Another ‘Wake Up’ Call For In‐House Lawyers

Alastair Brett v Solicitors Regulation Authority1; a recent reminder to in‐house lawyers of their dual duties to client and Court - a cautionary tale all in‐house lawyers should have across their radars.

KEY POINTS:

THE DUTY TO THE COURT IS FIRST AND FOREMOST AND WILL 'TRUMP' THE DUTY TO THE CLIENT WHEN THE TWO CONFLICT. IN-HOUSE LAWYERS OWE DUTIES TO THEIR CLIENT - THE BUSINESS - AND AS FIDUCIARIES ARE NOT MERELY FUNCTIONARIES OF THE BUSINESS. IN-HOUSE LAWYERS SHOULD HAVE IN PLACE CLEAR POLICIES, PROCESSES AND PROTOCOLS AROUND IDENTIFYING THE 'CLIENT', PRIVILEGE AND WAIVER. IN-HOUSE LAWYERS SHOULD ALSO HAVE IN PLACE CLEAR POLICIES, PROCESSES AND PROTOCOLS AROUND ETHICS SUCH AS 'UP THE LINE REPORTING'. EDUCATION FOR BOTH IN-HOUSE LAWYERS AND THE BUSINESS ABOUT THESE ISSUES REMAINS FUNDAMENTAL TO GOOD INHOUSE LEGAL PRACTICE MANAGEMENT. Background

With the fall‐out of various corporate scandals, the last few years has witnessed an increasing focus on in‐house lawyers' ethical obligations. In much the same way as Enron, Arthur Andersen, Tyco and WorldCom canvassed these issues back in the late 1990's; and early 2000's, a decade or so on, the likes of General Motors, News International and GSK have re‐ignited the discussion.

This month saw the UK's High Court consider the former Times lawyer's appeal from the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal's finding that he was in breach of the Solicitors Code of Conduct.

The Issues

The lawyer was originally suspended from practising for 6 months and fined £30,000 for failing to act with integrity and knowingly misleading the Court.

Those findings were made against the backdrop that the lawyer had failed to put 'known' facts before the Court in witness evidence concerning the way in which a Times reporter had originally identified an anonymous blogger ‐ the key issue before the Court.

The Appeal then focussed on 3 main issues:

The scope of privilege and options open to an inhouse lawyer in safeguarding privilege; Misleading the Court; and The in‐house lawyer's state of mind. Privilege & Its Safeguard

The Court's discussion on privilege and who was the lawyer's 'client' is opaque. The judgment suggests that privilege existed between the reporter (rather than the newspaper) and the in‐house lawyer.

Putting that to one side, the Court held that the lawyer had options available to prevent him from misleading the Court.

He could have obtained agreement (from the reporter) to waive privilege; or...

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