Control and The Lawyer-Client Relationship: Basten
Control and The Lawyer-Client Relationship: Basten
John Basten*
I . Independence and Morality
A. The Principle of Independence
A recent newspaper article quoted a Japanese lawyer as say-
ing: "As a lawyer, one's time is one's own. You can help people.
You get a sense of justice, and you have the pride of knowing that
you are not being used by anyone. As an individual you can even
take on the nation."' The combination of power, prestige, indepen-
dence and a good income combined with the satisfaction of helping
others, all in the service of the highest social values, sounds like an
ideal job description. While it is an ideal, the elements referred to
are present to a greater or lesser degree in the work of the lawyer
and account, no doubt, for the numbers seeking to swell the ranks
of an already bloated occupation.
T h e key concept i n t h i s description is indepen-
dence-independence from employers, the government and even
from those one serves. The importance and the validity of this con-
cept is constantly being publicly reaflirmed, in this country and
the rest of the common law world, by senior members of the pro-
fession. Consider, for example, the following statement of Chief
Justice Burger: "The overwhelming proportion of the legal profes-
sion rejects both the denigrated role of the advocate and counsellor
that renders him a lackey to the client and the alien idea that he is
an agent of the g~vernment."~
This latter statement suggests that the ideal is not without its
theoretical critics, and in reality, independence can only be a mat-
ter of degree, subject to a wide variety of limiting factors. Lawyers
* Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales, Australia. This paper was
prepared while I was a visiting scholar at the U.C.L.A. Law School. I would like to
thank Professors Richard Abel, David Mellinkoff, Murray Schwartz and Richard
Wasserstrom for their friendship and assistance during my stay at U.C.L.A. and
also my colleague, Stan Ross, for his comments on a draft.
1. Using a Lawyer in Japan is Embarrassing, Los Angeles Times, Oct. 29,
1978, $ IV (Magazine), at 1.
2. In re Griffiths 413 U.S. 717, 732 (1973), (Burger, C.J., dissenting).
8 The Journal of the Legal Profession
6. The process is clearly illustrated in California, where the unified State Bar
is a public corporation with six public members on its twenty-one person Board of
Governors: there are pressures for the establishment of an organization of local
voluntary bar associations to lobby for lawyers' self-interests. It should, of course,
be appreciated that the dichotomy referred to is not absolute: regulatory func-
tions often do further lawyers interests, as, for example, the control of unautho-
rized practice of law.
7. See, e.g., Conference Report: Ethical Responsibilities of Corporate Law-
yers, 33 Bus. LAW.1173 (March, 1978.) Schwartz, The Professionalism and Ac-
countability of Lawyers, 66 COLUM. L. REV.669 (1978);SEC v. National Student
Marketing, 360 F. Supp. 284 (D. D.C. 1973).
8. See, e.g., Freedman, Personal Responsibility in a Professional System, 27
CATH.U.L. REV.191 (1978);Fried, The h w y e r acl a Friend: The Moral Founda-
tion of the Lawyer-Client Relation, 85 YALEL.J. 1060 (1976);Seliger, The Perry
Mason Perspective and Others: A Critique of Reductionist Thinking about Eth-
ics of Untruthful Practices by Lawyers for Innocent Defendants, 6 HOPSTRA L.
REV.631 (1978);Seliger, Criminal Lawyers' Tiuth: A Dialogue on Putting the
10 The Journal of the Legal Profession
11. I. STONE,CLARENCE DARROW FOR THE DEFENSE 450 (1971) (quoting W.R.
Kellogg).
12. Serve, President's Page, 59 A.B.A.J. 863 (1973).
13. See Harris polls cited in Burbank & Dubott, Ethics and the Legal Pro-
fession: A survey of Boston Lawyers, 9 SUFPOLK L. REV.66, (1974-75). See also
Jacobs & Wagoner, Public and Professional Assessment of the Nebraska Bar, 55
NEB.L. REV.57, (1975).
14. See Marks & Cathcart, Discipline within the Legal Profession: Is it Self-
Regulation? 1974 U. ILL.L. FORUM193, 225. For a well-researched Australian
study, see the New South Wales Law Reform Commission's The Legal Profession,
Discussion Paper No.2, "Complaints, Discipline and Professional Standards Part
1" and Background Paper No.1, which contains a sample of case-studies.
15. E.g., cases discussed by J. AUERBACH, UNEQUAL JUSTICE,(1976); Ernst &
Schwartz, The Right to Counsel and the Unpopular Cause, 20 U. PI^. L. REV.
727 (1959); Rockwell, Controlling Lawyers by Bar Associations and Courts, 5
HARV.C.R.-C.L.L. REV.301 (1970).
