The Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam Outline
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  1. MPRE Basics

    What's up with the MPRE? Here are the basic facts you need to know.

    1. What

      The MPRE is a two-hour, 60-question multiple-choice exam that tests the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct (MRPC), the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct (MCJC), and certain other ethics-related concepts, like attorney-client privilege, the work product doctrine, malpractice liability, and Rule 11 sanctions. It's administered by the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE).

      1. Scored v. pretest questions

        Fifty questions are scored and 10 are experimental, “pretest” questions that are not scored. (The bar examiners are trying out the pretest questions for future versions of the exam.) You won’t be able to tell the pretest questions from the scored questions, so you should treat all of them as if they are real.

      2. Four answer choices

        Each question will have four answer choices.

      3. Scoring

        Scores on the MPRE can range from 50 to 150.

        1. Passing scores

          Each jurisdiction sets its own score required to pass. Currently, passing scores range from 75 to 86, with the majority of jurisdictions setting the bar between 80 and 85.        The best resource for your jurisdiction’s requirements is going to be the state bar admissions agency. The NCBE’s website (https://www.ncbex.org/exams/mpre/) offers recent information for each jurisdiction, but it’s not always up to date.

        2. Equated scoring

          Just like scores on the Multistate Bar Exam (MBE), MPRE scores are “equated” or scaled to account for differences in difficulty between test administrations. That means if you take the MPRE in August and it’s harder than the one that was given in March, your score will be adjusted so that you’re on an equal playing field with the March examinees. It also means that the number of right answers you need to get a particular score changes from exam to exam.

        3. If in doubt, guess

          Your score is based on the number of questions you get right. The MPRE doesn’t penalize wrong answers, so you should make sure you select an answer choice for every question, even if you have to guess.

    2. Why

      As of 2022, every state and territory except Wisconsin and Puerto Rico requires the MPRE for bar admission. Connecticut and New Jersey also accept evidence that an applicant completed a professional responsibility course in law school as a substitute for the MPRE.

    3. When

      The MPRE is generally offered in March, August, and November. You’ll have two days in each month to choose from.   The 2022 dates are March 23 and 24, August 10 and 11, and November 14 and 15.

    4. Where

      The MPRE is administered on computers provided at Pearson VUE testing centers. See https://home.pearsonvue.com/mpre for more details about test locations and procedures.

    5. How

      How do you succeed on the MPRE?

      1. Learning the rules

        Understand the substance of the rules. There's no need to learn rule numbers or to memorize the exact wording, but you'll want to be familiar enough to recognize key words and phrases when you see them in the answer choices. This outline generally includes rule numbers for ease of reference while you are studying.

      2. Applying the rules

        The official comments to the rules often include examples of what does or does not constitute a violation. Those examples often turn up in fact patterns on the MPRE. The rule discussions in this outline incorporate the highest-yield comments.

      3. High-yield topics

        Certain rules and issues show up again and again on the MPRE.

        1. Conflicts

          The MPRE loves to test conflicts-related issues, including imputed conflicts and screening, duties to former clients, personal interests of a lawyer, and interference by third parties in the lawyer-client relationship.

        2. Advocacy

          The MPRE loves to test the responsibilities of a lawyer as an officer of the court when she's acting as an advocate for a client. Topics like candor toward the tribunal, trial publicity, and fairness to opposing parties are perennial favorites.

        3. Reasonableness standard

          You will see “reasonable” and “reasonably” all over the MRPC and MCJC as the standard that determines when a lawyer or judge has crossed a line. Depending on the rule, you may be asked to decide what's reasonable from the perspective of a lawyer or judge or from the perspective of a client or member of the public.

        4. Appearance of judicial impropriety

          One key concept to remember about judicial conduct is that activities that would create an appearance of impropriety are prohibited, even if there's no actual unfairness or self-dealing involved. That's because it's part of a judge's responsibility to maintain the reputation of the justice system. If you see a judge doing something that would look improper to a reasonable person, it's probably an MCJC violation.

      4. Approaching MPRE questions

        MPRE questions follow a predictable pattern.

        1. Call of the question

          The most common calls you will see on the MPRE will ask (1) whether someone in the fact pattern should be subject to discipline or (2) whether the person's conduct was proper.

        2. Answer choices

          Most questions will then have two answer choices that begin with “Yes, because” and two that begin with “No, because.” This format is pretty convenient because once you reason through the yes-or-no part, you've eliminated two wrong answers. Then, you can move on to selecting the right “because” phrase to back up your conclusion.

        3. Details matter

          The MPRE tests lots of exceptions and minutiae. Many of the basic rules will seem like common sense, but the devil is really in the details on this exam.

        4. Practice questions

          It’s important to do some practice questions to get used to thinking of ethics issues in a multiple-choice format. Some bar prep companies and printed publications offer MPRE-style questions. In addition, the NCBE sells access to two simulated exams (with answer explanations) and offers 15 free sample questions (https://www.ncbex.org/study-aids/).

  2. Key definitions (MRPC 1.0)

    Some concepts appear over and over again throughout the MRPC. Here’s how the rules define the key terms you need to know.

    1. Informed consent

      “Informed consent” means a person’s agreement to a proposed course of conduct after the lawyer adequately explains the material risks and reasonably available alternatives.

      1. Confirmed in writing

        Informed consent is “confirmed in writing” if (1) the consenting person puts it in writing or (2) a lawyer promptly transmits a writing to the person to confirm an oral consent.

        1. Writing or written

          “Writing” or “written” means a tangible or electronic record of a communication. In addition to handwritten or typed/printed documents, it can include photographs, audio or video recordings, and electronic communications.

        2. Within a reasonable time

          If it is not feasible to obtain or transmit the writing at the time the person gives informed consent, the lawyer must do so within a reasonable time.

    2. Reasonable or reasonably 

      A lawyer’s conduct is “reasonable” if it’s something a reasonably prudent and competent lawyer would do.

    3. Substantial 

      Something is “substantial” under the MRPC if it is a material matter of clear and weighty importance.

    4. Law firm

      MRPC 1.0 defines a “law firm” as a lawyer or lawyers in a partnership, professional corporation, sole proprietorship, or other association authorized to practice law. It also includes lawyers who work for a legal services organization or the legal department of a corporation or other organization.

    5. Screened

      “Screened” means that a firm has isolated a lawyer from participation in a matter to protect information that the lawyer is obligated to protect under the MRPC or other law. The firm’s procedures have to be reasonably adequate to safeguard the information.

    6. Tribunal

      A “tribunal” means a court, an arbitrator in a binding arbitration, or a legislative body, administrative agency, or other body that is acting in an adjudicative capacity. It does not include mediation.

      1. Adjudicative capacity

        A legislative body, administrative agency, or other body is acting in an adjudicative capacity when a neutral official will hear the presentation of evidence or legal argument and then render a binding legal judgment that affects a party’s interests in a matter.

  3. Client-lawyer relationship

    This topic is an area of emphasis on the MPRE. Questions in this category should account for 10-16% of the MPRE.

    1. Prospective clients (MRPC 1.18)

      A prospective client is someone who consults with a lawyer about the possibility of forming a client-lawyer relationship for a particular matter.

      1. What counts as a “consultation”

        A consultation can be written, oral, or electronic. Whether a particular communication counts as a consultation depends on the circumstances. If there’s a back-and-forth exchange between a lawyer and a person seeking legal advice, it’s likely to be a consultation. It's a closer call when a person sends a message to a lawyer outside the context of a meeting, a phone call, or some other two-way communication.

        1. Response to a lawyer’s specific solicitation

          You probably have a consultation if (1) a lawyer, either in person or through an ad, specifically invites people to submit information about a potential representation and (2) a person responds by providing that information. A solicitation of this type would make a reasonable person think that the lawyer is willing to discuss taking that person on as a client.

          1. Cautionary statements

            A lawyer can avoid creating a consultation if she or her ad includes a clear warning that the lawyer doesn’t have any obligation to the person submitting the information.

            1. Reasonable person standard

              The warning has to be clear enough to prevent a reasonable person from thinking the lawyer is willing to discuss taking that person on as a client in a particular matter.

        2. Not a communication with intent to disqualify

          It’s also not a consultation if a person communicates with a lawyer for the purpose of disqualifying that lawyer from representing another party in the matter. If the person’s motive in communicating isn’t to explore a client-lawyer relationship, then the person is not a prospective client.

      2. Togstad definition of “prospective client”

        Another definition of “prospective client” that you should be familiar with for the MPRE comes from a federal case called Togstad v. Vesely. It has three elements: (1) a person seeks legal advice; 2) the person reasonably relies on the lawyer's response as legal advice; and 3) the lawyer doesn't try to dissuade the person from relying on the advice.

