LEGAL COUNSELING - PRACTICE OF LAW
Ramil F. De Jesus
Introduction
Counseling is The act of exchanging opinions and ideas; consultation,
advice or guidance, especially as solicited from a knowledgeable person
(http://www.thefreedictionary.com/counseling). When the advice came from a
lawyer who used his knowledge in substantive and procedural laws in order to
arrive at such advice, it is called legal counseling.
Legal counseling is a part of the lawyer’s function in the practice of his
profession. Before anyone can provide legal advice he should be a member of
the bar. The importance of legal counseling was not given its due emphasis
because it was overshadowed by the litigation function of a lawyer However it
should be remembered that legal counseling is an important and essential part of
the law profession and the practice of law.
Objective
To provide an overview discussion on the legal counseling function of a
lawyer and its importance in the law profession.
Discussion
The term practice of law is incapable of exact definition. Whether a
particular activity comes within the meaning of the term depends upon the
circumstances of each case. There are, however, general principles and
doctrines laid down by the courts explaining the meaning and scope of the term.
Generally, to engage in the practice of law is to do any of those acts which are
characteristics of the legal profession. It embraces any activity, in or out of court,
which requires the application of law, legal principle, practice or procedure and
calls for legal knowledge, training and experience. It involves the carrying on of
the calling of an attorney, usually for gain, acting in representative capacity
rendering service to another. It includes legal advice and counseling, and the
preparation of legal instruments and contracts by which legal rights are secured,
which may or may not be pending in court.
In the practice of profession, a licensed attorney-at-law generally engages
in three principal types of professional activities: legal advice and instructions to
clients to inform them of their rights and obligations; preparation of clients
documents requiring knowledge of legal principles not possessed by ordinary
layman; and appearance for clients before public tribunals which possess power
and authority to determine rights of life , liberty and property according to law, in
order to assist in the proper interpretation and enforcement of law.
One who confers with clients and advices them of their legal rights is also
practicing law. Giving advice for compensation regarding the legal status and
rights of another constitutes practice of law as well as rendering an opinion as to
the proper interpretation of a statute and receives pay for it.
Activity outside the Court
The practice of law consists of no small part of work performed outside of
court. It embraces the giving of legal advice on a large variety of subjects,
conveyancing and the preparation and execution of legal instruments covering
extensive field of business and trust relations and other affairs. These require in
many aspects a high degree of legal skills, a wide experience with men and
affairs. These customary functions of an attorney bear an intimate relation to the
administration of justice by the court. No valid distinction can be drawn between
that part of the work of a lawyer which involves the appearance in court and that
part which involves advice and drafting of instruments in his office. The work of
office lawyer has profound effect on the whole scheme of the administration of
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justice. It is performed with the possibility of litigation in mind, otherwise it would
hardly be needed.
In Cayetano v. Monsod, the majority of the court through Mr. Justice Paras
held that person’s past work experience as a lawyer economist, a lawyer
manager, a lawyer-entrepreneur of industry, a lawyer-negotiator of contracts, and
a lawyer-legislator more than satisfy the constitutional requirement for
appointment as Chairman of the Commission on Elections that he has been
engaged in active practice of law for at least ten years and that practice of law
need not be habitual services rendered in litigations in court. Mr. Justice
Gutierrez, in his dissenting opinion, noted that engaging in the practice of law is
also a qualification for appointment of Justices of the Supreme Court and Judges
of the Lower Courts and then asked: What kind of judges and justices will we
have if their main occupation is selling real estate, managing a business or
media, or operating a farm with no active involvement in the law, whether
Government or private practice, except that in one joyful moment in the distant
past, they happened to pass the bar examinations? Mr. Justice Cruz, in his
dissent, stated that from the term “practice of law” as defined by the majority of
the Court, “one does not even have to be a lawyer to be engage in the practice of
law as long as his activities involve the application of some law, however,
peripherally.” Mr. Justice Padilla, in his dissent, said that the respondent did not
meet the essential criteria enumerated by the Commission on Appointments as
determinative of engaging in the practice of law, said criteria being the following:
The Importance of Legal Counseling
In this era of great advances in science and technology, the services of
persons learned in law have not been dissipated. The law profession has
survived and continually become relevant in this modern world. The need for
legal counseling has never been as important as today. Conflicts between
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persons and problems of future litigants abound and those seeking advice has
grown with the advances in technology.
But not all individuals or persons are capable of providing appropriate
legal advice, as providing legal advice also constitute practice of law. Not all
persons may appear in courts and represent clients or provide legal counseling
as it is only limited to those persons admitted in the bar.
