vi.

Multiple Professions; Business – Secs. 9 and 10

Professional Competence Despite Other Work

Canon IV treats competence and diligence as obligations that remain constant even when a lawyer is also engaged in another profession, occupation, office, trade, or business. Sections 9 and 10 recognize that a lawyer is not barred from lawful non-legal work, but the lawyer must keep every outside engagement subordinate to the duties owed to the courts, clients, the legal profession, and the public.

The controlling idea is compatibility. A second profession or business is permissible only while it does not impair the lawyer's independence, diligence, confidentiality, candor, loyalty, avoidance of conflicts, and ability to comply with court orders and professional undertakings. The lawyer may have several lawful careers, but the lawyer cannot have several ethical standards.

A lawyer's conduct outside litigation can still be professional misconduct when it bears on fitness to practice law. The lawyer's title carries public trust, and misuse of that title in a non-legal enterprise may create discipline even if no pleading was filed and no courtroom appearance occurred.

Section 9: Multiple Professions

Section 9 covers the lawyer who concurrently practices another profession or occupation. Examples include a lawyer who is also a certified public accountant, physician, engineer, real estate service practitioner, professor, corporate officer, consultant, notary, arbitrator, mediator, or public servant. The rule is not prohibition, but disciplined separation of capacities.

The lawyer must make clear in what capacity the lawyer is acting. If the engagement is legal, the client is entitled to all incidents of the lawyer-client relationship. If the engagement is non-legal, the lawyer should not allow the other party to believe that ordinary professional or commercial services are protected, supervised, or guaranteed as legal representation.

Clarity of capacity matters because different legal consequences attach to different roles. Legal advice may create a lawyer-client relationship, trigger confidentiality, impose conflict rules, and require professional competence. Purely accounting, brokerage, consulting, medical, engineering, or management work may be governed by a different regulatory regime, but a lawyer who injects legal advice into that work may become counsel for that purpose.

The lawyer must also avoid a dual role that creates divided loyalty. A lawyer-accountant who audits a company may be unable to represent the same company in a dispute over the audited matters. A lawyer-broker who stands to earn a commission from a sale may be materially limited in advising a client whether to buy the property. A lawyer-corporate officer may not give independent legal advice when the officer's personal or corporate interest pushes against the client's legal interest.

Confidentiality is not diluted by the lawyer's other profession. Information learned as counsel may not be used to benefit the lawyer's accounting practice, brokerage business, consultancy, employer, relatives, or business partners. Conversely, information learned in a non-legal capacity should not be casually treated as a basis for legal action when doing so would breach another professional duty or mislead the source of the information.

Privilege should be handled carefully. Communications are not privileged merely because one participant is a lawyer. The dominant purpose must be legal advice or legal assistance. When the lawyer receives facts as accountant, broker, consultant, director, officer, or business adviser, the communication may be outside lawyer-client privilege even if the recipient is admitted to the bar.

Section 10: Business Engagements

Section 10 addresses the lawyer who engages in business. The business may be a sole proprietorship, corporation, partnership, investment vehicle, lending activity, real estate venture, online enterprise, consultancy, family business, or management position. The lawyer may earn from lawful commerce, but business interests must not compromise the lawyer's professional obligations.

The most serious risk in business activity is self-interest conflict. A lawyer's personal profit motive may materially limit professional judgment, especially when the client is asked to invest, borrow, lend, sell, buy, guarantee, assign rights, waive claims, or approve a transaction from which the lawyer, the lawyer's relatives, or the lawyer's business associates will benefit.

When a lawyer enters into a business transaction with a client, fiduciary standards require fairness, full disclosure, absence of undue influence, and informed consent. The lawyer must not exploit the client's trust, dependence, ignorance, distress, or belief that the lawyer is acting solely for the client's legal welfare. The more vulnerable the client and the more substantial the lawyer's benefit, the heavier the lawyer's burden to show candor and fairness.

