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ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY
OF NEW YORK COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
Year 1994 Ethics Opinions
THE ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
FORMAL OPINION 1994-9
COMMITTEE ON
PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
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July 27, 1994
ACTION: FORMAL OPINION
TOPIC: Reasonableness of fees; preparation of bills;
duty of supervision
OPINION:
DIGEST: A lawyer may delegate
final authority for the preparation of fee bills to a non-lawyer,
but remains ultimately responsible as a matter of ethics for any
billing improprieties and for the reasonableness of the fee
charged.
CODE: DRs 1-104(A), 2-106(A),
2-106(B); ECs 2-17, 3-6.
QUESTION
May a law firm delegate full
discretion and authority for the preparation of fee bills to a
non-lawyer employee?
OPINION
A law firm represents insureds in
personal injury actions at the behest of an insurance company. At
present, the firm's practice is periodically to send bills,
signed by a partner, to the insurance company for its
professional services. The firm employs a non-lawyer who prepares
the bills based upon the attorneys' time sheets, proofreads them,
and sends them to the client once a partner has signed them. The
firm now wishes to dispense with attorney review and signature of
all of the bills, and asks whether it is ethically permissible
for the non-lawyer employee, whose title is "supervisory
billing clerk," to sign some of the firm's bills in the firm
name. This practice is not required by the insurance company or
by any other third party or client.
The firm states that
"supervisory billing clerk is familiar with some of the
common mistakes that attorneys make on billing sheets and with
the amount of time with which some tasks undertaken by attorneys
can be billed," and notes that the clerk has "exhibited
maturity, good judgment, hard work and trustworthiness."
Essentially, the supervisory billing clerk will be preparing and
issuing bills based on his or her own discretion and, in most
cases, without any direct attorney involvement. Decisions as to
the propriety of the bill would be left to the clerk's judgment.
No attorney would be involved in the billing process unless the
clerk saw the need to ask a question.
It is a fundamental precept of
professional ethics that no lawyer may "enter into an
agreement for, charge or collect an illegal or excessive
fee." DR 2-106(A). The determination of fees and the
rendition of bills is an important aspect of the fiduciary
relationship between attorney and client, not a mere ministerial
task. As EC 2-17 counsels:
The determination of a proper fee
requires consideration of the interests of both client and
lawyer. A lawyer should not charge more than a reasonable fee,
for excessive cost of legal service would deter non-lawyers from
using the legal system to protect their rights and to minimize
and resolve disputes. Furthermore, an excessive charge abuses the
professional relationship between lawyer and client.
See also ABA 93-379 (1993)
(lawyers have a duty to disclose to the client the basis for
future billing as well as "to render statements to the
client that adequately apprise the client as to how that basis
for billing has been applied"). This duty is not diminished
when a third-party is paying the bills.
Any doubt that lawyers are
ultimately responsible for the billing process is resolved by DR
2-106(B), which explains that "[a] fee is excessive when,
after a review of the facts, a lawyer of ordinary prudence would
be left with a definite and firm conviction that the fee is in
excess of a reasonable fee" (emphasis supplied). The Code
thus expressly contemplates that the reasonableness or
excessiveness of legal fees will be judged through the eyes of an
objective attorney, not of a non-lawyer.
Lawyers may delegate tasks to
non-lawyers, however, consistent with their ethical obligations.
As EC 3-6 teaches:
A lawyer often delegates tasks to
clerks, secretaries, and other lay persons. Such delegation is
proper if the lawyer maintains a direct relationship with the
client, supervises the delegated work, and has complete
professional responsibility for the work product.
While a lawyer or law firm may
delegate the task of preparing and sending bills to clients and
third-party payers (the physical signing of bills has no
independent ethical significance), some measure of supervision is
essential. If a bill rendered by the supervisory billing clerk
were found to violate DR 2-106(A), for example, the lawyers would
personally risk the imposition of professional discipline. DR
1-104(A) confirms this and emphasizes the ultimate responsibility
of a lawyer for work delegated to non-lawyers:
A lawyer shall be responsible for
. . . conduct of a non-lawyer employed or retained by or
associated with the lawyer that would be a violation of the
Disciplinary Rules if engaged in by a lawyer if . . . (1) [t]he
lawyer orders the conduct; or (2) [t]he lawyer has supervisory
authority over the . . . non-lawyer, and knows or should have
known of the conduct at a time when its consequences can be
avoided or mitigated but fails to take reasonable remedial
action.
For these reasons, the Committee
concludes that although it would not be improper per se for a
lawyer or law firm to delegate final billing authority to a
non-lawyer, ultimate responsibility for improprieties will still
reside with the attorneys in the firm. We believe it would be
imprudent to permit a non-lawyer to have unsupervised and
unlimited discretion regarding sensitive matters of judgment such
as the propriety of attorney time entries, the propriety of
charging for certain legal services, and the reasonableness of
the legal fee being charged given that, in effect, the lawyers
are the guarantors of the end product's compliance with
applicable standards. That being said, it is for the law firm to
determine how, in the circumstances, to best exercise its
obligation to supervise the non-lawyer billing clerk so that his
or her conduct in rendering bills comports with the Code.
CONCLUSION
A lawyer may delegate final
authority for the preparation of fee bills to a non-lawyer, but
remains ultimately responsible as a matter of ethics for any
billing improprieties and for the reasonableness of the fee
charged.
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