      3. Prospective client conflicts

        See the Conflicts of interest, Prospective client conflicts section, below, for the rules about when communications with a prospective client disqualify a lawyer from representing another party to a matter.

      4. Information confidential

        A lawyer who has learned information from a prospective client must keep that information confidential and must not use it against the prospective client.

        1. Unless widely known

          A lawyer may use information she received from a prospective client in representing an adverse party if the information has become widely known.

    2. Formation of the client-lawyer relationship

      The MRPC do not describe the moment when a client-lawyer relationship forms. The definition you need to know comes from Section 14 of the Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers. Under that section, a relationship of client and lawyer arises in two situations.

      1. Actions of prospective client and lawyer

        A person manifests an intent that the lawyer provide legal services for her and either (a) the lawyer manifests consent to do so; or (b) the lawyer fails to manifest a lack of consent and knows or reasonably should know that the person reasonably relies on the lawyer to provide the services.

      2. Appointment by tribunal

        A client-lawyer relationship also forms when a tribunal appoints a lawyer to provide legal services.

      3. No formalities required

        There’s no requirement that the client and lawyer sign an engagement agreement or shake hands on the relationship.

        1. Reasonable from the client's perspective

          A lawyer may inadvertently form a lawyer-client relationship if a prospective client asks for help and the lawyer isn’t clear about declining the representation. It all depends on what seems reasonable from the client’s point of view.

    3. Scope of representation and decision-making authority (MRPC 1.2)

      This rule describes how a lawyer and client can define the goals of their relationship and the roles each of them will play in achieving those goals.

      1. Objectives

        The client sets the objectives for a representation, and the lawyer must abide by them.

        1. Within the bounds of law

          A lawyer’s duty to abide by her client’s objectives is conditioned on those objectives being legal. A lawyer can’t knowingly counsel a client to commit a crime or fraud or assist a client in doing so. That includes advice about how to conceal a crime and avoid prosecution.

          1. Mandatory withdrawal

            A lawyer is required to withdraw from a representation if she discovers that the client is currently using her services to commit a crime or fraud. From that point, continued representation would assist the client in committing the crime or fraud, which would violate the MRPC. Withdrawal is mandatory if the crime or fraud is ongoing. See MRPC 1.16.

          2. Honest opinion about a course of conduct

            A lawyer is permitted, however, to analyze and discuss with the client any legal consequences of a course of conduct the client proposes. This kind of advice is exactly what lawyers are there for: to explain the risks to the client and encourage her to take the path that best serves her interest (i.e., the legal one).

        2. No endorsement

          Representing a client does not constitute an endorsement of the client's political, economic, social, or moral views or activities.

      2. Means

        The lawyer is primarily responsible for determining the means by which to carry out the client’s objectives. Clients will typically defer to a lawyer’s knowledge of technical, legal, and tactical issues that arise in a matter.

        1. Consulting with the client

          A lawyer is required to consult with the client about the means she intends to pursue. See more about this rule (MRPC 1.4) in the Communications with clients section, below.

        2. Actual authority

          A lawyer can direct the means of a representation if the client gives her actual authority to do so. For example, at the beginning of a representation, the client might authorize the lawyer to take specific kinds of actions without further consultation.

          1. Reliance

            Unless there’s a material change in circumstances or there’s an obligation to communicate with the client (under MRPC 1.4), the lawyer can rely on the advance authorization.

          2. Revocation by client

            But the client may revoke any actual authority given to the lawyer at any time.

        3. Apparent authority

          In general, a lawyer may take whatever actions are impliedly authorized to carry out the representation. For example, in litigation, a lawyer will usually have implied authority to send discovery requests to the opposing party.

          1. When client’s decision is final

            There are four areas in which the client has sole decision-making power, and the lawyer has to abide by the client’s choices. You can remember them by the acronym STEW. The lawyer should still consult with the client about each of these matters so that the client has all the necessary information to make an informed decision.

            1. Settle

              In all criminal and civil matters, a lawyer must abide by a client's decision about whether to agree to a settlement.

            2. Testify

              A criminal defendant gets to decide whether to testify at trial.

            3. Enter a plea

              A criminal defendant has the final say about whether to plead guilty or not guilty.

            4. Waive a jury trial

              A criminal defendant has the sole right to determine whether to waive the right to a jury trial.

        4. Lawyer-client disagreement about means

          If the lawyer and client disagree about the means to use in carrying out the representation, the lawyer should consult with the client and attempt to reach agreement. If no agreement is possible, and the lawyer fundamentally disagrees with the client, the lawyer may withdraw from the representation. The client also has the right to discharge the lawyer at any time.

      3. Limiting the scope

        A lawyer may agree with the client to limit the scope of the representation.

        1. Reasonableness

          The limitations the lawyer proposes must be reasonable given the client’s circumstances.

        2. Informed consent

          The client must give informed consent to the limitation. The best practice here is to get an express, written agreement describing the scope of the representation.

        3. Objectives or means

          The lawyer and client can agree to limit either the objectives or the representation or the means used to accomplish them. Limiting the objectives is one way for a lawyer to fulfill the duty of competence: by limiting the representation to areas in which she has the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness, and preparation reasonably necessary for the representation. See the discussion of MRPC 1.1, below, for more on the duty of competence. Limiting the means may help the lawyer avoid having to take actions on the client’s behalf that are repugnant or unwise.

        4. Client-lawyer agreements in general

          All agreements between a lawyer and client about a representation must comply with the MRPC and any other applicable law.

    4. Declining or terminating representation (MRPC 1.16)

      Under normal circumstances, a representation terminates when the lawyer has performed whatever services she and the client agreed upon.  In some situations, however, a lawyer is required to withdraw, has the option to withdraw, or must decline to represent a client in the first place.

      1. Declining or withdrawal mandatory

        A lawyer must decline representation or withdraw in three situations.

        1. Violation of rules or law

          Representing the client will violate the MRPC or other law. If a lawyer learns, for example, that the client is committing an ongoing crime or fraud, she’s obligated to withdraw rather than assist in the client’s conduct.

        2. Lawyer's impairment

          The lawyer's physical or mental condition materially impairs her ability to represent the client.

        3. Discharge by client

          The client discharges the lawyer. In general, a client can fire a lawyer at any time for no reason (though the client will still have to pay the lawyer any fees already incurred). There may be an exception if you see a court-appointed lawyer or a client who is severely impaired. In both instances, the client may lack legal capacity to discharge counsel without a tribunal’s permission.

      2. Withdrawal optional

        A lawyer is permitted to withdraw in the middle of a representation under the following circumstances. You can remember them using the mnemonic IF CRUMB.

        1. Intent to commit crime or fraud

          The client intends to engage in conduct that involves the lawyer's services and that the lawyer reasonably believes will be criminal or fraudulent.

        2. Failure by the client to meet obligations

          The client fails to fulfill a serious obligation to the lawyer regarding the lawyer's services (e.g., failure to pay fees, to abide by an agreement between the lawyer and client, or to comply with a court order).

        3. (good) Cause

          There’s a catchall provision that allows a lawyer to withdraw if good cause exists but doesn't fit within the other categories.

        4. Repugnance

          The client insists upon a course of action, and the lawyer either finds it repugnant or fundamentally disagrees with it.

        5. Used lawyer’s services for crime or fraud

          The lawyer learns that the client has used the lawyer’s services in the past to commit a crime or fraud.

        6. (no) Material adverse effect

          The lawyer can withdraw without causing a material adverse effect on the client’s interests.

        7. Burden or difficulty

          The representation will place an unreasonable financial burden on the lawyer, or the client has made the representation unreasonably difficult.

      3. Court order to continue

        If the law requires a lawyer to give notice or get permission from a tribunal before withdrawing, the lawyer must comply with the law. If a tribunal orders a lawyer to continue the representation, she must do so, even if she has good cause for withdrawing.

        1. When this issue arises

          You are most likely to see this issue when a fact pattern involves pending litigation or a court-appointed lawyer.

      4. Reasonable protection when withdrawing

        A lawyer has to take reasonable steps to protect a client’s interest when the representation ends.

        1. What steps are reasonable

          Examples of reasonable steps include (1) giving the client reasonable notice; (2) giving the client time to find other counsel; (3) turning over the client’s papers and property; and (4) refunding any advance payments the client has made for fees and expenses not yet earned or incurred.

    5. Communications with the client (MRPC 1.4)

      A lawyer has a duty to make reasonable communications with the client so that the client can effectively participate in the representation. Failure to do so is a frequent bone of contention between lawyers and clients, so the bar examiners like to ask about these rules on the MPRE.

