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THE JACKSONVILLE BAR ASSOCIATION'S PROFESSIONALISM GUIDELINES
In its continuing effort to promote professionalism,
The Jacksonville Bar Association adopted in 1996 the Guidelines
for Professional Conduct promulgated by the Trial Lawyers Section
of The Florida Bar. These Guidelines have been given to every
Circuit and County Court Judge in Florida and have received the
endorsement of the Florida Conference of Circuit Judges. They
are not intended to be mandatory, but rather represent the standards
to which members of The Jacksonville Bar Association expect their
members to adhere. While the Guidelines should simply reflect
the current practice of most members of the Association, their
adoption by the Association in 1996 represented an effort to improve
the already high level of professionalism among all of the Association's
members. They also serve as a benchmark for trial attorneys and
judges to gauge the conduct of practicing attorneys. The Guidelines
were adopted in April 1996 under the leadership of Jacksonville
Bar Association President Marc Mayo and Professionalism Committee
Chair Tim Corrigan. The current Professionalism Committee is pleased
to have them published now in the new Professional Directory.
In addition to the Guidelines for Trial Lawyers, the Association
has prepared and endorsed separate Guidelines for Professional
Conduct for business and transactional lawyers, which are also
published in this Professional Directory. These Guidelines are
intended to emphasize standards which are applicable to all professional
contacts among attorneys, but with particular emphasis on those
attorneys engaged in transactional law.
FOREWORD
In 1993 the Executive Council of the Trial Lawyers Section of
The Florida Bar (which represents over 6,000 trial lawyers in
Florida) formed a professionalism committee to prepare practical
guidelines on professional conduct for trial lawyers. After reviewing
the numerous aspirational and model guidelines from Florida and
around the country, the professionalism committee determined that,
with minor modifications, the guidelines that had been prepared
by the Hillsborough County Bar Association were the best model
for the entire state. Therefore, in 1994, at the request of the
professionalism committee, the Executive Council of the Trial
Lawyers Section unanimously approved the Guidelines for Professional
Conduct. The Trial Lawyers Section then sought the endorsement
of the Guidelines from the Florida Conference of Circuit Court
Judges; at its meeting held in September 1995, the Conference
approved the Guidelines. In so doing, the Conference asserted
that the Guidelines do not have the force of law and that trial
judges still have the right and obligation to consider issues
raised by the Guidelines on a case-by-case basis issues raised
by the Guidelines. Since their endorsement by the Conference,
the Guidelines have been followed by lawyers throughout the state
and have been endorsed by administrative order in many circuits.
Beginning in 1999, the Trial Lawyers Section undertook to rewrite
the Guidelines to clarify certain provisions, to make certain
provisions consistent with current law, and to eliminate certain
provisions considered unnecessary because they were redundant
of either a rule of civil procedure or a rule of professional
conduct, which lawyers are expected to follow as minimum standards
of professionalism. The 2001 edition of the Guidelines is the
result of that effort. These revised Guidelines are promulgated
jointly by the Conference of Circuit Court Judges, the Conference
of County Court Judges, and the Trial Lawyers Section of The Florida
Bar. It is hoped that dissemination of these Guidelines will give
direction to both lawyers and judges concerning how lawyers should
conduct themselves in all
phases of trial practice. The adoption of the Guidelines by the
Trial Lawyers Section also is intended to express support for
trial judges who require that lawyers conduct themselves professionally.
For most lawyers, these Guidelines simply will reflect their current
practice. However, it is hoped that the use of these Guidelines
will continue to increase the level of professionalism in trial
practice in Florida.
This 2001 edition supercedes the previous edition of the Guidelines.