A lawyer must not mix client money with business funds. Client funds, settlement proceeds, filing money, acceptance fees held for future services, escrow amounts, and fiduciary funds cannot be treated as working capital, temporary loans, emergency liquidity, or business reserves. Misappropriation, conversion, commingling, or delayed accounting is grave misconduct because it attacks the fiduciary foundation of the profession.

The lawyer's business must not become a channel for improper solicitation. A non-legal enterprise may not be used to obtain legal clients through pressure, false claims, paid recommendations, misleading guarantees, or exploitation of accident victims, detainees, distressed debtors, grieving families, or persons facing urgent legal trouble. Referrals from a business must preserve the prospective client's freedom of choice and must not involve prohibited fee-sharing with non-lawyers.

Business partners, employees, agents, and marketing contractors cannot be allowed to practice law for the lawyer. Non-lawyers may perform clerical, administrative, technical, or commercial tasks, but they cannot give legal advice, select legal remedies, appear as counsel, draft pleadings as legal representatives, negotiate as attorneys, or control the lawyer's professional judgment.

Operational Duties in a Dual-Capacity Practice

The lawyer must maintain systems that allow competent legal service despite outside work. This includes calendaring deadlines, monitoring pleadings, attending hearings, updating clients, supervising staff, safeguarding files, and declining legal work that the lawyer cannot competently and diligently handle because of business demands.

A lawyer cannot justify neglect by pointing to business meetings, corporate duties, travel, investment problems, management burdens, or obligations in another profession. Once the lawyer accepts legal representation, the lawyer assumes the duty to act with the promptness, preparation, and attention required by the matter.

Situation Ethical Control Practical Effect
Lawyer gives legal advice while marketing another professional service Capacity must be clear and conflict rules apply The lawyer may become counsel despite calling the work consultancy
Lawyer asks a client to invest in the lawyer's business Fairness, disclosure, and informed consent are required The transaction is suspect when trust is used to secure the client's money
Lawyer uses client funds for business expenses Client funds must be segregated and accounted for Conversion or commingling may warrant severe discipline
Business staff screen customers for possible legal cases No unauthorized practice or improper solicitation Non-lawyers cannot procure, advise, or control legal representation
Outside work causes missed hearings or filings Diligence is non-delegable The lawyer remains administratively liable for neglect

Conflicts, Independence, and Public Confidence

Multiple professions and business interests often intersect with conflict-of-interest rules. A lawyer should not accept or continue legal work when personal commercial interests, duties to another profession, corporate loyalties, or obligations to business associates materially limit the lawyer's ability to give detached and loyal advice.

Independence is especially important when the lawyer's business depends on powerful clients, lenders, investors, employers, brokers, or political actors. A lawyer must not allow those persons to dictate litigation strategy, settlement decisions, legal opinions, billing choices, confidentiality decisions, or the handling of client property.

The lawyer must also preserve the dignity of the profession in commercial activity. Fraud, deceit, false advertising, issuance of worthless checks, dishonest borrowing, abusive collection, use of threats under color of legal authority, sham transactions, and bad-faith business dealings may be disciplined because they show unfitness to hold the trust attached to the practice of law.

Consequences of Breach

Violation of Sections 9 and 10 may lead to administrative discipline, disqualification as counsel, forfeiture or return of fees, civil liability, criminal exposure, regulatory sanctions in the other profession, and loss of credibility before courts and clients. The sanction depends on the gravity of the misconduct, injury caused, presence of dishonesty, misuse of client funds, prior offenses, and whether the lawyer acted in bad faith.

The central measure is whether the lawyer's other profession or business remained compatible with the lawyer's professional oath. A lawyer may earn, manage, invest, teach, consult, and serve in other lawful capacities, but every such activity must be conducted with candor, separation of roles, loyalty, diligence, and respect for the trust that accompanies admission to the bar.

This reviewer content is AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Use it at your own risk and verify against primary legal sources.