      1. Means of representation

        A lawyer must reasonably consult with the client about the means to use to accomplish the client's objectives.

        1. Exigent circumstances

          If an issue arises that requires an immediate decision, it may not be feasible to get the client’s input. In that case, the lawyer may proceed without consulting the client, but she should update the client promptly about any actions she takes.

        2. Minor or technical matters

          Most small or technical decisions don’t require client input. Details about trial presentation or negotiation techniques are usually left up to the lawyer to determine, unless the lawyer and client have agreed otherwise. Clients should be involved in shaping objectives, overall strategy, and other important or big-picture items.

        3. Expensive items

          If the proposed means of representation are going to include something costly, like taking 80 depositions in a case, the lawyer should definitely consult with the client first. It’s reasonable to think the client would want to weigh in before spending a large sum of money.

      2. Status updates

        A lawyer has to keep the client reasonably informed about the status of a matter.

        1. Important developments

          There’s no duty to update a client on every minor development, unless the client and lawyer have agreed otherwise. A lawyer does have to convey important developments that affect the timing or substance of the matter.

        2. Client's reasonable expectations

          A lawyer should fulfill a client's reasonable expectations for information in light of the nature of the representation and the duty to act in the client's best interests.

      3. Response to client requests

        Ideally, you communicate often enough with a client that she doesn’t feel the need to ask for information. But if she does, you must reply promptly.

        1. If you can't . . .

          If you can’t reply promptly, you need to get someone in your office to contact the client, acknowledge the request, and tell the client when she can expect a response from you.

      4. Limitations on lawyer's conduct

        If the lawyer knows that the client expects the lawyer to do something that isn’t permitted under the MRPC or other law, she has to explain to the client how the MRPC/law limits her conduct.

      5. Extent of communications required

        When a lawyer has a duty to communicate, she must explain a matter to the extent reasonably necessary for the client to make an informed decision.

      6. Exceptions to duty to communicate

        The Comment to MRPC 1.4 states a couple of exceptions to the lawyer’s duty to communicate.

        1. Risk of imprudent reaction or harm to client

          A lawyer can delay sharing information with a client when it’s likely that the client would react imprudently to the news or would be harmed by it.

          1. Not for personal or third-party interest

            Only the client’s well-being counts for this exception. A lawyer may not withhold information to serve her own interest or convenience or those of a third party.

        2. Rules or court order prohibiting disclosure

          Procedural rules or court orders that govern litigation may require a lawyer not to share certain information with a client. The lawyer has to comply with such a rule/order under MRPC 3.4.

    6. Fees and expenses (MRPC 1.5)

      A lawyer must not make an agreement for, charge, or collect an unreasonable fee or unreasonable expenses.

      1. Reasonable expenses

        A lawyer may seek reimbursement for the cost of services performed in-house (e.g., copying) or for expenses incurred in-house (e.g., telephone charges). The lawyer and client can agree to a reasonable amount in advance, or the lawyer can charge an amount that reasonably reflects the expenses the lawyer actually incurred.

      2. Reasonable fees

        Here are the key factors that determine if a fee is reasonable. You can remember them with the mnemonic Never Charge TALLER Fees.

        1. Novelty, difficulty, and required skill

          The novelty and difficulty of the questions involved, and the skill the lawyer will need to address them

        2. Customary fees

          The fee customarily charged in the locality for similar legal services

        3. Time and labor

          The time and labor required to carry out the representation

        4. Amount at issue and results

          The amount in controversy in the matter and the results the lawyer obtained

        5. Limited time

          Whether the client imposed any time limitations on the lawyer (e.g., was the matter handled on an emergency basis?)

        6. Lost opportunities

          Whether the representation will prevent the lawyer from accepting work from other clients, resulting in lost opportunities

        7. Experience, reputation, and ability

          The experience, reputation, and ability of the lawyer or lawyers conducting the representation

        8. Relationship between lawyer and client

          The nature and length of the lawyer’s professional relationship with the client

        9. Fixed or contingent

          Whether the fee is fixed or contingent

      3. Communication, preferably in writing

        A lawyer must communicate to the client (1) the scope of the representation and (2) the basis or rate of the fee and expenses the client must pay, preferably in writing, before the representation starts or within a reasonable time afterwards.

        1. Exception for regular client

          No communication about fees is required if the lawyer will charge a regularly represented client on the same basis or rate that the client usually pays.

        2. Changes in fees or expenses

          If the basis or rate of the fee or expenses changes, the lawyer must communicate the change to the client.

      4. Contingent fees, writing required

        In most kinds of matters, a fee may be contingent on the outcome.

        1. Contingent fee agreement 

          A contingent fee agreement must be in a writing signed by the client.

          1. Method of determination

            The agreement must state the method that will be used to determine the fee, including the percentage the lawyer will receive if there’s a settlement, trial, or appeal. It also has to include whether expenses will be deducted before or after the contingent fee is calculated and whether the client will be liable for expenses if the client doesn’t prevail.

        2. Written statement when matter ends

          When a contingent-fee matter ends, the lawyer must give the client a writing that (1) states the outcome of the matter and (2) if there is a recovery, shows how much the client will receive (less the lawyer’s fee and any expenses) and how the amount was determined.

        3. Prohibited contingency fee arrangements

          The MRPC specifically prohibit contingency fees in two situations.

          1. Domestic relations matters

            You can’t have a fee in a domestic relations matter that depends on securing a divorce or a certain amount of alimony, support, or property.

          2. Criminal cases

            You can’t charge a contingent fee for representing a defendant in a criminal case.

      5. Division of fees, different firms

        If lawyers who practice in separate firms want to divide a fee, there are three requirements.

        1. Basis for division

          The fee can be divided (1) in proportion to the services each lawyer performed or (2) if each lawyer assumes joint responsibility for the whole representation.

        2. Total fee reasonable

          The total fee charged to the client must be reasonable.

      6. Advances okay

        A lawyer can require or accept an advance on legal fees and expenses.

        1. Held in trust

          The advanced funds have to be kept in a client trust account (i.e., separate from the lawyer's funds) until earned.

        2. Balance returned

          Any unearned funds have to be returned to the client at the end of the representation.

      7. No exploitation of hourly billing

        A lawyer should not exploit a fee arrangement that’s based on an hourly fee by wasting time or taking longer than necessary to perform services.

      8. Payment in property

        In theory, a lawyer may accept property in payment for services. But on the MPRE, watch out for violations of MRPC 1.8 in this scenario. Payment in property may constitute (1) an acquisition of a proprietary interest in the subject matter of the litigation or (2) a business transaction with the client. See the Conflicts of interest section, below, for more on MRPC 1.8.

  4. Client confidentiality

    Questions from this category should account for 6-12% of the MPRE.

    1. Attorney-client privilege

      Attorney-client privilege protects confidential communications between an attorney and her client from legal demands for their disclosure (e.g., a subpoena to an attorney to testify or a discovery request).

      1. Three elements

        The privilege attaches if these three elements are satisfied.

        1. Confidential communication

          “Confidential” requires both physical privacy and the client's intent that the communication be confidential. If the client knows someone else is listening to the conversation, there is no physical privacy and therefore no privilege. If the client asks the attorney to disclose the communication to a third party, there is no intent to keep the communication confidential and therefore no privilege.

          1. Joint client exception

            When two or more clients with common interests consult an attorney, the privilege applies between them. In other words, a joint client doesn't count as a third party whose presence destroys the privilege.

            1. Against third parties

              Any of the joint clients can assert attorney-client privilege against third parties.

              1. Waiver

                A client in a joint representation can only waive the privilege as to its own communications with counsel. If any other joint clients were involved in a communication, the privilege can't be waived unless all participants consent.

            2. But not against each other

              The “adverse-litigation exception” to the privilege says that if joint clients sue each other or sue their joint counsel, all communications made during the representation are discoverable.

        2. Between attorney and client

          Both “attorney” and “client” are broadly defined for purposes of the privilege.

          1. “Attorney”

            This term is not limited to members of the bar. It includes people the client reasonably believes are members of the bar. It also extends to other members of the legal team who are reasonably necessary to facilitate the representation, like assistants, paralegals, translators, investigators, and accountants.

          2. “Client”

            This term includes prospective clients and client representatives who are reasonably necessary to facilitate the provision of legal services.

        3. Not documents or physical evidence

          The privilege only applies to communications for the purpose of giving or receiving legal advice. A document or other physical evidence doesn't become privileged when a client provides it to her attorney.

      2. Who holds it

        The attorney-client privilege belongs to the client.

        1. Waiver

          Because the privilege belongs only to the client, only the client can waive it. She can do so intentionally or inadvertently.