PREAMBLE
The effective administration of justice requires the interaction
of many professionals and disciplines, but none is more critical
than the role of the lawyer. In fulfilling that role, a lawyer
performs many tasks, few of which are easy, most of which are
exacting. In the final analysis, a lawyer's duty is always to
the client. In striving to fulfill that duty, a lawyer always
must be ever conscious of his or her broader duty to the judicial
system that serves both attorney and client. To the judiciary,
a lawyer owes candor, diligence and utmost respect. To the administration
of justice, a lawyer unquestionably owes the fundamental duties
of personal dignity and professional integrity. Coupled with those
duties, is a lawyer's duty of courtesy and cooperation with fellow
professionals for the efficient administration of our system of
justice and the respect of the public it serves.
In furtherance of these fundamental concepts, the following Guidelines
for Professional conduct are adopted. It is recognized that these
Guidelines must be applied in keeping with the advocacy of the
interests of ones client and the long tradition of professionalism
among and between members of the Trial Lawyers Section of The
Florida Bar. These Guidelines are subject to the Florida and Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, the Florida Rules of Professional Conduct,
and the specific requirements of any standing or administrative
order, local court rule, or order entered in a specific case.
Although we do not expect every lawyer to agree with every guideline,
these standards reflect our best effort to encourage decency and
courtesy in our professional lives without intruding unreasonably
on each lawyer's choice of style or tactics.
A. GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- A lawyer is both an officer of the court and an advocate.
As such, the lawyer always should strive to uphold the honor
and dignity of the profession, avoid disorder and disruption
in the courtroom, and maintain a respectful attitude toward
the court.
- A lawyers word should be his or her bond.
- A lawyer should adhere strictly to all express promises and
agreements with other counsel, whether oral or in writing.
- A lawyer should be courteous and civil in all professional
dealings with other persons. Lawyers should act in a civil manner
regardless of the ill feelings that their clients may have toward
others. Lawyers can disagree without being disagreeable. Effective
representation does not require antagonistic or acrimonious
behavior. Whether orally or in writing, lawyers should avoid
vulgar language, disparaging personal remarks, or acrimony toward
other counsel, parties, or witnesses.
- Lawyers should require that persons under their supervision
conduct themselves with courtesy and civility.
- When consistent with their clients interests, lawyers
should cooperate with opposing counsel to avoid litigation and
to resolve litigation that already has commenced.
- A lawyer should not use any aspect of the litigation process,
including discovery and motion practice, as a means of harassment
or to unnecessarily prolong litigation or increase litigation
expenses.
B. SCHEDULING, CONTINUANCES, AND EXTENSIONS OF TIME
- Attorneys are encouraged to communicate with opposing counsel
prior to scheduling depositions, hearings and other proceedings,
in order to schedule them at times that are mutually convenient
for all interested persons. Alternatively, if an attorney does
not communicate with opposing counsel prior to scheduling a
deposition or hearing, the attorney should be willing to reschedule
that deposition or hearing if the time selected is inconvenient
for opposing counsel.
- Upon receiving an inquiry concerning a proposed time for a
hearing, deposition, meeting, or other proceeding, a lawyer
should promptly agree to the proposal or offer a counter suggestion
that is as close in time as is reasonably possible.
- A lawyer should call potential scheduling conflicts or problems
to the attention of those affected, including the court or tribunal,
as soon as they become apparent to the lawyer.
- Attorneys should cooperate with each other when conflicts
and calendar changes are necessary and requested.
- Counsel should never request a calendar change or misrepresent
a conflict in order to obtain an advantage or delay. However,
in the practice of law, emergencies affecting our families or
our professional commitments will arise which create conflicts
and make requests inevitable. We should be cooperative with
each other whenever possible in agreement to calendar changes,
and should make such request of other counsel only when absolutely
necessary.
- Attorneys should endeavor to provide opposing counsel, parties,
witnesses, and other affected persons, sufficient notice of
depositions, hearings and other proceedings, except upon agreement
of counsel, in an emergency, or in other circumstances compelling
more expedited scheduling.
- When scheduling hearings and other adjudicative proceedings,
a lawyer should request an amount of time that is truly calculated
to permit full and fair presentation of the matter to be adjudicated
and to permit equal response by the lawyer's adversary.
