Vol. 77, No. 12, December
2004
Pro Bono; Pro Lawyer
Many Wisconsin lawyers provide pro bono service, but many who want to
help cannot because they lack insurance. The Bar's new professional
liability insurance contract helps fill that gap.
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
The other day I signed a contract. Not an unusual event.
Over the years, I have signed innumerable contracts. But this one is
different. This contract helps Wisconsin attorneys expand their
commitment to provide pro bono legal services to indigent people. This
insurance for our Volunteer Lawyers Program - a project of the Bar's Pro
Bono Initiative - provides all lawyers with professional liability
insurance when they accept pro bono referrals from the State Bar or
volunteer at a State Bar-sponsored pro bono project. This includes
retired and semi-retired attorneys, and part-time and stay-at-home
lawyers who might not necessarily carry insurance or high-enough limits.
The largest groups covered under this policy likely will be government
lawyers and in-house corporate counsel who do not have their own
insurance policies. An endorsement on the policy even makes the State
Bar policy the primary insurance for volunteer attorneys who already
have coverage through their own firms.
Signing this insurance contract fulfilled a long-standing objective
of the Pro Bono Initiative developed by the State Bar's Legal Assistance
Committee and our pro bono coordinator. Many Wisconsin lawyers provide
pro bono service, but many who desire to help cannot because they lack
insurance. This new professional liability insurance contract helps fill
that gap.
The State Bar's Pro Bono Initiative coordinates, expands, and
publicizes opportunities for lawyers to provide legal services to
indigent people without being limited to matters that meet Legal
Services Corporation restrictions on income and case types. Three pilot
programs currently are under way, one each in the first, fifth, and
seventh judicial districts. However, any Wisconsin lawyer taking cases
or providing service through a State Bar-sponsored legal clinic is
eligible to receive coverage under the State Bar insurance.
This insurance for volunteer attorneys is similar to the professional
liability insurance the State Bar provides to attorneys who pick up the
pieces when a lawyer abandons his or her practice. Until about 10 years
ago, whenever a sole practitioner abandoned his or her practice, whether
through death, illness, or disappearance, local attorneys often took the
responsible action of winding up the attorney's practice. However, they
did so at their own risk or at the risk of their liability coverage. At
the request of the State Bar, the Wisconsin Supreme Court ordered the
creation of the Lawyers Assistance Corporation to provide professional
liability insurance coverage to attorneys appointed by the circuit court
as trustees of an abandoned practice. The State Bar pays the premiums
for both insurance programs so that clients' rights can be preserved and
lawyers who are engaged in this work can have their well-being
preserved.
For more information about the Pro Bono Initiative or how to use this
new insurance benefit, contact attorney Jeffery Brown, the State Bar's
pro bono coordinator, at (608) 250-6177 or jbrown@wisbar.org. For information
about the Lawyers Assistance Corporation, contact Shell Goar, the
Wisconsin Lawyers Assistance Program coordinator, at (608) 250-6172 or
sgoar@wisbar.org.
Wisconsin Lawyer