          1. Subject-matter waiver

            At common law, if you disclosed one privileged piece of information, you waived the privilege as to all other information about the same subject matter. Federal Rule of Evidence 502 was adopted to address concerns about whether federal courts would apply this sweeping, unforgiving doctrine—especially in the age of electronically stored information, where discovery means combing through masses of documents to avoid producing a privileged communication.

            1. Intentional disclosure, if required by fairness

              A party might intentionally disclose a document that's subject to the attorney-client privilege in a judicial or administrative proceeding. Doing so waives the privilege as to that document. It also waives the privilege as to undisclosed communications about the same subject matter if "they ought in fairness to be considered together" with whatever was intentionally disclosed. So if a party intentionally waives the privilege as to one document, it will result in a subject-matter waiver only if fairness requires. See FRE 502(a).

              1. Preventing selective disclosure

                The reason for this rule is to discourage litigants from revealing only the privileged documents that are helpful to them. You shouldn't be able to make "a selective, misleading presentation" of privileged information "that is unfair to [your] adversary." See Notes to FRE 502.

            2. Inadvertent disclosure

              A party may inadvertently disclose a privileged communication in a federal proceeding or before a federal agency.

              1. Reasonable steps, no waiver

                If that happens, the party doesn't waive the privilege as long as she (1) took reasonable steps to prevent disclosure and (2) promptly takes reasonable steps to rectify the error.

                1. Claw back

                  An example of a reasonable step to rectify would be sending the other side a "claw-back" letter, informing them of the inadvertent disclosure and asking that the privileged document be returned. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b).

      3. Survives client's death

        The client's estate has the right to waive the privilege.

      4. Exceptions

        The attorney-client privilege does not apply to communications involving a client's intent to commit a crime or fraud or disputes in which the communications are directly at issue.

        1. Future crime or fraud

          Attorney-client communications are not privileged if the client is seeking legal advice to further a crime or fraud. See U.S. v. Zolin (1989).

          1. Committing or planning to commit

            The client must be in the process of planning or committing the crime or fraud that is the subject of the communication.

            1. Not potential crimes

              The privilege may still attach if the client does not have a fully formed intent to commit the crime or fraud. If the conversation is exploratory and the client is merely asking about her options, this exception may not apply.

          2. Awareness of illegality

            When the communication occurs, the client has to know that the conduct she's considering is illegal or fraudulent.

          3. Common examples

            This exception often arises when the client intends to obstruct an investigation or an ongoing prosecution by tampering with witnesses or destroying evidence.

          4. Past crimes

            Communications about past crimes remain privileged as long as they are confidential and made for the purpose of obtaining legal advice.

        2. Communication at issue

          If the client puts the attorney-client communication at issue, like in a legal malpractice case, the privilege does not apply.

    2. Work product doctrine

      The work product doctrine protects certain information from discovery. See Hickman v. Taylor (1947) and Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3).

      1. What it protects

        The doctrine shields “documents and tangible things that are prepared in anticipation of litigation or for trial” by a party or its representative.

        1. Impressions, preparation, and strategy

          The doctrine is primarily intended to protect an attorney's impressions, legal theories, and strategic planning. It makes sense that it would shield materials the attorney (or her paralegal, investigator, or expert) creates in the process of analyzing and preparing a case. In one way or another, attorney-generated materials are likely to reflect that analysis and preparation.

          1. Not primary information

            What the doctrine does not shield is "primary" information—the documents on which a contract claim is based or the defective widget in a products liability case. Documents and objects that have an historical connection to the case and aren't attorney-generated will be discoverable.

      2. Who holds it

        Attorneys often assert the work product doctrine on their own behalf, though courts have also allowed clients to invoke it.

        1. Waiver

          The same rule that governs waivers of attorney-client privilege in federal court also governs work product waivers. See FRE 502.

          1. Intentional

            An intentional disclosure may open you up to subject-matter waiver, requiring you to turn over any undisclosed materials on the same topic. Subject-matter waiver is only appropriate where “fairness” to your adversary requires that all materials on that topic be viewed together.

          2. Inadvertent

            An inadvertent disclosure isn't a waiver as long as you took reasonable steps to protect the materials and reasonable steps to get them back once you discovered your mistake.

      3. How to counter it

        In some situations, an opposing party may be able to compel discovery of certain materials that meet the definition of work product.

        1. Conditional

          The doctrine usually applies conditionally, which means the other party can get access to work product after a sufficient showing. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3). Specifically, the opposing party must show two elements.

          1. Substantial need

            The party has substantial need for the materials to prepare its case.

          2. No substantial equivalent

            And the party can't obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials without undue hardship.

        2. Absolute

          Even if an opposing party succeeds in getting access to some materials under the “substantial need” test, there's an absolute protection for “mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of a party's attorney or other representative.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b). Portions of documents containing these kinds of statements may be redacted.

    3. Duty of confidentiality (MRPC 1.6)

      The professional duty of confidentiality is broader than the attorney-client privilege. It applies not only to confidential communications with the client but also to all other information that relates to the representation, regardless of its source.

      1. No disclosure or access

        A lawyer has to take reasonable steps to prevent (1) inadvertent or unauthorized disclosure of client information by the lawyer and other people she supervises and (2) unauthorized access to client information by third parties.

      2. Reasonably leading to discovery

        The rule also prohibits disclosures that don’t directly reveal protected information but that could reasonably lead a third person to discover it.

      3. Disclosures within a firm okay

        The rule does not prohibit lawyers within a firm from disclosing information about a client representation to each other, unless the client has said otherwise.

      4. Exceptions

        There are three exceptions to the rule that a lawyer must not reveal information relating to a client representation.

        1. Express informed consent

          The client has given her informed consent to the disclosure.

        2. Implied authorization

          The lawyer has implied authorization to make the disclosure because it furthers the client’s interests or is appropriate in the context of the client’s matter.

          1. Examples

            In a pleading, a lawyer may need to admit a fact if there’s no good-faith basis to dispute it. Or, in settlement negotiations, a lawyer may need to make a disclosure so that the parties can reach a deal that’s satisfactory to the client.

        3. Reasonably necessary

          The disclosure is reasonably necessary to prevent certain bad outcomes.

          1. Substantial bodily harm

            A lawyer can reveal information to the extent it’s necessary to prevent reasonably certain death or substantial bodily harm.

          2. Preventing client’s crime or fraud

            A lawyer can reveal information if it’s necessary to prevent the client from committing a crime or fraud that is reasonably certain to cause substantial injury to another party’s financial interests or property.

            1. But only if . . .

              This exception only applies when the client has been using the lawyer’s services to further the crime or fraud.

          3. Mitigating injury from client's crime or fraud

            Similarly, a lawyer can reveal information to mitigate or fix the substantial injury that the client’s crime or fraud has already caused or is reasonably certain to cause.

            1. But only if . . .

              This exception only applies when the client has been using the lawyer’s services to further the crime or fraud.

            2. And not when . . .

              If you’re representing a criminal defendant, you can’t reveal information about the crime your client has been charged with for purposes of mitigating injury.

          4. Compliance with MRPC

            A lawyer can reveal information if it’s necessary to secure legal advice about how to comply with the MRPC. The usual fact pattern involves a lawyer who calls the state bar's ethics hotline or consults with another attorney about an ethical question raised by the client representation.

          5. Claims involving the client

            A lawyer can reveal information if it’s necessary (1) to establish a claim or defense in a controversy between the lawyer and the client; (2) to establish a defense to a criminal charge or civil claim against the lawyer based on conduct in which the client was involved; or (3) to respond to allegations in any proceeding that concerns the lawyer's representation of the client.

          6. Identifying conflicts

            Finally, a lawyer can reveal information if it’s necessary to detect and resolve conflicts of interest that arise when the lawyer goes to a new firm or when there’s a change in the membership of the lawyer’s firm.

            1. But only if . . .

              This exception only applies if the revealed information would not compromise attorney-client privilege or otherwise prejudice the client.

        4. Survives termination (MRPC 1.9(c)(2))

          Even after the attorney-client relationship ends, a lawyer has a duty to keep information relating to the representation confidential.

        5. Prospective clients (MRPC 1.18(b))

          The rules define a prospective client as someone who consults with a lawyer about the possibility of forming a client-lawyer relationship regarding a matter. Information learned from a prospective client should generally be protected from disclosure just as it is for an existing or former client. Duties to prospective clients are covered in more detail in the Client-lawyer relationship section, above, and the Conflicts of interest section, below.

        6. Disclosures when the client is an organization (MRPC 1.13(c))

          This rule permits a lawyer representing an organization to reveal information in limited circumstances.