- A lawyer should accede to all reasonable requests for scheduling,
rescheduling, cancellations, extensions, and postponements that
do not prejudice the client's opportunity for full, fair and
prompt consideration and adjudication of the client's claim
or defense.
- First requests for reasonable extensions of time to respond
to litigation deadlines, whether relating to pleadings, discovery
or motions, should ordinarily by granted between counsel as
a matter of courtesy unless time is of the essence.
- After a first extension, any additional requests for time
should be dealt with by balancing the need for expedition against
the deference one should ordinarily give to an opponent's schedule
of professional and personal engagements, the reasonableness
of the length of extension requested, the opponent's willingness
to grant reciprocal extensions, the time actually needed for
the task, and whether it is likely a court would grant the extension
if asked to do so.
- A lawyer should advise clients against the strategy of granting
no time extensions for the sake of appearing "tough."
- A lawyer should not seek extensions or continuances or refuse
to grant them for the purpose of harassment or prolonging litigation.
- A lawyer should not attach to extensions unfair and extraneous
conditions. A lawyer is entitled to impose conditions such as
preserving the right to seek reciprocal scheduling concessions.
However, a lawyer should not, by granting extensions, seek to
preclude an opponent's substantive rights, such as his or her
right to move against a complaint.
- A lawyer should not request rescheduling, cancellations, extensions,
or postponements without legitimate reasons and never solely
for the purpose of delay or obtaining unfair advantage.
C. SERVICE OF PAPERS
- Papers should not be served in order to take advantage of
an opponent's known absence from the office or at a time or
in a manner designed to inconvenience an adversary, such as
late on Friday afternoon or the day preceding a secular or religious
holiday. A paper is any written material that is
to be filed with a court or other tribunal.
- Service should be made personally or by facsimile transmission
when it is likely that service by mail, even when allowed, will
not provide the opposing party with adequate time to review
the paper before a court appearance. Sending an additional copy
of electronic mail also is encouraged, if possible.
D. MEMORANDA, AFFIDAVITS AND DECLARATIONS
- Copies of any submissions to the court (correspondence, memoranda
of law, case law, and so forth) should be provided simultaneously
to opposing counsel by substantially the same method of delivery
by which they are provided to the court. For example, if a memorandum
of law is hand-delivered to the court, a copy should be hand-delivered
or faxed to opposing counsel at the same time. If asked by the
court to prepare an order, counsel should furnish a copy of
the order, and any transmitted letter, to opposing counsel when
the material is submitted to the court. Sending an additional
copy by electronic mail also is encouraged, if possible.
- Papers, including memoranda of law, should not be served at
court appearances unless the proponent agrees to give opposing
counsel reasonable time including memoranda of law, are served
before a court appearance, those papers should not be served
so close in time to the court appearance as to inhibit the ability
of opposing counsel to prepare for that appearance or to respond
to the papers.
- Neither written submissions nor oral presentations should
disparage the intelligence, ethics, morals, integrity or personal
behavior of one's adversaries, unless those characteristics
or actions are directly and necessarily in issue.
E. COMMUNICATIONS WITH ADVERSARIES
- Counsel should always be civil and courteous in communicating
with an adversary, whether in writing or orally.
- Letters should not be written to ascribe to one's adversary
a position that the adversary has not taken or to create a
record of events that have not occurred.
- Unless specifically permitted or invited by the court, letters
between counsel should not be sent to judges.
F. DEPOSITIONS
- Depositions should be taken only when actually needed to ascertain
facts or information or to perpetuate testimony. Depositions
never should be used as a means of harassment or to generate
expense.
- When scheduling depositions, reasonable consideration should
be given to accommodating schedules of opposing counsel and
deponent, when it is possible to do so without prejudicing the
client's rights.
- When scheduling depositions on oral examination, a lawyer
should allow enough time to permit the conclusion of the deposition,
including examination by all parties, without adjournment.
