – see the discussion of former client conflicts below.)
(b) Corporate constituents.
When a law firm represents an entity, DR 5-109(a) provides that the law firm “is
the lawyer for the organization and not for any of the constituents.” The
first sentence of EC 5-18 of the Code is even more explicit: “A lawyer
employed or retained by a corporation or similar entity owes allegiance to
the entity and not to a shareholder, director, officer, employee, representative,
or other person connected with the entity.”
Nevertheless, especially when a law firm represents a small or closely held
corporation with few shareholders, or when the law firm appears on behalf of
individual officers or employees but bills the corporate client for the legal
services, an attorney-client relationship does or may develop—intentionally
or unintentionally—between the law firm and one or more individual constituents
of the entity. See, e.g., Rosman v. Shapiro, 653 F. Supp. 1441 (S.D.N.Y. 1987)
(50% shareholder of a closely held corporation was a client of law firm that
represented the corporation); Cooke v. Laidlaw, Adams & Peck, Inc., 126
A.D.2d 453, 510 N.Y.S.2d 597 (1st Dep’t 1987) (corporate officer was
considered client of law firm that represented corporation because law firm
appeared on behalf of officer in an SEC proceeding). Accordingly, a law firm
that represents corporate clients may need a system for determining whether
the law firm has an attorney-client relationship with individual constituents
of a client organization and, if so, should add the names of those clients
to its records database.
(c) Trade association members.
A law firm that represents a trade association ordinarily represents only the
trade association and not the members of the trade association. However, an
attorney-client relationship between the law firm and a member may arise if
a member provides the law firm with confidential information. In that instance,
the law firm will be restricted in its freedom to oppose the member. See, e.g.,
Glueck v. Jonathan Logan, Inc., 653 F.2d 746 (2d Cir. 1981) (trade association
member may be a “vicarious” client); Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v.
Kerr-McGee Corp., 580 F.2d 1311 (7th Cir. 1978) (a client is no longer merely
a person who walks through the door); ABA Formal Opinion 92-365 (1992) (whether
a lawyer for a trade association also represents members of the association
is a question of fact). If a law firm represents a trade association, its conflict-checking
system should enable attorneys to determine whether members of the trade association
are also clients. If so, the law firm should add the member’s name to
the records identifying the firm’s clients.
2. Conflicts with former clients.
(a) The law firm’s own former clients.
Under DR 5-108(a) (entitled “Conflict of Interest—Former Client”),
except with the consent of a former client after full disclosure, or in compliance
with the special provisions of DR 9-101(b) for former public servants, a lawyer
who has formerly represented a client in a matter shall not thereafter “represent
another person in the same or a substantially related matter in which that
person’s interests are materially adverse to the interests of the former
client.” In short, absent the former client’s informed consent,
or absent an information screen and other procedures mandated by DR 9-101(b)
for conflicts involving former public servants, a lawyer may not oppose a former
client in the same or a substantially related matter.
Because conflicts with former clients are common, we think every law firm must
have a system for discovering such conflicts. If the law firm consistently
maintains its database of clients and former clients, then checking each proposed
engagement against that list should be adequate. If a probable adverse party
turns out to be one of the firm’s former clients, the firm will know
that it should look further into the situation to see whether the former client’s
consent is required.
Unfortunately, it will not always be clear whether a particular person is a
current client or a former client. See, e.g., Oxford Sys. Inc. v. CellPro,
Inc. 45 F. Supp. 2d 1055 (W.D. Wash. 1999); SWS Financial Fund A v. Salomon
Bros., Inc., 790 F. Supp. 1392 (N.D. Ill. 1992); Lama Holding Co. v. Shearman & Sterling,
758 F. Supp. 159 (S.D.N.Y. 1991). This is not the place for a comprehensive
discussion of the factors that will enable a law firm to distinguish between
current clients and former clients, or to tell when a current client has become
a former client.
However, to provide effective assistance to the firm in avoiding conflicts
with current clients, a law firm’s conflict-checking system should include
some means of determining whether a client remains a current client or has
become a former client.