          1. Best interest of the organization

            When someone associated with the organization is doing something illegal that is likely to cause the client substantial harm, the lawyer has to take steps that are reasonably necessary to serve the client’s best interests.

            1. What actions trigger this rule

              This rule kicks in when the organization’s lawyer knows that an officer, employee, or other associate (1) is violating a legal obligation to the client or intends to do so or (2) is committing a violation of law that could be imputed to the organization.

            2. Reporting up

              Unless the lawyer reasonably believes that it is not necessary in the best interest of the organization, the lawyer must refer the matter to a higher authority in the organization, including the highest authority that can act on behalf of the organization (e.g., the board of directors).

            3. Reporting out

              If (1) the organization’s highest authority refuses to act on a clear legal violation in a timely and appropriate way and (2) the lawyer reasonably believes that the organization will suffer substantial harm, the lawyer may reveal information relating to the representation to the extent necessary to prevent the harm.

              1. Even if confidential

                This rule applies even if MRPC 1.6 (Confidentiality) would prohibit disclosure.

                1. Unless investigating or defending against violation of law

                  But, the lawyer cannot disclose any information if she’s been retained to (1) investigate an alleged violation of law or (2) defend the organization or an officer, employee, or other agent of the organization against a claim that they violated the law. That makes sense: in these situations, the organization is actually using the lawyer's services to address the alleged violation, so maintaining confidentiality is essential to protect the organization’s interests.

            4. Upon discharge or withdrawal

              If a lawyer is discharged or decides to withdraw because she reported a legal violation, she should take reasonably necessary steps to inform the organization’s highest authority of her discharge or withdrawal.

  5. Conflicts of interest

    This is usually the most heavily tested topic on the MPRE. Expect 12-18% of the questions to involve the rules about conflicts.

    1. Avoiding current client conflicts (MRPC 1.7 and 1.8)

      A lawyer must not represent a client if it would create a “concurrent” conflict of interest.

      1. Directly adverse

        There’s concurrent conflict if two of the lawyer’s clients would be directly adverse to one another.

        1. Unrelated matters

          You can’t act as an advocate in one matter against a client you’re representing in another matter, even if the matters are completely unrelated.

        2. Representing competitors

          You can represent two clients who compete with each other in the same industry if (1) the matters are unrelated and (2) the clients are only “economically adverse” (i.e., not legally adverse in either matter). If those two criteria are met, you probably don’t need consent from either client because there’s no conflict.

      2. Significant risk of material limitation

        Even if two clients aren't directly adverse, there's a concurrent conflict if there’s a significant risk that the lawyer’s representation of a client will be materially limited (1) by her responsibilities to another client, a former client, or a third person or (2) by the lawyer’s own personal interest.

        1. Material limitation = foreclosing alternatives

          A conflict materially limits a representation if it forecloses alternative courses of action that would otherwise be available to the client.

          1. Joint venture example

            The Comment to this rule gives the example of several individuals forming a joint venture. If a lawyer tries to represent all of them, she may not be able to recommend all possible positions that every one of them might want to take. She would have a duty of loyalty to each client, so she couldn’t advocate for a position that would give one of them an advantage over the others.

          2. Not a mere possibility of harm

            You don’t have to get a client’s consent because there’s a mere possibility of future harm. If you have to look into a crystal ball to find a potential conflict between clients, there’s no conflict.

          3. Likely interference

            The test is whether it’s likely that a difference in clients’ interests will interfere with the lawyer's independent, professional judgment in advising one client about reasonable alternatives.

          4. Responsibilities to third parties

            Third-party interests might create a conflict if a lawyer has fiduciary duties as a trustee, an executor of an estate, or a corporate director. If a client's interests clash with those of the trust beneficiaries, the decedent’s heirs, or the corporate shareholders, the lawyer may be materially limited in representing the client.

          5. Lawyer's personal interests

            Examples of personal interests that might create a conflict for a lawyer would include (1) business interests; (2) considering employment with a party or a firm that is adverse to a client; or (3) a family relationship with the opposing party’s lawyer (i.e., Jack represents the plaintiff, and his sister Jill represents the defendant). Any of those situations would require a client’s informed consent. See also Lawyer’s personal interest section, below.

      3. Multiple clients/joint representation

        When a lawyer represents two or more clients in the same matter, she owes certain duties to each client.

        1. Loyalty and diligence

          Each client in a joint representation has the right to loyal and diligent representation.

        2. Impartiality

          A lawyer is required to be impartial between commonly represented clients. If it's unlikely that the lawyer can remain impartial, she can't represent multiple clients in the matter.

        3. Information

          Each client has the right to be informed of anything that might be relevant to the client's interests in the matter and the right to expect the lawyer to use that information to the client's benefit.

          1. Lawyer's obligations

            The obligation to share relevant information with each client comes from the lawyer's duty of loyalty to each client. If one client wants to withhold information from another client, that's a conflict, and the lawyer may need to withdraw.

          2. Agreeing to confidentiality

            Joint clients can contract around this requirement to the extent that keeping information confidential will not adversely affect the representation. For instance, joint clients may agree that the lawyer can keep each client's trade secrets confidential from the others.

        4. Advising clients about the risks

          At the start of a matter, the lawyer should discuss the risks of joint representation with each client to obtain informed consent.

          1. Antagonism between clients

            If the clients are already antagonistic toward each other, joint representation is a bad idea. A lawyer can't undertake joint representation if it's likely there will be contentious litigation or negotiations between the clients.

            1. Attorney-client privilege

              Attorney-client privilege does not apply as between clients in a joint representation. That means that if one client sues another, both clients can reveal attorney-client communications and use them against each other. Attorney-client privilege does apply as to third parties in a joint representation. So, if a lawyer sits down with two clients and provides advice, a third party can't compel the clients or the lawyer to reveal those communications.

            2. Representing co-parties

              Various conflicts may arise between co-parties to litigation. Maybe their witnesses give conflicting testimony or they have very different views on whether to settle the case. In criminal cases, it's usually not appropriate for one lawyer to represent more than one co-defendant because the likelihood of a conflict is so high.

          2. Failure of a joint representation

            If a joint representation fails because the clients' interests can't be reconciled, the lawyer will have to withdraw from representing all of the clients.

        5. Class counsel

          A lawyer who is representing the class in a class action does not have to get consent from an unnamed class member before representing a client who is adverse to that class member in an unrelated matter. Unnamed class members generally aren't considered clients for purposes of the conflicts rules.

      4. Conflicts involving organizational clients (MRPC 1.13)

        When the client is an organization rather than an individual, there are some additional conflict-related issues to consider.

        1. Stakeholders

          A lawyer who represents an organization does not automatically represent any of its individual stakeholders (e.g., directors, officers, employees, members, or shareholders).

          1. Interests adverse to the organization

            When a lawyer represents a corporation, she has to be clear with all individual stakeholders that the organization is her client. A lawyer should explain that the organization is the client whenever she knows or reasonably should know that the organization's interests are adverse to the interests of a stakeholder she's dealing with.

          2. Representing stakeholders

            A lawyer who represents an organization may also represent any of its directors, officers, employees, members, or shareholders if it doesn't create a conflict.

            1. Conflict waiver by the organization

              If the lawyer needs the organization's consent to waive a conflict, consent can be given by the shareholders or by an appropriate official other than the stakeholder the lawyer is representing.

        2. Affiliates

          A lawyer who represents an organization does not necessarily represent any affiliated organization, like a parent company or subsidiary.

          1. Interests adverse to an affiliate

            That means that a lawyer may ordinarily accept a representation that is adverse to an affiliate and unrelated to the matter she's handling for the organization.

            1. Exceptions

              The organization's lawyer can't represent someone who's adverse to an affiliate if (1) the lawyer and organization have an agreement to that effect; or (2) the representation would materially limit the lawyer's ability to advocate for either the organization or the new client.

        3. Organization’s lawyer as board member

          A lawyer for an organization who is also a member of its board of directors should determine whether the responsibilities of the two roles may conflict. For example, the lawyer may be asked to advise the corporation about actions the board has taken.

          1. Maintaining independent professional judgment

            If there is material risk that the lawyer's independent professional judgment will be compromised, she should not serve as a director or should cease to act as the corporation's lawyer when conflicts arise.

          2. Attorney-client privilege

            The lawyer should advise the board that when she's acting as a director, attorney-client privilege won't apply to their communications.

          3. Recusal

            The lawyer should also advise the board that she might need to recuse herself from certain votes and that her firm might have to decline to represent the corporation in a matter involving board actions.

      5. Lawyer's personal interests (MRPC 1.8)

        Lawyers have a duty to prevent their personal interests from getting in the way of a client representation.

