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ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
Year 1995 Ethics Opinions
THE ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
FORMAL OPINION 1995-14
COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
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December 29, 1995
ACTION: Formal Opinion
OPINION:
TOPIC: Advertising; Letterhead;
Honorary Degrees.
DIGEST: A lawyer may list honorary
degrees in advertisements and on letterhead. The nature of
honorary degrees, fellowships and similar distinctions, however,
requires that particular care be taken to ensure that their
listing be in a precise manner that will not, either by
affirmative statement or by omission, be misleading.
CODE: DRs 2-101(A), 2-101(B)(5),
2-101(C), DR 2-101(C)(1), 2-102(F), 2-103.
QUESTION
May a lawyer mention honorary
degrees he or she has received in advertisements or on
letterhead?
OPINION
An attorney was awarded an
honorary fellowship in jurisprudence from an educational
institution, and asks whether the degree may be mentioned in his
advertisements and listed on his letterhead.
The issue of the use by lawyers of
academic degrees or distinctions on letterheads or other media
has been addressed by several ethics committees, but the issue of
the treatment of honorary degrees has received surprisingly scant
attention. Also, the rules governing the propriety of listing
academic credentials have changed significantly over the period
during which the opinions on this topic were issued.
Historically, under the former
Canons of Professional Ethics, in effect from 1908 to 1969, the
listing of academic degrees or professional distinctions was not
allowed. Such listing was (with few specified exceptions
involving admiralty and patent practice) held to be improper
advertising under Canon 27. As such, committee opinions at the
time uniformly forbade the mention of academic degrees on
lawyers' professional letterheads. See, e.g., N.Y. City 869
(1969); N.Y. State 105 (1969); ABA Inf. 1001 (1968); ABA Inf.
C-445 (1961). This prohibition was, in one opinion, specifically
extended to honorary degrees. ABA Inf. C-409 (1961).
The rules governing this issue
were changed when the Canons of Professional Ethics were replaced
by the Code of Professional Responsibility. The Code, as adopted
by the New York State Bar Association in 1970, contained two
provisions addressing the provision of information concerning
lawyers' academic degrees. DR 2-101(B)(5), relating to
advertising, provided in pertinent part that "a lawyer may
publish or broadcast, subject to DR 2-103, the following
information . . .: Schools attended, with dates of graduation,
degrees and other scholastic distinctions." DR 2-102(F),
addressed to professional notices, letterheads and signs,
provided that:
Nothing contained herein shall
prohibit a lawyer from using or permitting the use of, in
connection with his name, an earned degree or title derived
therefrom indicating his training in the law.
Committees construing these new
provisions withdrew their earlier opinions prohibiting the use of
degrees and opined that, after the effective date of the Code,
"an earned law degree . . . may be listed following a
lawyer's name on professional cards, announcements, letterheads,
etc." N.Y. City 876 (1971). Accord, ABA Inf. 1151 (1969);
N.Y. State 105(a) (1969). This Committee is aware of no opinions
during this period addressing the use of honorary degrees or
distinctions, or whether such degrees would fall within the
allowance for the use of "earned degrees."
The rules in the Code relating to
publicity and advertising were substantially affected by
amendments in 1978. At that time, both DR 2-101(B)(5) and DR
2-102(F) as set forth above were deleted. The amended Code
contained one provision relating to the listing of degrees and
distinctions, DR 2-101(C)(1), which remains in the Code to this
day. DR 2-101(C)(1) provides, in pertinent part, that in any
advertising or publicity "it is proper to include
information . . . as to education, degrees and other scholastic
distinctions...."
Under this latest Code provision,
committees have opined that it is proper for a lawyer to list on
a letterhead both degrees and distinctions in law, see, e.g.
Philadelphia 86-7; Rhode Island 93-61, and in other fields of
study. See, e.g., Alabama 87-60 (engineer can list
"P.E."); New Jersey 589 (1986) (CPA); Philadelphia
86-171, 172 (physician); New Hampshire 1992-93/8 (1993)
(engineer); Ohio 93-1, 94-3 (lawyer can list degrees in other
fields); South Carolina 93-10 (M.D.). This Committee has stated
that the statement on a law firm's letterhead that a (non-lawyer)
patent agent has a Ph.D degree is "ethically proper if
accurate." N.Y. City 82-19.
While this Committee is unaware of
reported ethics opinions applying the standard of DR 2-101(C)(1)
to honorary degrees, several committees have, in their opinions,
specifically referred to the degrees or distinctions allowed to
be listed as being "earned degrees." Michigan CI-1012
(1984) (lawyer may include designation that indicates an earned
degree, so long as information is not false); Texas 418 (1984)
(lawyer may include list of degrees earned); Iowa 92-93 (1993)
(earned licenses and degrees may appear). The New York State Bar
Association, in an opinion issued after the latest amendments to
the Code on this topic, expressly concluded that the requirement
that a degree be "earned" remains in effect:
The provisions of DR 2-101(C)(1),
as recently amended, permit a lawyer to publicize his
"education, degrees and other scholastic distinctions."
Although the term "degrees" is unqualified, it is clear
that the amended Code intends to perpetuate the concept of an
"earned degree" contained in former subdivision (F) of
DR 2-101, which subdivision was repealed in this State along with
the general revision of the Canon 2 Disciplinary Rules relating
to lawyer advertising....
N.Y. State 488 (1978) (lawyer
cannot list both LL.B. and replacement J.D. degrees, as only one
was "earned"). Under this construction, it could be
argued that the listing of an honorary degree would be improper
in that it is not an "earned" degree.
This Committee, however, does not
agree with the conclusion in N.Y. State 488 that the requirement
that a degree be "earned" be read into a Code provision
where it is not present. While one of the predecessor provisions
of the present Code provision, former DR 2-102(F), contained such
a requirement that a degree be "earned," the other
predecessor, DR 2-101(B)(5), did not. Furthermore, former DR
2-102(F) provided only for the listing of an "earned degree
. . . indicating [a lawyer's] training in the law", while it
is the clear consensus of contemporaneous committee opinions
(including this Committee's conclusion in N.Y. City 82-19) that
degrees in fields unrelated to law may now be listed under DR
2-101(C). We see no reason why the "earned"
qualification of former DR 2-102(F) should be carried over into
present DR 2-101(C).
As such, there is no blanket
prohibition against the listing on a lawyer's letterhead of an
honorary degree or distinction in the law or another field.
However, any listing pursuant to DR 2-101(C) must also meet the
qualifications of DR 2-101(A) and (B) that the communication not
be misleading or given to self-laudation. The listing or
reference to an honorary degree, as with any degree, would be
ethically proper only "if accurate." N.Y. City 82-19
(1982). The nature of honorary degrees, fellowships and similar
distinctions requires that particular care be taken to ensure
that their listing be in a precise manner that will not, either
by affirmative statement or by omission, be misleading.
CONCLUSION
Subject to the caveats set forth
in the foregoing opinion, the question is answered in the
affirmative. back to top
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