Risk Management
Have license, will travel, Part II:
Preserve clients' rights when you change firms
Part I of this series described the long and sometimes winding trail
of risk left behind when lawyers move to another firm or change career
paths. In this installment, learn how to make your departure smoother
for your clients.
By Ann Massie Nelson
Your clients should never feel like forgotten baggage on your way out
the door to a new firm. To make a smooth transition, keep in mind that
clients have certain rights, some compelled by professional
responsibility rules, others by common courtesy.
Madison family law practitioners Linda Balisle and Linda Roberson,
who left one firm to form another, and Sally E. Anderson, who practiced
in two Milwaukee firms before joining Wisconsin Lawyers Mutual Insurance
Co. as claims counsel, shared their experiences for the development of
this client "bill of rights."
When you leave your law firm for new ventures, your clients have the
right to:
- Know you are leaving. Ideally, you and the firm you are
leaving will carefully script a joint letter to current and former
clients, giving them reasonable notice of your departure. You are not
obligated to tell them why you are leaving the firm; you can simply say
you are leaving to "pursue new opportunities." If the legal matter is in
litigation, you will need to ask the court for permission to withdraw.
(See SCR 20:1.16.) Reinforce that the client has retained the
firm - not you individually - and that the firm will continue to serve
the client until he or she directs the firm to do otherwise. "While the
client is the client of the firm, in reality, clients often believe they
have hired the individual lawyer," Roberson says.
- Select other counsel. Your client is not limited to
choosing between you and the firm, a fact that could be overlooked when
communicating your departure to clients. Tell clients, "Your legal
matter has not concluded. You will continue to need legal
representation." Some lawyers, particularly sole practitioners who don't
want to leave clients in a lurch, feel obligated to refer their clients
to another attorney. Be aware that you could be accused of negligent
referral if your successor acts negligently. Rather than recommending
one lawyer, refer clients to three or four lawyers or the State
Bar's Lawyer Referral &
Information Service, at (800) 362-9082.
- The contents of their file. You know that the color-coded,
identity-encrypted, punched, bound, legal-size document in your locked
file cabinet is the client's property. Odds are, the client believes the
file belongs to you. In your letter, tell the client he or she owns the
file and may choose who maintains custody of it. For example, "Your file
and all original documents related to your legal matter belong to you.
You may pick up your file at the firm's reception desk any time.
Alternatively, I would be happy to send the file to another lawyer, with
your written authority and at your direction." Get a signed receipt from
whomever picks up the file. Keep copies of the file (or at minimum your
work product and all correspondence) to document your work in the event
that the client later claims you were negligent.
- Progress. Your departure should not cause undue delay in
the client's legal representation, Anderson says. If you are
transferring the file to the client or another attorney, highlight the
immediate obligations and deadlines that must be fulfilled.
- Confidentiality. Attorney-client privilege and
confidentiality rules continue, even after the attorney-client
relationship ends. Make certain when referring client matters or
transferring files you don't reveal information that would compromise
the client's interests. (See SCR 20:1.6.)
- Expect you to fulfill obligations to third parties. For
example, if you hire expert witnesses, surveyors, appraisers, court
reporters or others, the client can expect you to pay for services
rendered on the client's behalf. Likewise, if you are holding clients'
money in escrow, you need to distribute the funds in the time and manner
you promised.
- Be billed fairly. Establish a "stop point" on billing for
continuing matters to ensure that clients are not double billed, Balisle
and Roberson recommend. For example, you might write, "All legal
services provided and expenses incurred before April 30, 1998, will
appear on an invoice you will receive from Law Firm A and will be
payable to that firm." Your time spent talking with successor counsel
and any costs resulting from your departure (photocopies, telephone and
delivery charges) are your responsibility, not the client's.
- Approve any fee-splitting agreements. Who bills for what is
a "spicy question" in contingency fee cases, says Anderson. Contingent
fees may be split between law firms in proportion to the services
performed, or by written agreement with the client when the lawyers
agree to be jointly responsible for the representation. The division of
responsibility and fees needs to be specified in a written agreement
between the firms, Anderson says. (See SCR 20:1.5.)
Ann Massie Nelson is director of communications at
Wisconsin Lawyers Mutual Insurance Co. Past risk management columns
appear on the WILMIC web site, with
permission of the State Bar of Wisconsin.
- Expect that your departure will not create a conflict of
interest. Your knowledge of clients' affairs cannot be erased when
your name is removed from the firm letterhead. The hazards of lateral
transfers are greatest in small to mid-size firms, where a new associate
or partner's mere presence could disqualify the firm from representing
some long-term clients. "Both firms must write to the client, explain
the situation, and request the client's permission to continue
representation," Anderson notes. Before making a lateral transfer, the
lawyer and the hiring firm should examine each other's client lists to
identify potential conflicts of interest and confidentiality concerns.
See the rule and the comments to SCR 20:1.10 (Lawyers Moving Between
Firms) for a discussion of vicarious disqualification.
- Expect you to maintain adequate insurance protection. While
malpractice may be the last thing on your mind when making a life
change, your clients should not lose their home or life savings as a
result of errors or omissions in your representation. Make sure there
are no gaps in your professional liability insurance protection when
transferring to another firm or leaving private practice. (See Part I of
this series in the December 1997 Wisconsin Lawyer, page 29,
which discusses "tails" and prior acts coverage.)
Finally, go gently with clients. People come to you to solve their
problems, not become a part of yours. "Your first consideration is to
protect your client's interests," says Balisle. "It's not just the
professional way to approach the situation, it's the pragmatic way. We
have nothing if we don't have satisfied clients."
Watch the June issue for the next installment: Exit interviews.
Wisconsin
Lawyer