        1. No gifts from client

          A lawyer shall not (1) solicit any substantial gift from a client or (2) prepare an instrument (e.g., a will) for a client that gives a substantial gift to the lawyer or her relative.

          1. Unless related

            Gifts from a client are okay if the person receiving the gift (the lawyer or her relative) is related to the client. “Related” includes a spouse, child, grandchild, parent, grandparent, or other relative with whom the lawyer or client maintains a close, familial relationship.

        2. Literary or media rights

          A lawyer shall not make or negotiate an agreement giving the lawyer literary or media rights to any book, movie, or other account based on information about a client representation until after that representation has ended.

        3. No sexual relationships

          It’s a professional violation to have sex with a client, unless the sexual relationship began before the client-lawyer relationship. Consent by the client does not get the lawyer off the hook.

        4. Business transactions with clients

          A lawyer can’t enter into a business transaction with a client or knowingly acquire an ownership, possessory, security, or other financial interest that is adverse to a client unless these four conditions are met. Note that both the disclosure and consent requirements involve a writing.

          1. Fair and reasonable

            The terms of the transaction must be fair and reasonable to the client.

          2. Disclosed in writing

            The terms must be fully disclosed to the client and provided in a writing that the client can reasonably understand.

          3. Advised to seek counsel

            The lawyer must advise the client in writing that she should seek independent counsel and give the client a reasonable opportunity to do so.

          4. Informed, written consent

            The client must give informed consent, confirmed in a signed writing.

            1. To terms and lawyer's role

              The client must consent to both (1) the essential terms of the deal and (2) the lawyer's role in the transaction, including whether the lawyer is representing the client in the deal.

        5. No proprietary interest in litigation

          A lawyer must not acquire a proprietary interest in any litigation she’s conducting for a client. There are a couple of exceptions related to legal fees.

          1. Fee liens permissible

            The MRPC do allow a lawyer to acquire a lien on a client’s property to secure payment of fees, if the law of the jurisdiction permits it.

          2. Contract for contingent fees

            A lawyer may also contract with a client to receive a reasonable contingent fee in a civil case.

        6. No financial assistance to clients in litigation

          In general, a lawyer shall not provide financial assistance to a client for current or contemplated litigation. There are a few, narrow exceptions.

          1. Advancing costs and expenses

            A lawyer may advance court costs and expenses of litigation. A lawyer and client can also agree that the client's obligation to repay the lawyer will depend on the outcome of the matter.

          2. Paying costs and expenses for indigents

            A lawyer representing an indigent client may pay court costs and expenses of litigation on behalf of the client.

          3. Basic necessities for indigent pro bono clients

            A lawyer representing an indigent client pro bono may provide modest gifts for food, rent, transportation, medicine, and other basic living expenses.

            1. Not as an inducement

              The lawyer may not promise or imply that a gift is available to induce a client to retain a lawyer or continue the client-lawyer relationship.

            2. No reimbursement

              The lawyer may not seek or accept reimbursement from the client or from anyone affiliated with the client.

          4. Fee-shifting statutes irrelevant

            A lawyer can provide financial assistance under this rule even if the representation is eligible for fees under a fee-shifting statute.

      6. Former client conflicts (MRPC 1.9)

        A lawyer owes certain duties to clients even after a representation has ended.

        1. Lawyer’s former client

          A lawyer who formerly represented a client in a matter must not represent another person in the same or a substantially related matter if the person's interests are materially adverse to the former client's interests. In other words, you can't switch sides.

          1. Substantially related

            Matters are “substantially related” if (1) they involve the same transaction or legal dispute; or (2) there's a substantial risk that confidential information a lawyer would usually obtain in the first matter would help the client in the second matter.

          2. Consent

            The lawyer can represent the other person if the former client gives informed consent, confirmed in writing.

        2. Client of previous firm

          If a lawyer changes firms, she can't knowingly represent a person in a substantially related matter who is adverse to a client of her previous firm.

          1. Actual knowledge required

            This prohibition only applies if the lawyer learned confidential information about the previous firm's client that is material to the matter. A lawyer who knew nothing about the matter or the client while practicing at the prior firm isn't conflicted out of representing an adverse party at her new firm.

          2. Consent

            Even if the lawyer has actual knowledge of the former representation, she can represent the adverse party if the former client gives informed consent, confirmed in writing.

        3. Use and disclosure of former client’s information

          This rule protects both a lawyer's former clients and the former clients of her current or previous firm. It forbids a lawyer from (1) using information relating to a representation to the disadvantage of a former client; or (2) disclosing information relating to the representation.

          1. Generally known

            If the information the lawyer has about the former client is generally known to the public, the lawyer may use it.

      7. Prospective client conflicts (MRPC 1.18)

        When a lawyer consults with a prospective client and identifies a potential conflict, she must inform the prospective client or decline representation.

        1. Consent

          If the prospective client still wants to retain the lawyer, and if the conflict is consentable under MRPC 1.7, then the lawyer has to get consent from all affected clients or former clients before accepting the representation.

        2. Disqualification

          If a lawyer receives information from a prospective client that might be harmful in a matter, the lawyer can't represent another person whose interests are materially adverse to the prospective client.

          1. Imputed within a firm

            Other lawyers within the firm are also disqualified under this rule, unless they get informed consent and screen the lawyer who received the harmful information. Here's what's required:

            1. Screening

              In addition, the disqualified lawyer has to be screened from participation in the matter and can't receive any part of the fee the firm receives.

            2. Notice to prospective client

              Written notice must also be given to the prospective client.

        3. Limiting the scope of consultation

          A lawyer should limit the initial consultation to information that is reasonably necessary to determine whether to represent the prospective client. Limiting the scope will help the lawyer avoid acquiring information that would disqualify her.

        4. Conditions of initial consultation

          As a condition of consultation, a lawyer may require a prospective client to give informed consent to the lawyer representing a different client in the matter, regardless of what information the prospective client discloses. The agreement can also expressly provide that the prospective client consents to the lawyer's subsequent use of the information.

        5. No harmful information

          Even if the prospective client doesn't expressly consent, a lawyer can still represent a person adverse to the prospective client unless the lawyer has received information from the prospective client that could be significantly harmful.

        6. Use and disclosure of prospective client’s information

          The same rule regarding former clients' information also applies to prospective clients. It forbids a lawyer from (1) using information relating to a representation to the disadvantage of a prospective client; or (2) disclosing information relating to the representation, unless the information is generally known.

      8. Imputed conflicts (MRPC 1.10)

        These conflict-of-interest rules are not limited to the individual lawyer who is representing a client. Conflicts of interest are imputed to all lawyers practicing within that lawyer’s firm. No lawyer associated with a firm may knowingly represent a client when any one of the firm's lawyers would be conflicted out.

        1. Personal interest, no significant risk

          The conflict isn't imputed to the whole firm if the lawyer is disqualified based on a personal interest and there's no significant risk it will materially limit representation by the other lawyers in the firm.

        2. Former client; screening and notice

          A lawyer joins a new firm, and that creates a conflict with one of her old firm's clients. Other lawyers in the new firm can represent a party that's adverse to the old firm's client if (1) the lawyer is screened and receives no fee; and (2) the former client gets written notice of the screening procedures.

        3. Former lawyer

          When a lawyer leaves a firm, the remaining lawyers can represent people adverse to the lawyer's former clients if they are not currently clients of the firm.

          1. Unless same matter + material information

            The matter can't be the same or substantially related to the one the former lawyer handled, and no lawyer remaining in the firm may have confidential information from the former client that's material to the matter.

          2. Waiver permitted

            A client can waive any conflict under this rule if it's consistent with MRPC 1.7, discussed above.

      9. Government lawyers (MRPC 1.11)

        Both former and current public-sector lawyers have two additional rules to worry about.

        1. Former public officer or government employee

          Former public officers or government employees may not reveal information they received from a client or use that information to the client's disadvantage.

          1. Personal and substantial participation

            In addition, they can't represent a client in connection with a matter in which they participated personally and substantially as a public officer or employee, unless the government agency gives informed consent, confirmed in writing.

            1. Screening and notice

              If a lawyer is disqualified under this rule, no lawyer in her firm may knowingly undertake or continue representation in the matter unless (1) the disqualified lawyer is screened from participation and receives no part of the fee; and (2) the parties and tribunal get prompt written notice.

          2. Confidential government information

            A lawyer who's working in public service learns certain confidential government information about a person. That lawyer can't subsequently represent a private client whose interests are adverse to the person if the information could materially harm the person.

            1. What information counts

              “Confidential government information” means information obtained under government authority that (1) the government is legally prohibited from disclosing to the public; (2) is legally privileged; or (3) is not otherwise available to the public.