Legal Ethics essential component of Law Practice
The term Legal Ethics is the embodiment of all the principles of morality
and refinement that should govern the conduct of every member of the bar. It has
also been broadly defined as the living spirit of the profession, which limits yet
uplifts it as a livelihood.”. Specifically it refers to that branch of moral science
which treats of the duties which an attorney owes to the court, to his client, to his
colleagues in the profession and to the public. ( Agpalo, Legal and Judicial
Ethics, 2009).
Needless for us to disagree that as life on earth has multiplied a million-fold
and has become more complex, human problems have also multiplied and have
become complicated. Hence, the demand for more lawyers has turned acute,
thereby making Filipino litigant vulnerable to the mercy of unscrupulous
practitioners.
Legal ethics is an essential component of the practice of law. It ensures
that lawyers possess the integrity, probity and excellence that a member of the
law profession should have. Without legal ethics, the quality of legal service and
counseling will deteriorates as time goes by and as the profession is transferred
from one generation of lawyers to the other. With legal ethics, the tradition of
integrity and probity is maintained.
Professional Responsibility
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There is more to law practice however than just opening and developing a
law office and winning office cases. In the conduct of lawyering an officer of the
court must always be guided by a sense of professional responsibility.
An advocate of law therefore must be equipped with a vast knowledge in
psychology, an expert in human relations, a skillful arbitrator on the bargaining
table, an actor if you may, and above all a man of integrity whose words
command respect and authority not only from his clients but also from his clients’
adversaries in order to be an effective legal counselor.
On accepting cases
One cardinal advice to a lawyer is: Don’t take a case unless you believe in
it”. This advice seem at first blush impractical when a new lawyer needs cases
and is faced with increasing expenses; but in the long run, this advice produces
dividends in the building of good reputation and a successful practice. Of course
this does not involve one’s belief as to whether or not a client is guilty, since you
still have the duty to see to it that he is given the full benefits of the law and all
the legal defenses he is entitled to. But if the client has really no cause of action
or defense at all, but merely seeks your legal services to delay and buy time, to
obstruct justice and harass the court or the adverse party and you ought to know
this as a counselor-at-law, then you should not accept the case. Likewise, do not
accept a case on the ground solely that it has “nuisance value” for purpose of
settlement, for this would demean your stature and reputation.
On the other hand, if you believe that a case is a worthy cause, though
unpopular or difficult it may be, then, do the best you can, for the lawyer is bound
to protect the rights of his client the best he can.
Scope of Lawyers advice and control
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But whether or not a lawyer should advise his client to submit to arbitration
or compromise agreement, will al depend on the lawyer’s honest and sound
judgment subject to the client’s final word. The better judgment is towards
advising your client to submit amicable settlement, when, in your honest opinion
in the light of the evidence on hand, the prospect of winning court battle is
remote. Much of this judgment will depend on the lawyer’s knowledge of our
procedural laws, because even if he is knowledgeable in the substantive
provisions of the law, if he takes the wrong step in their application or formulates
a wrong theory, his case is already doomed even he drafts the first pleading.
But it is also remembered that a lawyer has control only with respect to the
procedural aspects of the case. The final decision on whether to litigate or not, or
whether or to enter into a compromise agreement or not, or whether or not to
take an appeal or not, should come from the client. But even in the matter of
whether to take an appeal or not, whether or not to litigate at all, or whether to
enter a plea of not guilty or not in a criminal case, or to prosecute malicious suit
or to pursue an illegal course of action, the lawyer should not allow himself to be
dictated by the client simply because the latter can afford to pay him the highest
fees. He must be frank with his client in explaining that his case will not prosper
in court and be ready to substantiate his opinion on this matter based on his legal
knowledge and experiences.
Extent of Lawyer’s Authority
The canons of professional responsibility and accepted norms in legal
advocacy recognize the lawyers’ authority to choose the proceedings he will
institute and the witnesses he will present in court. He can make admissions of
facts but not of law.
Thus, it has been held that admissions in pleadings made by an
attorney without the knowledge of the party, can nevertheless be used as
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evidence against him and cannot be heard to deny that they were authorized.
The lawyer has implied authority to enter or take dismissal, discontinuance or
non-suit, which does not bar the bringing of another suit on the same cause of
action.
Inversely, parties-litigants are bound by the mistakes committed by their
lawyer in matters of procedures. Thus mistakes by a lawyer as to the
competency of a witness, or the sufficiency, or whether a certain evidence is
relevant or not, or whether the defense he had chosen is proper or not, in the
introduction of certain evidence or witnesses, or in argumentation, of what
pleading to file in court or what theory should be adopted, are all mistakes of
procedures and they bind the client, except for honest mistakes.