- Counsel should not attempt to delay a deposition for dilatory
purposes, but only if necessary to meet real scheduling problems.
- Counsel should not inquire into a deponent's personal affairs
or integrity when that inquiry is not relevant to the subject
matter involved in the pending action.
- Counsel should refrain from repetitive or argumentative questions
or those asked solely for purposes of harassment. Counsel should
not conduct questioning in a manner that is intended to harass
a witness, such as by repeating questions after they have been
answered, by raising ones voice or by appearing angry
at the witness.
- Counsel defending a deposition should limit objections to
those that are well founded and permitted by the Florida or
Federal Rules Rules of Civil Procedure or applicable case law.
Counsel should remember that most objections are preserved and
need be interposed only when the form of the question is defective
or when privileged information is sought. When objecting to
the form of a question, counsel should simply state "I
object to the form of the question." The grounds should
not be stated unless asked for by the examining attorney. When
the grounds are requested, they should be stated succinctly.
- While a question is pending, counsel should not coach the
deponent nor suggest answers through objections or otherwise.
- Counsel should refrain from self-serving speeches during depositions.
- Counsel should not engage in any conduct during a deposition
that would not be allowed in the presence of a judicial officer,
including disparaging personal remarks or acrimony toward opposing
counsel, and gestures, facial expressions, audible comment,
or the like as manifestations of approval or disapproval during
the testimony of the witness.
G. DOCUMENT DEMANDS
- When responding to unclear document demands, receiving counsel
should attempt to discuss the demands with propounding counsel
so that the demands can be complied with fully or appropriate
objections can be raised.
- Document production should not be delayed to prevent opposing
counsel from inspecting documents before scheduled depositions
or for any other tactical reason.
- A lawyer should never use document demands for the purpose
of harassing or improperly burdening an adversary or to cause
the adversary to incur unnecessary expense.
H. INTERROGATORIES
- In responding to interrogatories whose meaning is unclear,
receiving counsel should attempt to discuss the meaning with
propounding counsel so that the interrogatories can be answered
fully or appropriate objections can be raised.
- Objections to interrogatories should be based on a good faith
belief and not be made for the purpose of withholding relevant
information. If an interrogatory is objectionable only in part,
the unobjectionable portion should be answered.
- A lawyer should never use document demands for the purpose
of harassing or improperly burdening an adversary or to cause
the adversary to incur unnecessary expense.
I. MOTION PRACTICE
- Lawyers should avoid unnecessary motion practice or other
judicial intervention by negotiating and agreeing with other
counsel whenever practicable. For example, before setting for
hearing a nondispositive motion, counsel shall make a reasonable
effort to resolve the issue.
- A lawyer should not force an adversary to make a motion and
then not oppose it.
- After a hearing, the attorney charged with preparing the proposed
order should prepare it promptly, generally no later than the
following business day, unless it should be submitted immediately
to the court. T he order fairly and adequately must represent
the ruling of the court.
- Before submitting a proposed order to the court, attorneys
should provide the order to opposing counsel for approval, either
orally or in writing. Opposing counsel then promptly should
communicate any objections. As soon as objections are made,
the drafting attorney immediately should submit a copy of the
proposed order to the court and advise the court whether the
proposed order has been approved by opposing counsel.
J. EX PARTE COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE COURT AND OTHERS
- A lawyer should avoid ex parte communication on the substance
of a pending case with a judge before whom such case is pending.
- Before making an authorized ex parte application or communication
to the court, a lawyer should make diligent efforts to notify
the opposing party or a lawyer known or likely to represent
the opposing party and to accommodate the schedule of that lawyer
to permit the opposing party to be represented on the application.
A lawyer should make an ex parte application or communication
(including an application to shorten an otherwise applicable
time period) only where there is a bona fide emergency that
will result in serious prejudice to the lawyers client
if the application or communication is made on regular notice.