        2. Current public officer or government employee

          A lawyer currently serving as a public officer or employee has to comply with these limitations.

          1. Conflicts

            She is subject to the rules about current and former client conflicts.

          2. Participation in a matter

            She can't participate in a matter in which she participated personally and substantially while in private practice or nongovernmental employment.

          3. Negotiation for employment

            She can't negotiate for private employment with any party or lawyer for a party in a matter in which she's participating personally and substantially.

            1. Law clerk exception

              A law clerk may negotiate for employment with a party or lawyer involved in a matter in which she is participating, but only she notifies the judge.

      10. Former judges and other third-party neutrals (MRPC 1.12)

        Two additional rules apply to former judges, arbitrators, mediators, and other third-party neutrals.

        1. No subsequent representation

          If a lawyer participates in a matter as a judge, law clerk, arbitrator, mediator, or other third-party neutral, she cannot later represent any party in that matter.

          1. Unless parties consent

            A lawyer may represent a party if all parties give informed consent, confirmed in writing.

          2. Screening and notice

            If a lawyer is disqualified under this rule, no lawyer in her firm may knowingly undertake or continue representation in the matter unless (1) the disqualified lawyer is screened from participation and receives no part of the fee; and (2) the parties and tribunal are given prompt, written notice.

          3. Exception for party-selected arbitrator

            Sometimes an arbitration panel has multiple members. Each side will often choose one or more arbitrators to serve as their partisans, and then together, they will choose another person to serve as the neutral arbitrator. MRPC 1.12 does not bar an arbitrator who is selected as a partisan (rather than as a neutral) member of the panel from subsequently representing the party who chose her.

        2. Negotiation for employment

          If a lawyer is participating in a matter as a judge, law clerk, arbitrator, mediator, or other third-party neutral, she cannot negotiate for employment with anyone who is a party or lawyer in the matter.

          1. Law clerk exception

            A law clerk may negotiate for employment with a party or lawyer involved in a matter in which she is participating, but only she notifies the judge.

  6. Competence, diligence, and civil liability

    Expect questions in this category to comprise 6-12% of the MPRE.

    1. Competence (MRPC 1.1)

      A lawyer has a duty to provide competent representation to a client. That means having the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness, and preparation that’s reasonably necessary for the matter.

      1. Unfamiliar matters

        A lawyer doesn’t necessarily have to have special training or prior experience to handle legal problems that are unfamiliar to her. She can satisfy the duty of competence by studying the governing law or by associating with a lawyer who has established competence in the field.

      2. Emergency assistance

        In an emergency, a lawyer can assist a client in a matter even if she doesn’t have the skill ordinarily required if it’s not practical to refer the client or to consult/associate with a more expert lawyer.

        1. Reasonably necessary

          In that situation, the lawyer’s assistance should be limited to whatever is reasonably necessary under the circumstances.

      3. Study and preparation

        A lawyer has a duty to investigate and analyze the facts and the law and to use methods and procedures that meet professional standards.

        1. What's at stake for the client

          How much you have to do in a particular case depends, in part, on how high the stakes are for your client. If a matter is really complex or a lot of money is involved, you’re going to need to study and prepare more.

      4. Limiting the scope

        One way to ensure you comply with the duty of competence is to limit the scope of your representation through an agreement with the client. See the Client-lawyer relationship section, above, for more on limiting the scope under MRPC 1.2.

      5. Retaining or contracting with other lawyers

        You can also comply with the duty of competence by tapping into the expertise of other lawyers, either within your firm or outside of it. Bringing in outside lawyers must be reasonable under the circumstances.

        1. When reasonable

          To decide if it’s reasonable to bring in a lawyer from outside your firm, consider (1) the other lawyer’s education, experience, and reputation; (2) the kind of services the lawyer would perform; and (3) any local laws and rules that will help protect your client’s interests, especially when it comes to confidential information.

        2. Coordinating the representation

          If lawyers from multiple firms are working for the same client in a matter, they must consult with one another and allocate responsibilities among themselves. The idea is to avoid duplicating work or causing unnecessary delays.

      6. Maintaining competence

        Competence is an ongoing obligation. Lawyers have to keep up with changes in the law and its practice, including technological developments, and they have to fulfill their jurisdiction’s continuing legal education (CLE) requirements.

    2. Diligence (MRPC 1.3)

      A lawyer must act with reasonable diligence and promptness in representing a client.

      1. Zeal within limits

        A lawyer must be a zealous advocate for her client but the duty of diligence doesn’t require that you press for every advantage in a matter or use questionable tactics to achieve your client’s goals. In fact, see the Litigation and other forms of advocacy section, below, for examples of adversarial tactics that specifically violate the MRPC.

      2. Managing your work load

        A lawyer has a duty to manage her work load so that she has enough time to handle each matter competently.

      3. Reasonable promptness

        Missing deadlines—like the statute of limitations—is probably the most common violation of the MRPC in real-world practice.

        1. Not just deadlines

          More generally, a lawyer has to be aware of the passage of time and its consequences for each client's interests. Even when there’s not a black-and-white deadline to observe, it’s a lawyer’s duty to act reasonably promptly to resolve the client’s matter.

        2. Postponements without prejudice

          Despite this duty, it’s fine for a lawyer to agree to an extension or postponement if the request is reasonable and the delay will not prejudice the client.

      4. Completing all matters

        Unless the attorney-client relationship is terminated (see MRPC 1.16), a lawyer should see all matters undertaken for a client through to completion.

        1. Sole practitioner's death or disability

          Diligence may require a sole practitioner to plan for another lawyer to review client files and contact clients in the event of her death or disability.

      5. Malpractice liability; civil liability to clients

        Legal malpractice is generally a creature of state law, not ethics rules, but certain theories of malpractice liability correspond to duties set out in the MRPC.

        1. Tort

          A client may sue an attorney under several tort theories. Here are the major ones.

          1. Negligence

            When we think of legal malpractice, we usually think about a negligence claim, which might mean a violation of the duty of competence, the duty of diligence, or the duty of care.

          2. Breach of fiduciary duty

            Since lawyers hold their clients’ funds and property as fiduciaries, any mishandling or misappropriation on the lawyer’s part gives rise to a claim for breach of fiduciary duty. For instance, commingling client funds with the lawyer’s funds would create both an ethics violation (MRPC 1.15) and grounds for a civil suit. (Note: the same is true for the funds and property of third parties who are not clients).

          3. Misrepresentation

            A client could also sue a lawyer in tort for fraud or misrepresentation if the client suffers damages as a result.

        2. Contract

          A client might have a malpractice claim based on either express or implied contract.

          1. Express

            An express contract claim would arise from a breach of the engagement agreement between the lawyer and client. For instance, if the agreement specified that the attorney would file a lawsuit on the client’s behalf before the statute of limitations expired and the attorney failed to do so, the client would have a cause of action.

          2. Implied

            In some states, a client will also have an implied contract claim based on the idea that every client representation implies a promise to exercise reasonable care.

      6. Limiting malpractice liability (MRPC 1.8(h))

        The ABA rules frown on agreements between lawyers and clients that limit the lawyers’ malpractice liability prospectively (i.e., at the beginning of the representation before a malpractice claim has arisen).

        1. Independent representation required

          An agreement that prospectively limits malpractice liability is only permitted if the client has independent representation in negotiating the agreement. See MRPC 1.8(h)(1).

        2. Agreements to arbitrate

          The client does not need independent representation if all the agreement does is specify that the parties will arbitrate any malpractice dispute, as long as the lawyer explains what that means.

      7. Settling malpractice claims

        A lawyer is allowed to reach an agreement with a client to settle a malpractice claim or a potential claim, with one caveat. See MRPC 1.8(h)(2).

        1. Advice and opportunity to seek counsel

          The lawyer has to advise an unrepresented or former client in writing to seek independent counsel and then give the client time to consult with counsel before the parties sign the agreement.

      8. Civil liability to third parties

        A lawyer may be liable to third parties on a variety of legal theories, primarily based in tort law. Examples include (1) fraudulent conduct; (2) negligence or misrepresentation in providing a third-party opinion letter; and (3) negligence or misrepresentation in communicating with an unrepresented party when the lawyer knows the party is going to rely on what she says. On the MPRE, if a lawyer’s conduct meets all the elements of a tort, the right answer will probably be that a third party has a claim against her.

  7. Litigation and other forms of advocacy

    This topic is an area of emphasis on the MPRE. You should expect 10-16% of the MPRE questions to involve the lawyer’s role as an advocate.

    1. Meritorious claims and contentions (MRPC 3.1)

      A lawyer must not bring a claim or defense or take a legal position without a basis in law and fact that is “not frivolous.”