12 The Journal of the Legal Profession
way.21
While both lines of criticism are valid in their own terms, both
suffer from limitations. The first correctly identifies tensions be-
tween the theory and the actual operation of the adversary system,
but then sees the way to reform through a redefinition of the law-
yer's role. The second concentrates on the effects of the system on
the attitudes and values internalized by the lawyer as an operator
of the system. I believe it is dangerous to isolate the legal system
(or more narrowly, the litigous process) and try to reform it from
inside without attention to the political and economic factors
which determine its structure. The particular danger in this in-
stance is that the demands for greater moral accountability on the
part of lawyers made by these critics will result in a further dimi-
nution of the degree of control exercised by clients, especially by
clients from disadvantaged groups. On the other hand, recognition
of internal tensions may lead to pressure for systemic change so
long as lawyers are not able to effectively defuse the tensions in a
way that simply eases their own working consciences.
Before leaving this topic one other comment is called for,
namely that those who accuse lawyers of amorality are themselves
exercising moral judgement. Refusal to judge may be benighted
amorality or praiseworthy tolerance. The following view expressed,
if a little self-righteously, by Clarence Darrow would probably re-
ceive concurrence from many criminal law practitioners today. "I
have never judged anyone. I have had sympathy for all. I have
done my best to understand the manifold conditions that surround
and control each human life. You know it is said, 'Judge not, that
ye be not judged'. I do not judge a man; I defend him."2a Alterna-
tively, the lawyer's action in defending someone known to be guilty
may be justified, as Richard Wasserstrom suggests, on other
grounds including "a serious scepticism about the rightness of pun-
ishment even when wrongdoing has o c c ~ r r e d " .Given
~ ~ the exis-
tence of our criminal justice system, it could be argued that such
scepticism should be repressed by functionaries within that sys-
tem. On the other hand, to acknowledge it may at a personal level
help them to perform their social role with a properly easier
conscience.
24. L. SOC'Y
UPPER CANADA,DEPENDINGA CRIMINAL CASE282 (1969) (quoted
in J. DISNEY, LAWYERS
556 (1977)).
25. 2 A. TROLLOPE,
JOHN 297 (1923) (quoted in Rostow, The Law-
CALDICATE
18 The Journal of the Legal Profession
30. 51 Ala. App. 573, 287 So. 2d 901 (1973) (discusses in Christopher, Attor-
ney and Client-Control of the Case-Who Decides What Theory of Defense to
Use?, 1 J . LEGALPROFESSION 121 (1976)).
31. See Frankel, The Search for Truth: An Umpireal View, 123 U . PA. L.
REV.1031 (1975).
32. The courts and critics have been particularly troubled by the problem of
the perjurious defendant: see, e.g., M. FREEDMAN, LAWYERS' ETHICS IN AN ADVER-
SARY SYSTEM 63 (1975) and more recently, Lowery v. Cardwell 575 F.2d. 727 (9th
20 The Journal of the Legal Profession
Cir. 1978).
33. D. ROSENTHAL, LAWYER AND CLIENT:WHO'SIN CHARGE? 42 (1974) (illus-
trates ways in which this occurs in personal injury litigation). See also Gilbert,
Workers' Compensation: The Defense of Tunnel Vision?, 3 LEGALSERVICE BULL
180 (1978).
34. 422 U.S. 806 (1975).
35. Id. at 834.
Lawyer-Client Relationship 21
fact that such a function will often be inconsistent with the law-
yer's role as a partisan advo~ate.~'
A third criticism of the traditional model is based on the
width of discretion which it accords to the lawyer. The pressures of
the system and the opinions of state officials with whom the lawyer
must maintain working relations, the danger of offending other cli-
ents, the possibility of furthering the lawyer's own reputation or
ideological beliefs, as well as simple pecuniary interest are all fac-
tors which affect the lawyer, but are of no concern to the client. It
is impossible to rid the lawyer of such extraneous influences, but
their effects can be mitigated by limiting the mandate of the law-
yer alone to make crucial decisions.
Finally, the traditional model has been criticized for the social
values it propogates. For example, Richard Wasserstrom has ar-
gued that,
the relationship between the lawyer and the client is typically,
if not inevitably, a morally defective one in which the client is
not treated with the respect and dignity which he or she de-
serves. . . . The point is not that the professional is merely
dominant within the relationship. Rather it is that from the
professional's point of view the client is seen and responded to
more like an object than a human being, and more like a child
than an
37. Am. C. Trial Law., DISRUPTION OF THE JUDICIAL PROCESS 6 (1970). See
also N. DORSEN & L. FRIEDMAN, DISORDER IN THE COURT145 (1973).
38. Wasserstrom, supra note 18, at 15-16. See also Wexler, Practicing Law
for Poor People, 79 YALEL.J. 1049, 1062 (1970) (where the author correctly iden-
tifies the early indications of such a view: "The dominant attitude of law school is
that the client is a troublesome pain-in-the-neck").