- Attorneys should notify opposing counsel of all oral or written
communications with the court or other tribunal, except those
involving only scheduling matters.
- A lawyer should be courteous and may be cordial to a judge
but should never show marked attention or unusual informality
to the judge. A judge should be referred to by surname in court.
A lawyer should avoid anything calculated to gain, or to have
the appearance of gaining, special personal consideration or
favor from a judge.
K. SETTLEMENT AND ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION
- An attorney should raise and explore the issue of settlement
in every case as soon as enough is known about the case to make
settlement discussions meaningful.
- Counsel should not falsely hold out the possibility of settlement
as a means for adjourning discovery or delaying trial.
- In every case, counsel should consider whether the client's
interest could be served adequately and the controversy more
quickly and economically be expedited trial, voluntary trial
resolution, arbitration, mediation, or other forms of alternative
dispute resolution.
L. TRIAL CONDUCT AND COURTROOM DECORUM
- A lawyer should always interact with parties, counsel, witnesses,
jurors or prospective jurors, court personnel and the judges
with courtesy and civility and should avoid undignified or discourteous
conduct that is degrading to the court or the proceedings.
- Counsel shall admonish all persons at counsel table that gestures,
facial expressions, audible comments, or the like, as manifestations
of approval or disapproval during the testimony of witnesses
or at any other time, absolutely are prohibited.
- During trials and evidentiary hearings, the lawyers mutually
should agree to disclose the identities and duration of witnesses
anticipated to be called that day and the following day, including
depositions to be read, and should cooperate in sharing with
opposing counsel all visual aid equipment.
- A lawyer should abstain from conduct calculated to detract
or divert the fact finders attention from the relevant
facts or otherwise cause the fact finder to reach a decision
on an impermissible basis.
- A lawyer knowingly should not misstate, distort, or improperly
exaggerate any fact or opinion nor permit the lawyers
silence or inaction to mislead anyone.
- In appearing in his or her professional capacity before a
tribunal, a lawyer should not
- State or allude to any matter that he or she has no reasonable
basis to believe is relevant to the case or that will not
be supported by admissible evidence;
- Ask any questions that he or she has no reasonable basis
to believe is relevant to the case and that is intended
to degrade a witness or other person;
- Assert a personal knowledge or opinions concerning the
facts in issue, except when testifying as a witness;
- Assert a personal opinion concerning the justness of a
cause, the credibility of a witness, the culpability of
a civil litigant, or the guilt or innocence of an accused,
but may argue, on the lawyers analysis of the evidence,
for any position or conclusion with respect to the matters
at issue.
- A question should not be interrupted by an objection unless
the question is patently objectionable or there is a reasonable
ground to believe that information is being included that should
not be disclosed to the jury.
- When a judge already has made a ruling about the inadmissibility
of certain evidence, a lawyer should not seek to circumvent
the effect of that ruling and get the evidence before the jury
by repeated questions relating to the evidence in question,
although the lawyer may make a record for later proceedings
of the ground for urging the admissibility of the evidence in
question. This does not preclude efforts by the lawyer to have
the evidence admitted through other, proper means.
- A lawyer scrupulously should abstain from all acts, comments,
and attitudes calculated to curry favor with any juror, by fawning,
flattery, actual or pretended solicitude for the jurors
comfort or convenience, or the like.
- A lawyer never should attempt to place before a tribunal or
jury evidence known to be clearly inadmissible, nor make any
remarks or statements intended improperly to influence the outcome
of any case.
- A lawyer should accede to reasonable requests for waivers
of procedural formalities when the clients legitimate
interests are not affected adversely.
THE JACKSONVILLE BAR ASSOCIATION'S
PROFESSIONAL GUIDELINES FOR BUSINESS LAWYERS
PREAMBLE
The Association recognizes that, although a large portion of its
membership is actively engaged in litigation, there are many attorneys
whose practices are devoted to the representation of clients outside
the courtroom. While many of the Guidelines for Professional Conduct
are equally applicable beyond the context of litigation, attorneys
who engage in transactional law must also recognize their responsibilities
with respect to courtesy and cooperation with their fellow professionals.
