(Approved April 25, 1997)
Issue: May an attorney engage in a
direct solicitation, by mail and for pecuniary gain, that advertises
mediation and arbitration services?
Opinion: A solicitation that is limited
to alternative dispute resolution services is not prohibited, provided
that the solicitation makes it clear to all parties that the alternative
dispute resolution services are not legal services and that no attorney-client
relationship will be established.
Analysis: An attorney proposes to
engage in providing mediation and arbitration services and advertises
those services by mail. The first sentence of the attorney's letter
to a prospective client would read: "Recently, you entered into
legal proceedings with another party in connection with a dispute which
you have." The solicitation recites a number of disadvantages to
litigation and compares them with the advantages of alternative dispute
resolution (ADR). The solicitation also identifies the attorney as a
"licensed Attorney with 14 years of experience in business, employment
and contracting law as well as litigation experience," and it explains
the ADR services that are available through the attorney's business.
Under some circumstances, the Utah Rules of Professional
Conduct prohibit attorneys from making a direct, in-person solicitation
of clients if done to "solicit professional employment."1The
mailing in question is a written communication by an attorney, directed
to specific individuals who are parties in pending litigation. However,
our inquiry into whether such a letter is governed by Rule 7.3
turns on whether the "professional employment" the attorney
seeks includes the type of service this rule intended to regulate. Because
we conclude it is not, we need not reach the question of whether the
letter would otherwise violate Rule 7.3.
Under Utah statute, neither formal legal education
nor membership in the Utah State Bar is required to provide mediation,
arbitration or similar services.2It
follows that ADR services are not considered by the Utah Legislature
to be legal services or the practice of law.
The drafters of Rule 7.3
apparently intended that the direct solicitation described in the rule
be prohibited only when legal services are solicited. In this regard,
the language of Rule 7.3 might seem
ambiguous, as it prohibits an attorney from soliciting "professional
employment from a prospective client" without including such phrases
as "practice of law" or "legal services." However,
the comments to Rule 7.3 and the
context of the rule indicate an intent that the prohibition be limited
to the solicitation of legal services in a direct relationship where
the attorney, as advocate, represents the client, and that the rule's
reference to "professional employment" would not be construed
to include non-legal services such as arbitration and mediation.
We must, however, make two cautionary comments. First,
because the solicitation at issue here was conducted by an attorney,
we call attention to Utah Ethics Advisory Opinion No. 151.3That
opinion reviewed the conduct of a lawyer who had been appointed by an
insurance company as an independent appraiser of the property of an
insured of the company. The lawyer also provided legal services for
the insurance company on unrelated matters. In holding that the lawyer's
conduct as an appraiser did not constitute legal services subject to
the Rules of Professional Conduct, the opinion stated that:
If the lawyer does not make it clear to all parties
who may be otherwise misled that the appraisal services are not legal
services and that a client-lawyer relationship is not being established,
the lawyer will be governed by the Rules of Professional Conduct in
the provision of appraisal services to the extent the insurance company
client of the insured might reasonably believe that a client-lawyer
relationship exists between the lawyer and the insurance company for
the performance of the appraisal services.
Here, the direct solicitation letter is being sent
to parties involved in litigation. Many of these parties may be particularly
vulnerable to the implication that, because an attorney is offering
alternative dispute resolution services, they are being asked to employ
an attorney for legal services under which an attorney-client relationship
would be established. Unless such an implication is clearly dispelled,
the attorney's services in the alternative dispute resolution context
would be subject to the Rules of Professional Conduct.
Second, to the extent that the mailing at issue would
be sent to persons involved in an ADR program under the auspices of
a Utah court, it would be subject to the Utah Rules of Court-annexed
Alternative Dispute Resolution (the "ADR Rules"). The ADR
Rules provide a Code of Ethics for ADR Providers, under which "[a]
provider should not directly contact a party to solicit the selection
of that provider in a particular case if the party is represented by
counsel."4
The ADR Rules have been established by the Judicial
Council and are administered by the Administrative Office of the Courts
under the supervision of the Director of Dispute Resolution Programs.5While
a violation of the ADR Rules may not, of itself, constitute a violation
of the Rules of Professional Conduct, we must caution persons issuing
solicitations in the ADR context to be mindful of the rules governing
ADR providers-particularly in connection with Utah's Court-annexed ADR
program.6
Conclusion: Provided that the proposed
mailing is modified to make it clear to all parties that legal services
are not being offered and that no attorney-client relationship will
be established, the mailing would not violate the Utah Rules of Professional
Conduct's limitations on direct solicitation of prospective clients
for legal services. The person initiating the mailing should also decide
whether the Utah Rules of Court-annexed Alternative Dispute Resolution
apply to the proposed mailing.
Footnotes
1.A lawyer
may not solicit, in-person, professional employment from a prospective
client with whom the lawyer has no family or prior professional relationship,
when a significant motive for the lawyer's doing so is the lawyer's
pecuniary gain. The term "in-person" includes in-person and
telephonic communication directed to a specific recipient, but does
not include letters addressed or advertising circulars distributed generally
to persons not known to need legal services of the kind provided by
the lawyer in a particular matter, but who are so situated that they
might in general find such services useful.
Utah Rules of Professional Conduct 7.3(a).
2.Applicants
for certification as an alternative dispute resolution provider shall:
(1) submit an application in a form as prescribed by
the division;
(2) pay a fee as determined by the department under Section 63-38-3.2;
(3) be of good moral character; and
(4) complete a program of education or training, or both, in ADR or
have demonstrated sufficient experience in ADR, as determined by the
division in a collaboration with the board.
Utah Code Ann § 58-39a-5 (1996). In addition,
Utah Code Ann § 78-31b-5(3) provides:
The rules of the Judicial Council shall include provisions:
. . . .
(h) to establish the qualifications of ADR providers
for each form of ADR procedure including that:
(i) an ADR provider may, but need not be, a certified
ADR provider pursuant to Title 58, Chapter 39a, Alternative Dispute
Resolution Providers Certification Act; and
(ii) formal education in any particular field may not, by itself,
be either a prerequisite or sufficient qualification to serve as
an ADR provider under the program authorized by this act; . . .
.
3.1994 WL
631268 (Utah St. Bar).
4.Utah R.
Court-annexed ADR, Canon I, ¶(h)(1995).
5.Utah Code
Ann. § 78-31b-5(1)(1996).
6.See
also Utah Rules of Professional Conduct 8.4(d),
under which it is professional misconduct to "[e]ngage in conduct
that is prejudicial to the administration of justice."
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