Fee to Lawyer for Recommending Service Providers
E-00-04: Fee to Lawyer for
Recommending Service Providers
Professional Ethics Opinion E-00-04 considers whether lawyers may accept fees for recommending
service providers to their clients.
by State Bar Professional Ethics Committee
Issued: January 31,2001
MAY A LAWYER ACCEPT A FEE for recommending the services of a nonlawyer
to a client during the course of representation?
Opinion
When lawyers represent clients, certain types of service other than legal
representation are necessary to advance the client's interests. In such
circumstances, lawyers commonly are called upon to recommend one or more
service providers to their clients. To encourage such client referrals,
some service providers offer monetary payments, commissions, referral
fees, or other consideration to lawyers.
The Rules of Professional Conduct explicitly prohibit lawyers from giving
anything of value to any person for recommending the lawyer's services.
See SCR 20:7.2(b). The rules also prohibit lawyers from sharing fees with
nonlawyers. See SCR 20:5.4(a). The rules, however, do not per se prohibit
lawyers from receiving anything of value for recommending another's nonlawyer
services to their clients. It may be argued that the cost of these referral
fees is not borne by clients, but comes out of the service provider's
revenue. The underlying economic facts of the transaction may or may not
support such an assertion. However, a referral fee paid to a lawyer that,
in substance, increases the client's costs violates the Rules of Professional
Conduct as an impermissible sharing of legal fees with a nonlawyer. See
SCR 20:5.4(a). In such cases, the nonlawyer service provider is collecting
fees for the lawyer's benefit.
In recommending another's services to a client, a lawyer is acting within
the scope of the lawyer-client relationship. Clients seek and place a
high degree of trust in such recommendations by their lawyers. They expect
such recommendations to be considered, competent, objective, and free
of conflicting interest. The Rules of Professional Conduct express and
protect these reasonable expectations. See SCR 20:1.1, 1.4, 2.1, and 1.7(a).
When a lawyer receives consideration for referring a client to a particular
service provider, the potential exists that the lawyer's independence
and objectivity may be compromised by the lawyer's own interests. A lawyer
must be especially scrupulous in protecting his or her client from the
inherent risk of exploitation in such an arrangement.
Should the lawyer continue to represent the client, the lawyer must
determine that his representation of the client will not be adversely
affected by the referral arrangement. See SCR 20:1.7(b). For example,
such an arrangement cannot restrict the lawyer's advice so that the client
does not receive information or opinions needed to make fully informed
decisions about the representation. See SCR 20:1.4(b) and 2.1. The existence
of such an arrangement may also preclude the lawyer from continuing to
represent the client if the representation would involve monitoring or
evaluating the service provider's work from which the lawyer is receiving
or may receive consideration for referrals. See SCR 20:1.7(b).
Whenever a lawyer receives compensation or other consideration for a
referral to another service provider, the lawyer must fully disclose to
the client the nature and extent of any such benefit she will receive
and the advantages and disadvantages to the client of the referral compared
to any reasonably available alternatives. To the extent the lawyer may
reasonably know, this disclosure includes such factors as relative cost;
suitability to the client's needs; and the competence, character, and
reputation of the person to whom the lawyer refers the client. This also
requires the lawyer to evaluate the merits of the particular service provider
and the likelihood that the client will benefit from that person's particular
services. This degree of disclosure is meant to assure that the client's
decision regarding accepting the lawyer's recommendation is suitably informed.
A lawyer may make such a recommendation only when the lawyer reasonably
believes that the services of the service provider are compatible with
the client's best interests.
A lawyer's duty to render uncompromised independent professional advice
to a client takes precedence over any benefit the lawyer may realize from
recommending a service provider to a client. Where consideration for a
referral to another service provider is nominal, the likelihood that the
lawyer's recommendation will be unduly influenced is probably small. However,
the committee notes that the benefit or other consideration a lawyer may
obtain for referring a client could be so substantial as to preclude a
reasonable belief that the referral was uninfluenced by the lawyer's own
interest in securing that benefit. A lawyer cannot receive so substantial
a benefit for referring a client to another professional. The determination
of what would constitute so substantial a benefit can only be determined
based on all the facts on a case-by-case basis.
|