This Addendum is intended to emphasize standards which are fundamentally
applicable to all professional contacts among attorneys, but with
a particular emphasis on those attorneys engaged in transactional
law, recognizing that attorneys engaged in this type of practice
may or may not be adversaries, and frequently represent clients
who have common as well as disparate interests. For this reason,
references to "opposing attorneys" should be read broadly,
to include all attorneys who represent other parties to a transaction.
A. SCHEDULING
- Attorneys should cooperate with each other when conflicts
and calendar changes are necessary and requested.
- Counsel shall never request a calendar change or misrepresent
a conflict in order to obtain an advantage or delay. However,
in the practice of law, emergencies affecting our families or
our professional commitments will arise which create conflicts
and make requests inevitable. We should be cooperative with
each other whenever possible in agreeing to calendar changes,
and should make such request of other counsel only when absolutely
necessary.
- Attorneys should notify opposing attorneys of scheduling difficulties
as soon as they become know.
- Meetings, conferences and closings with opposing attorneys
and clients should be scheduled at the most practical location.
- Attorneys should make every effort to appear promptly with
their clients at scheduled meetings, and attorneys providing
facilities for such meetings should be ready to receive the
opposing attorneys and their clients at scheduled time.
B. COMMUNICATIONS
- Counsel should at all times be civil and courteous in communicating
with opposing attorneys, whether in writing or orally.
- Attorneys should promptly respond to communications from opposing
attorneys whether by telephone, facsimile or correspondence.
- Letters should not be written to ascribe to an opposing attorney
a position he or she has not taken or to create "a record"
of events that have not occurred.
- Letters intended only to make a record should be used sparingly
and only when thought to be necessary under all circumstances.
- Attorneys should adhere strictly to all express promises to
and agreements with opposing attorneys, whether oral or in writing,
and should adhere in good faith to all agreements implied by
the circumstances or local custom.
- During the course of representing a client, an attorney should
not communicate on the subject of the representation with a
party known to be represented by another attorney in that matter
without the prior consent of the other attorney.
C. DOCUMENTS
- Counsel should not produce requested documents in a disorganized
or unintelligible fashion, or in a way calculated to hide or
obscure the existence of particular documents or information.
- Document production should not be delayed to prevent an opposing
attorney from inspecting or reviewing documents prior to scheduled
meetings or closings or for any tactical reason.
- Attorneys should not attempt to draft or request changes to
documents in a manner to take unfair advantage of the other
party or place unreasonable burdens on the other party.
- A request for an opinion from opposing counsel should not
require an opinion with respect to any matter which the requesting
attorney, assuming an equivalent level of competence and knowledge,
would not be willing to give, and should not require an opinion
as to any matter outside the normal and customary scope of an
attorney's expertise.
- Attorneys should not make any substantive changes to documents
during course of revision without highlighting, redlining or
other side clearly indicating the changes for the benefit of
the opposing attorney.
D. RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES
Except where there are strong and overriding issues of principle,
an attorney should raise and explore the issue of settlement or
compromise of disputes in every matter arising during the course
of any transaction as soon as enough is known about the matter
to make such discussions meaningful.
E. CONDUCT
- An attorney should always deal with parties and opposing attorneys
with courtesy and civility and avoid undignified, discourteous
or adversarial conduct.
- Attorneys should be prepared in advance for any meeting or
closing.
- An attorney should avoid disparaging personal remarks or acrimony
toward opposing attorneys.
- An attorneys word should be his or her bond. The attorney
should not knowingly misstate, distort or improperly exaggerate
any fact, opinion or legal authority and should not improperly
permit the attorneys silence or inaction to mislead anyone.
Further, if this occurs unintentionally and is later discovered,
it should immediately be disclosed or otherwise corrected.
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