From: | Barbara Legate <blegate@legate.ca> |
To: | obligations@uwo.ca |
Date: | 13/11/2009 17:59:42 UTC |
Subject: | RE: legal ethics |
In practice, there are multiple dilemmas.
Joint representation of defendants by one
firm where one defendant may be at fault and the others are not; impact on
discovery obligations; See Chainauskas v Barnett OCA
Agreements between defendants not to examine
one another to avoid tipping the plaintiff to knowledge of one about the fault
of the other;
Contingency fee agreements are a very
difficult issue in particular in medmal, where risk is high, and s. 116.1 of
the Courts of Justice Act of
Unrepresented plaintiffs dealing with
insurers: counsel knows the person is entitled to more than is on offer and her
client will not permit a recommendation that the person retain counsel.
Barbara
From: DAVID CHEIFETZ
[mailto:davidcheifetz@rogers.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2009
8:03 PM
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: Re: legal ethics
In the litigation process, discovery production is an
area fraught with potential ethical slips and what could be ethical dilemmas
for the lawyer, since complete disclosure of what could be relevant to the
issues ultimately turns on the integrity and competence of the
lawyer.
David
From: Russell
Brown <rsbrown@ualberta.ca>
To: Benjamin Zipursky
<bzipursky@law.fordham.edu>; Vaughan.Black@dal.ca; obligations@uwo.ca
Sent: Tue, November 10, 2009
9:49:23 AM
Subject: Re: legal ethics
I think Ben's examples are all useful. In the Canadian context, I deal
with his sixth point in my torts class in light of Toneguzzo-Norvell v. Savein,
[1994] 1 S.C.R. 114, where the SCC considered a trial judgment which increased
the award for the female plaintiff on the basis of the "positive contingency"
that the wage disparity will someday disappear.
To Ben's list, I would also add the conflicting duties (as between insured and
insurer) owed by defence counsel when coverage is an issue. (My
colleague, Barbara Billingsley, has written on this - see (2000) Can. Bar Rev.
221-51).
Russ
----- Original Message ----- From: "Benjamin Zipursky" <bzipursky@law.fordham.edu>
To: <Vaughan.Black@dal.ca>; <obligations@uwo.ca>
Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2009 7:34 AM
Subject: Re: legal ethics
> Your question about how to integrate legal ethics and torts is of great
interest to me.
> I think there are a number of legal ethics issues that can be brought into
a torts class, although I confess that I do not integrate them as well or as
consistently as I think I should. Here is a sampling of some of the
tort/legal ethics issues that I think are of significant interest even apart
from the pedagogical directive you have received. They are, to different
degrees, possible and valuable to bring into class. [N.B. Some will cross
national borders better than others.]
>
> 1. Duties to non-clients in legal malpractice claims. It is not just
intended beneficiaries of wills who now sue lawyers for negligently drafting
the will. There is a range of cases, including also those providing
opinion letters for a transaction in which non-clients are involved.
These raise interesting conflict of interest questions in legal ethics and they
raise interesting questions on the "duty" element of negligence.
>
> 2. Duties of candor to the tribunal in settlement of a personal injury
claim. The American classic Spalding v. Zimmerman , 116 N.W.2d 704 (
>
> 3. Aggregate litigation and settlement. This happens to be an issue
currently of great importance to the American Law Institute and its Aggregate
litigation project. As is well known, the asbestos litigation in the U.S.
has been difficult to bring to any closure because of conflicts of interest
problems that were said (by the U.S. Supreme Court, rightly in my view) to
present an obstacle to class certification under the Federal Rules. Less
well known, but currently more important, is the cluster of legal ethics
problems that bedevil lawyers for both sides when they try to settle non-class
aggregate litigation, like the Vioxx litigation. The big question is
whether the system does or should permit a plaintiff's law firm that has a raft
of 1,000 personaly injury clients -- not part of a class -- from making a
package deal with the defendant without really providing each client any say in
whether he or she accepts the terms of the settlement. The obvious answer
is tha!
> t this is impermissible, as ethics rules now stand. The interesting
question is whether lawyers should be permitted to have their clients authorize
such settlement in advance (with certain conditions), when they sign a retainer
agreement.
>
> 4. A variety of questions about the morality of extended motion practice
and onerous discovery requests and claims of privilege will be more easily
appreciated in torts case, in my view, than in many other contexts.
>
> 5. There are currently, in the
>
> 6. Perhaps this is more political and constitutional than ethical, but I
think it is of interest to students: should a defense lawyer presenting
actuarial testimony about diminished (or eliminated) future earnings of an
injured (or deceased) plaintiff put forward statistics that are gender-based or
race-based (e.g., plaintiff Smith would not have earned as much as a physician
as the average in the twenty professional years she lost because of the injury
defendant inflicted, because women physicians earn less than average).
Most defense lawyers will be careful not to use such words, of course, but
their experts may well provide actuarial data that in essence makes the same
point.
>
> I hope this is of some help.
>
> Regards,
> Ben Zipursky
>
>
>
>
>>>>
> Colleagues, I would be interested in hearing suggestions of fruitful
avenues for
> introducing questions of legal ethics and professional responsibility in a
torts
> course.
>
> When I used to teach contracts I found this pretty easy. For instance one
might
> identify a contractual term that would be ineffective against consumers
and
> then raise the question of whether it would be ethical for a contract
drafter
> to include such a term in a standard-form contract (knowing that some
consumers
> would read the term and think they were bound by it, even though they were
not).
>
> The institution I teach at says that I am supposed to bring discussions of
> lawyers' ethics into the classroom in my substantive courses, but in my
> teaching of torts (which mostly involves analysis of appellate cases in
the
> tort of negligence) I have not found it easy to identify good occasions
for
> this.
>
> Regards,
> vb
>
>
>
>