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Rule 2.2. Intermediary.
(a) A lawyer may act as intermediary between clients
if:
(1) The lawyer consults with each client concerning
the implications of the common representation, including the advantages
and risks involved, and the effect of the attorney-client privileges,
and obtains each client's consent to the common representation; and
(2) The lawyer reasonably believes that the matter
can be resolved on terms compatible with each client's best interest,
that each client will be able to make adequately informed decisions
in the matter and that there is little risk of material prejudice
to the interests of any of the clients if the contemplated resolution
is unsuccessful; and
(3) The lawyer reasonably believes that the common
representation can be undertaken impartially and without improper
effect on other responsibilities the lawyer has to any of the clients;
and
(4) All requirements of Rules 1.7 and 1.8 are met.
(b) While acting as intermediary, the lawyer shall
consult with each client concerning the decisions to be made and the
considerations relevant in making them, so that each client can make
adequately informed decisions.
(c) A lawyer shall withdraw as intermediary if any
of the clients so requests, or if any of the conditions stated in paragraph
(a) is no longer satisfied. Upon withdrawal, the lawyer shall not continue
to represent any of the clients in the matter that was the subject of
the intermediation.
COMMENT
A lawyer acts as intermediary under this Rule when
the lawyer represents two or more parties with potentially conflicting
interests. A key factor in defining the relationship is whether the
parties share responsibility for the lawyer's fee, but the common representation
may be inferred from other circumstances. Because confusion can arise
as to the lawyer's role where each party is not separately represented,
it is important that the lawyer make clear the relationship.
The Rule does not apply to a lawyer acting as arbitrator
or mediator between or among parties who are not clients of the lawyer,
even where the lawyer has been appointed with the concurrence of the
parties. In performing such a role the lawyer may be subject to applicable
codes of ethics, such as the Code of Ethics for Arbitration in Commercial
Disputes prepared by a joint Committee of the American Bar Association
and the American Arbitration Association.
A lawyer acts as intermediary in seeking to establish
or adjust a relationship between clients on an amicable and mutually
advantageous basis; for example, in helping to organize a business in
which two or more clients are entrepreneurs, working out the financial
reorganization of an enterprise in which two or more clients have an
interest, arranging a property distribution in settlement of an estate
or mediating a dispute between clients. The lawyer seeks to resolve
potentially conflicting interests by developing the parties' mutual
interests. The alternative can be that each party may have to obtain
separate representation, with the possibility in some situations of
incurring additional cost, complication or even litigation. Given these
and other relevant factors, all the clients may prefer that the lawyer
act as intermediary.
In considering whether to act as intermediary between
clients, a lawyer should be mindful that if the intermediation fails
the result can be additional cost, embarrassment and recrimination.
In some situations the risk of failure is so great that intermediation
is plainly impossible. For example, a lawyer cannot undertake common
representation of clients between whom contentious litigation is imminent
or who contemplate contentious negotiations. More generally, if the
relationship between the parties has already assumed definite antagonism,
the possibility that the clients' interests can be adjusted by intermediation
ordinarily is not very good.
The appropriateness of intermediation can depend on
its form. Forms of intermediation range from informal arbitration, where
each client's case is presented by the respective client and the lawyer
decides the outcome, to mediation, to common representation where the
clients' interests are substantially though not entirely compatible.
One form may be appropriate in circumstances where another would not.
Other relevant factors are whether the lawyer subsequently will represent
both parties on a continuing basis and whether the situation involves
creating a relationship between the parties or terminating one.
Confidentiality and Privilege
A particularly important factor in determining the
appropriateness of intermediation is the effect on client-lawyer confidentiality
and the attorney-client privilege. In a common representation, the lawyer
is still required both to keep each client adequately informed and to
maintain confidentiality of information relating to the representation.
See Rules 1.4 and 1.6. Complying with both requirements while acting
as intermediary requires a delicate balance. If the balance cannot be
maintained, the common representation is improper. With regard to the
attorney-client privilege, the prevailing rule is that as between commonly
represented clients the privilege does not attach. Hence, it must be
assumed that if litigation eventuates between the clients, the privilege
will not protect any such communications, and the clients should be
so advised.
Since the lawyer is required to be impartial between
commonly represented clients, intermediation is improper when that impartiality
cannot be maintained. For example, a lawyer who has represented one
of the clients for a long period and in a variety of matters might have
difficulty being impartial between that client and one to whom the lawyer
has only recently been introduced.
Consultation
In acting as intermediary between clients, the lawyer
is required to consult with the clients on the implications of doing
so, and proceed only upon consent based on such a consultation. The
consultation should make clear that the lawyer's role is not that of
partisanship normally expected in other circumstances.
Paragraph (b) is an application of the principle expressed
in Rule 1.4. Where the lawyer is intermediary, the clients ordinarily
must assume greater responsibility for decisions than when each client
is independently represented.
Withdrawal
Common representation does not diminish the rights
of each client in the client-lawyer relationship. Each has the right
to loyal and diligent representation, the right to discharge the lawyer
as stated in Rule 1.14, and the protection of Rule 1.9 concerning obligations
to a former client.
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