Lawyer-Client Relationship 23
D. A Brief Evaluation
Critics of the traditional model call it elitist, paternalistic and
undemocratic. Monroe Freedman recently suggested that "the real
reason lawyers prefer to make the final decision, and judges are
inclined to give it to them, is professional pride, with the emphasis
on the word ride."'^ The traditional approach also contains an
element of hypocrisy, as illustrated by the unwillingness of the
profession and the judiciary to equate responsibility with power.44
Indeed, the history of malpractice suits suggests a direct correla-
tion between the degree of control vested in the individual lawyers
41. Wexler, Practicing Law for Poor People, 79 YALEL.J. 1049, 1063 (1970).
42. Id. at 1053.
43. Freedman, Personal Responsibility in a Professional System 27 CATH.
U.L. REV. 191, 203 (1978).
44. Mazor, Power and Responsibility in the Attorney-Client Relationship,
20 STAN.L. REV. 1120 (1968).
Lawyer-Client Relationship 25
45. The best example is undoubtedly the legal immunity of the English bar-
rister: see Rondel v. Worsley, 1 A.C. 191 (1969) and Saif Ali v. Sydney Mitchell &
Co., 3 W.L.R. 849 (1978). However, there is also a noticeable lack of reported
malpractice involving trial conduct in this country; see Mazor, supra note 44.
46. E.g., Frankel, The Search for Truth: An Urnpireal View, 123 U . PA. L.
REV. 1031 (1975).
47. A.B.A. STANDARDS RELATING TO THE ADMINISTRATION OF CRIMINALJUSTICE
110 (1974). See also the critique in Rosenthal, supra note 33, at 19, of advice
given by the Wisconsin Bar Association to its members on communicating with
clients.
48. For a sad example, see the Australian case, Re Foster, 50 S.R. (N.S.W.)
149 (1950).
26 The Journal of the Legal Profession
50. United States v. Wilhelm, 570 F.2d. 461 (3d Cir. 1978).
51. A.B.A. CODE,EC 2-26.
52. A.B.A. CODE,EC 2-33. The current provisions emphasize the lawyer's
freedom to serve the client without interference from any third party.
28 The Journal of the Legal Profession
sel (and the lawyer involved can help do that) whereas it may be
impossible to find another experienced attorney to handle the diffi-
cult and serious charge.
2. Money.-The client may be impecunious. Even though law-
yers as a group are comparatively affluent, it would not be politi-
cally acceptable to require them to accept clients regardless of
whether the client could pay for the services or not. Since the ma-
jority of criminal defendants are poor and would usually seek law-
yers who specialize in criminal work, such an obligation would soon
bankrupt the criminal defence bar. It might be possible to achieve
a compromise which would help some clients obtain lawyers of
their choice, while spreading the load within the profession, by re-
quiring that all trial attorneys do a certain volume of free work
each year. This suggestion, sometimes called "mandatory pro
bono," has been made before, but it has hardly swept through the
profession with enthusiastic acceptance. The ABA Code becomes
almost evangelical on this topic: "The basic responsibility for pro-
viding legal services for those unable to pay ultimately rests upon
individual lawyers, and personal involvement in the problems of
the disadvantaged can be one of the most rewarding experiences in
the life of a lawyer. Every lawyer, regardless of professional promi-
nence or professional workload, should find time to participate in
serving the di~advantaged."~~ This Florence Nightingale approach,
unsupported by any substantive duty or mechanism for sharing the
burden, failed long ago. A partial answer is now to be found in the
institution of the public defender, where, incidentally, neither law-
yer nor client has any freedom of choice.
The totally impecunious client provides an extreme example
from the much larger class of clients who would be unable to pay a
full lawyer's fee. Should a lawyer be able to refuse a client who can
make some payment, though not a 'normal' fee? It would be possi-
ble for a public body to set a specific level of remuneration, below
which an attorney would not be entitled to refuse a client for-
money reasons.
3. Competence.-Lack of competence in the relevant area en-
tails a duty not to accept employment." While this rule provides a
unique professional recognition of the fraudulent nature of the li-
censing process, it is really a consideration of peripheral relevance
60. This topic has been one of continuing concern over decades of legal writ-
ing. See, e.g., H. SACKS,DEFENDING TZ~E UNPOPULAR CLIENT(Nat'l Council on Le-
gal Clinics 1961); Cooper, Representation of the Unpopular What Can the Pro-
fession Do About the Eternal Problem?, 22 C n m ' s L.J. 333 (1974); Ernst &
Schwartz, The Right to Counsel and the "Unpopular Cause," 20 U . Prrr. L. REV.
727 (1959); GOLDBERGER, Would You Defend an Unpopular Cause?, 5 BARRISTER
46 (Winter 1978); Nagle & Champagne, The Risks of Defending Unpopular Cli-
ents, 2 STUDENT LAW.41 (1973-74); Jaworski, The Unpopular Cause, 47 A.B.A.J.