Code of Conduct of Successful Lawyering
First and foremost, of course, there is no substitute for winning a case. But
being human beings as they are, not all lawyers can guarantee a sure victory for
his client’s cause. Apart from the human factor and this does not discount the
unpredictable disposition of the trial judge and his apparent bias and prejudices,
the inevitable intervention of events beyond our control like disappearance or
death of a vital witness; bribery of witnesses; the loss or disappearance of a vital
documentary evidence; and / or the lapse of memory or impeachment of a
witness by a skillful cross-examiner resulting in witness want of credibility; these
and many more are some of the setbacks that a trial lawyer usually suffers from
the practice of his profession no matter how strong his case appear at the start.
Good human relation, a lot of psychology and tact and diplomacy are
considered essential ingredients that can guarantee satisfaction to a distraught
client. Even in the sad news of losing a case, the client would not feel
disappointed and would still come back to the same lawyer who is loaded with
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these fire-power of encouragement and endeavors to soothe his client’s ruffled
feelings with reasonable and logical explanations why the case collapsed.
The key to a satisfied client therefore, is to treat him with cordiality and
compassion, with sincerity and honest intentions, and with a spirit of not giving up
even when all the odds seem to shatter the brightest hopes. These plus a strong
determination to succeed and sustain a good fight, believing that not all days are
cloudy and that in a court battle only one party is going to win and the other party
will lose. All of these human factors must be practiced not only by the lawyer, but
also by the lawyer’s secretary and office staff.
Advise
Giving advice is the task of a lawyer most commonly perform and
whatever else they do for clients is almost invariably accompanied with advice.
Lawyer’s advice consists of recommendations as to what course of action should
be followed, and the reasons and data supporting these recommendations. It is
usually based in the large part on the lawyer’s conception and learning of
relevant substantive law and doctrine applicable on the particular facts and
subject involved.
The lawyer who does his advisory job well makes the law and legal
processes meaningful to clients. In terms of understandable to laymen, he should
endeavor to explain the applicability and probable impact of the substantive law
and legal doctrine involved.
This individualizing and popularizing of law requires a good deal of facility
with ideas and language, at simplifying concepts often mystifying and strange to
laymen. But the more the lawyer knows about the surrounding circumstances of
the matter at hand, the better position he is in to give accurate and sound advice.
Mastery of legal doctrines and substantive laws by themselves seldom is
enough. The better he understands his client and his client’s affair, the more
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helpful the lawyer can be. Some lawyers, however, when asked for advice which
they know they are equipped to give, will gamble or luck on their client’s gullibility
and give the advice without sufficient preparation. This practice is fraught with
dangers that may adversely affect the lawyer’s reputation someday.
Not infrequently lawyers are asked to give advice having little or nothing to
do with legal doctrine or law-making or adjudicating bodies. Lawyers who are
holding positions in the government and business often become trusted
counselors on a wide range of family, business, administrative and political
problems. Widows spouses with marital troubles, small businessmen in financial
difficulties are among those likely to seek non-legal advice from their lawyers. As
long as the performance of these acts do not prejudice the interest of the public
or are done outside of office hours, there is nothing wrong in the acts of
government lawyers who earn extra income outside their official functions. This
quite true with full time judges and government prosecutors who teaches in law
schools outside of office hours.
In advising clients, the lawyer can often run into role conflict giving rise to
different questions. The lawyer is not faced with problems in identifying and
determining what the client wants. The man who hires a lawyer may not be clear
in his own mind whether or not he wants the lawyer to challenge him or how he
wants the lawyer go in this respect. The problems become trickier when the
client is a large organization. The lawyer’s role then may be shaped by a number
of persons, each with different perceptions of what he wants the lawyer do and
what different degrees of vulnerability lawyer’s criticism. A lawyer may have to
represent a client or establish relationship with him for a long time before feeling
certain about the outer limits of his role.
The best approach in dealing with this particular type of client is define
right upon the acceptance of the employment or before giving advice, the extent
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of client’s role. He should be made to feel that as a lawyer his wishes can be
followed insofar as they appear to be legally feasible and do not collide with the
lawyer’s oath. Frankness is the name of the game. The lawyer’s role is to stand
foursquare with his client’s interest, but only to such limit that will not allow him
compromise his professional and moral standards, by advising on a course of
conduct bordering on ethical principle.
Conclusion
Engaging in a practice of law such as legal counseling must be
predicated on attorney-client relationship. If there is now attorney-client
relationship and the lawyer merely gives advice it will not be considered practice
of law.
References:
Legal Counseling with Notes on: Practicum and Practice Court by Recaredo P. Barte
Legal and Judicial Ethics by Ruben E. Agpalo
Internet
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