(b) The former clients of laterals.
When a lawyer moves from one private law firm to another private law firm,
the clients that the lawyer personally represented at his or her prior law
firm are potential sources of conflict for the new law firm. See, e.g., Kassis
v. Teachers Ins. and Annuity Ass’n, 93 N.Y.2d 611, 695 N.Y.S. 2d 515
(1999) (disqualifying a firm that hired a lawyer who had actively worked on
litigation in which the old and new firms were opposing counsel, where the
litigation was still pending when the lawyer changed firms); N.Y. State Opinion
723 (1999) (discussing the DR 5-108); (N.Y. State Opinion 720 (1999), 1999
WL 692571, at *2 (“[W]e believe that the intent of [DR 5-105(e)] can
only be effected if a firm adds to its system information about the representations
of lawyers who join the firm.”). Under DR 5-108(b), absent the former
client’s informed consent, a law firm that hires a lateral may be disqualified
from acting adversely to a client of the lateral’s former law firm in
a matter substantially related to the former firm’s representation of
that client if the lateral, while at the former firm, “acquired information
protected by DR 4-101(b) that is material to the matter,” even if the
lateral never personally represented the client in question at the former firm.
Accordingly, since DR 5-105(e) specifically applies only to prior engagements
of the law firm itself, if a law firm hires lawyers laterally from other law
firms, the hiring firm should include in its conflict-checking system a means
for determining which clients the lateral lawyer personally represented while
at his or her former firm. At the same time, while it is not required under
DR 5-505(e), it would be prudent for the firm to consider what, if any, other
steps it might take with regard to other matters about which the lateral lawyer
acquired protected information while at the former firm. In either event, the
information from the lateral’s former firm should be obtained only insofar
as it is possible to do so in a manner that is consistent with the lateral’s
obligations to his or her former firm and its clients. See, e.g., N.Y. State
Opinion 720 (1999) 1999 WL 692571 (discussing lateral’s duties to protect
former clients’ confidences and secrets, as well as contractual or fiduciary
restrictions the lateral may be subject to regarding the disclosure of information
proprietary to the lawyer’s former firm).
Types of Conflicts Not Addressed in This Opinion
The subject of conflicts of interest is vast, and we have discussed only
a small portion of the field. There are many other areas that we have
not discussed but that law firms may have to consider when checking
for conflicts pursuant to DR 5-105(e). These include (a) conflicts
arising in class actions; (b) conflicts that arise when lawyers in
a firm invest in client ventures (either directly or in lieu of fees – see
ABCNY Opinion 2000-3 (2000), 2000 WL 33769162; (c) conflicts that arise
when lawyers in the firm serve on a client’s Board of Directors;
(d) conflicts that arise in connection with an insurance triangle;
(e) conflicts with nonlawyers (such as paralegals and secretaries),
especially those who have previously worked at another law firm (including
the legal department of a corporate adversary); (f) conflicts arising
from the use of temporary lawyers who concurrently work or have in
the past worked at other law firms; (g) conflicts that arise when lawyers
represent or are represented by other lawyers; (h) conflicts that arise
when a current client is an adverse witness; (i) conflicts involving
former public servants; and (j) the special conflict issues that may
arise in connection with beauty contests or other business development
activities. Each firm should survey the extent to which these special
varieties of conflicts are pertinent to the firm’s practice and
should adopt measures to detect and deal with them.
Conclusion
Under DR 5-105(e) of the New York Code of Professional Responsibility, all
law firms must keep records and must have policies and systems in place to
check for conflicts of interest to the extent necessary to render effective
assistance to the lawyers in the firm in complying with New York’s rule
on imputed conflicts, DR 5-105(d). The records each firm must keep, and the
policies and systems each firm must implement, will depend on each law firm’s
particular nature, structure, practice, history, personnel, and other factors.
However, all law firms must keep certain minimum written or electronic records
of each new or prospective engagement and must consult those records when checking
proposed new engagements for conflicts of interest.
Issued: October, 2003
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