714 (1961); Comment, Controlling Lawyers by Bar Associations and Courts, 5
HARV.C.R.-C.L.L. REV.301 (1970).
61. M. FREEDMAN, LAWYERS ETHICSIN AN ADVERSARY SYSTEM10 (1975).
32 The Journal of the Legal Profession
62. Selinger, The Perry Mason Perspective and Others: A Critique of Reduc-
tionist Thinking about the Ethics of Untruthful Practices by Lawyers for "Inno-
cent" Defendants, 6 HOFSTRA L. REV.631 (1978).
Lawyer-Client Relationship 33
best he could. The client did insist, and the lawyer took the case.
The English rule is often traced back to the rhetorical words
of Erskine in justifying his defence of the unpopular Tom Paine
near the end of the eighteenth century: "From the moment that
any advocate can be permitted to say that he will or will not stand
between the Crown and the subject arraigned in the court where
he daily sits to practise, from that moment the liberties of England
are a t an end."e6
The rule, now generalized beyond the criminal jurisdiction, is
frequently referred to as the "cab-rank" principle, indicating that
barristers, like cab drivers, must act on a 'first come, first served'
basis in accepting work. That is seen as an appropriate condition
for the privilege of being licensed to provide a public service. The
analogy can be criticized: while cab drivers are licensed to ensure
that an adequate service is provided a t a proper charge, lawyers
are licensed for the entirely different purpose of ensuring compe-
tence, and hence that the service provided is of an acceptable stan-
dard. Furthermore, lawyers, unlike cab drivers, have to establish a
relationship of trust with their clients and thus, while it may be
appropriate to require cabbies to accept all comers, the same rea-
soning does not apply to lawyers.
The response is, I believe, inadequate because it ignores the
fact that the beneficiary of the relationship, the client, is the one
who is to be permitted the freedom to choose. If lawyers are to be
free to refuse work there is a danger that less prestigious clients
and less remunerative work will be denied access to the better law-
yers. As one member of the English House of Lords said in 1969:
It is easier, pleasanter and more advantageous profession-
ally for barristers to advise, represent or defend those who are
decent and reasonable and likely to succeed in their action or
their defence than those who are unpleasant, unreasonable,
disreputable, and have an apparently hopeless case. Yet it
would be tragic if our legal system came to provide no reputa-
ble defenders, representatives or advisers for the latter. And
that would be the inevitable result of allowing barristers to
pick and choose their ~lienta.~'
it alone cannot account for the greater independence of the English bar from their
clients is undoubtedly correct, but does not reduce the rule, or at least its
preceived effects, to insignificance.
68. FREEDMAN, LAWYERS ETHICS IN AN ADVERSARY SYSTEM, 10 (1975).
69. STONE, supra note 11 at 35, 427.
70. See, e.g., his speech in the same Communist Labour Party case; C DAR-
ROW, ATTORNEY FOR THE DAMNED 125 n.126 (A. Weinberg ed. 1957) (discussing the
rule against expressing such opinions).
36 The Journal of the Legal Profession
tion against their meeting, the local ACLU stepped in. The sad
story of vituperation and abuse, tacitly supported by the silence of
the Chicago bar, indicates the difficulty lawyers still face in repre-
senting unpopular causes. Efforts to protest that the ACLU attor-
neys concerned did not agree with what the Nazis wanted to say,
nor even necessarily believe that the Nazis had a right to say it,
were largely unsuccessful in a community, both legal and lay,
which did not recognize any obligation to act for unpopular cli-
e n t ~The
. ~ ~ACLU action might have been more readily accepted if
a general duty to act existed, so that it would not be only with
unpopular clients that lawyers claim immunity from moral
accountability.
There is one other objection which can be raised against the
English rule, (though lawyers might think it an advantage). Its
adoption could encourage courts to grant trial advocates immunity
from malpractice actions for their conduct during the trial. In the
leading English case affirming the existence of the immunity, some
of the judges referred to the duty to act.7aThe link is a little ob-
scure, but it could be argued that advocates would try to evade
that duty if they thought they were dealing with the type of client
who would turn against and sue his or her lawyer if the case were
lost. The duty to act emphasises the public responsibilities of the
lawyer, while the immunity from suit resembles the quasi-public
officer's immunity granted to prosecutors in this country. The
linkage is, therefore, not coincidental.
Since the immunity amounts to a privileged status, the con-
nection might render one wary of establishing the suggested duty.
On the other hand, there are other disincentives which establish a
virtual immunity for American defence counsel now. Such evidence
as we have, suggests that courts are quite willing to protect mem-
bers of the profession from such actions, and the client will in
many cases be dissuaded from attacking counsel when to do so al-
lows the lawyer to reveal confidential communications in defence.78