      1. Inquiry into the facts and law

        A lawyer has a duty to inform herself about the facts of each case and the applicable law and to decide if she can support each client's position with good-faith arguments.

        1. Need for discovery okay

          You don’t have to have all the facts to prove your case when you file it. A claim or defense isn’t frivolous just because you need to develop evidence through discovery.

        2. Small chance to prevail okay

          A claim or defense isn’t frivolous just because you don’t think it’s going to be a winner in the courtroom.

        3. Argument to change law okay

          It’s fine to base your claim or defense on a good-faith argument that the existing law should be changed.

      2. Criminal cases

        There’s a constitutional exception to this rule where a defendant is facing possible jail time. It reflects that the burden of proving the elements of a crime is always on the prosecution. If the defendant’s lawyer needs to assert an otherwise frivolous defense to make sure the prosecution has to prove all the elements, by all means, bring it on.

    2. Expediting litigation (MRPC 3.2)

      A lawyer must make reasonable efforts to expedite litigation consistent with the interests of the client.

      1. What's reasonable

        When something a lawyer does causes a delay, ask yourself if a competent lawyer who is acting in good faith would believe the action had some substantial purpose besides delay.

      2. What's unreasonable

        The comment to the rule cites three examples of unreasonable delay.

        1. Convenience of counsel

          Routine delays for the personal convenience of the lawyers are unreasonable.

        2. Frustrating an opponent’s recovery

          So is a failure to expedite that’s meant to frustrate an opposing party's attempt to obtain relief.

        3. Client's improper benefit

          It’s unreasonable to delay litigation to help a client gain a financial or other benefit. The client might have an interest in such a delay, but it’s not a legitimate interest that justifies abusing the legal system.

    3. Candor toward the tribunal (MRPC 3.3)

      The lawyer’s duty of candor before a tribunal lasts throughout the proceeding, and it applies even if it means disclosing confidential client information. You can remember what candor requires with the mnemonic SAFFE.

      1. Statements by the lawyer

        A lawyer must not knowingly make a false statement of fact or law to a tribunal. If a lawyer discovers she’s made a false statement of material fact or law, she has a duty to correct the error.

      2. False evidence

        A lawyer cannot offer evidence to the tribunal that she knows to be false.

        1. Remedial measures

          If a lawyer, her client, or her witness offers material evidence and the lawyer finds out it’s false, she has to take reasonable remedial measures, including, if necessary, disclosure to the tribunal.

        2. Refusal to offer

          A lawyer must refuse to offer evidence that she knows to be false and may refuse to offer evidence that she reasonably believes to be false.

          1. Testimony of a criminal defendant

            The decision about whether to testify is generally up to a criminal defendant. Some jurisdictions require counsel to offer the accused as a witness or allow the accused to testify in a narrative statement, even if counsel knows that the testimony or statement will be false. While the lawyer may not be able to keep the defendant off the stand in these jurisdictions, she still has an obligation not to ask questions intended to elicit false testimony.

      3. Fraud or crime on the court

        A lawyer representing a client in an adjudicative proceeding who knows any person intends to commit or has committed a fraud or crime related to the proceeding must take reasonable remedial measures, including, if necessary, disclosure to the tribunal.

      4. Ex parte proceeding

        In an ex parte proceeding, like a TRO hearing, a lawyer has to inform the tribunal of all material facts she knows that will help the tribunal make an informed decision, whether the facts are adverse to her client or not.

    4. Fairness to opposing party and counsel (MRPC 3.4)

      This rule recognizes that when parties in an adversary proceeding have to gather and present their own evidence, the lawyers have incentives to obstruct, falsify, and otherwise act badly on their clients’ behalf. Remember a lawyer's obligations to opposing parties with the mnemonic FIIDDO (He's a good boy.).

      1. Falsifying evidence

        A lawyer must not (1) falsify evidence; (2) counsel or assist a witness to give false testimony; or (3) offer an incentive to a witness that is prohibited by law.

        1. Lay witness incentives

          For a lay witness, it’s fine to pay their expenses, but most jurisdictions prohibit payment of any fee for testifying.

        2. Expert witness incentives

          Expert witnesses are generally entitled to both expenses and a professional fee for testifying, but you can’t pay them on a contingency basis.

      2. Influencing people who possess information

        It violates this rule to ask a person other than a client to refrain from turning over relevant information voluntarily to the opposing side.

        1. Client's relative, employee, or agent

          It’s okay to give that advice if the person is a relative, an employee, or an agent of a client and the lawyer reasonably believes refraining from turning over the information will not adversely affect that person's interests. A corporate employee’s interests, for instance, may align with her employer’s interests in the outcome of the case.

      3. Interference with evidence at trial

        At trial, a party's lawyer must avoid the following statements.

        1. Reference to irrelevant or unsupported matters

          A lawyer can't refer to any matter that she does not reasonably believe is relevant or that won’t be supported by admissible evidence.

        2. Personal knowledge

          A lawyer must not assert personal knowledge of facts in issue (except when testifying as a witness; see the Lawyer as witness section below).

        3. Opinion of credibility, liability, or guilt

          A lawyer shouldn't state a personal opinion as to whether a cause is just, whether a witness is credible, or whether a defendant is liable or guilty.

      4. Disobeying tribunal rules

        A lawyer can’t knowingly disobey an obligation under the rules of a tribunal.

        1. No valid obligation

          It’s not a professional violation if a lawyer openly refuses to comply because she believes there’s no valid obligation under the rule.

      5. Discovery misconduct

        A lawyer can’t make a frivolous discovery request or fail to exercise reasonable diligence to comply with a proper discovery request from an opposing party.

      6. Obstructing access to evidence

        A lawyer must not unlawfully (1) obstruct another party' s access to evidence or (2) alter, destroy, or conceal a document or other material that may have evidentiary value. That includes advising or helping another person to commit such an act.

        1. Spoliation

          Destroying evidence is known as “spoliation,” a term you might see on the MPRE. In addition to violating this rule, it can subject both a lawyer and her client to severe sanctions—including an “adverse inference” instruction to the jury to presume the evidence was destroyed because it was harmful. It’s also a tort in some jurisdictions.

    5. Decorum of the tribunal (MRPC 3.5)

      This rule contains four prohibitions designed to keep tribunal proceedings fair and dignified. Remember DICE.

      1. Disruptive conduct

        A lawyer must not engage in conduct that’s intended to disrupt a tribunal (e.g., abusive language or belligerence toward a witness).

        1. Includes depositions

          The no-disruption rule applies to depositions as well as other tribunal proceedings.

      2. Improper influence

        A lawyer must not seek to influence a judge, juror, prospective juror, or other official in a way that’s prohibited by law.

      3. Communications with jurors after trial

        After the jury is discharged, a lawyer can’t communicate with a juror or prospective juror if (1) it’s prohibited by law or court order; (2) the juror has told the lawyer she doesn’t want to communicate; or (3) the communication involves misrepresentation, coercion, duress, or harassment.

      4. Ex parte communications

        During the proceeding, a lawyer must not communicate ex parte with a judge, juror, prospective juror, or other official, unless specifically authorized to do so by law or court order.

    6. Trial publicity (MRPC 3.6)

      A lawyer who is participating in an investigation or litigation of a matter must refrain from making certain extrajudicial statements (i.e., statements outside the courtroom).

      1. Substantial likelihood of material prejudice

        An extrajudicial statement violates this rule if the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that it (1) will be disseminated publicly (e.g., through the media) and (2) will create a substantial likelihood of material prejudice to an adjudicative proceeding.

      2. Key examples

        The Comment to MRPC 3.6 identifies six types of extrajudicial statements that are more likely than not to materially prejudice a proceeding, especially if it’s a criminal matter or a civil jury trial. Participating lawyers must avoid these topics. Remember OPTICS: these are the statements that would interfere with the optics of a trial more than any others.

        1. Opinion about guilt

          You can’t offer an opinion about the guilt or innocence of a defendant or suspect in a criminal case or any other proceeding that could result in jail time.

        2. Physical evidence

          You can’t make statements about (1) whether an examination or test was performed; (2) what the results were; (3) whether a person refused to submit to an exam or test; or (4) the nature of the physical evidence you expect to be presented in the proceeding.

        3. Testimony or character of a party or witness

          You can’t make statements about (1) the character, credibility, reputation, or criminal record of a party, a suspect in a criminal investigation, or a witness; (2) the identity of a witness; or (3) the expected testimony of a party or a witness.

        4. Inadmissible evidence

          You can’t disclose information that you know or reasonably should know will be inadmissible at trial.

        5. Charged with a crime

          You can’t disclose that a defendant has been charged with a crime, unless you also state that she’s innocent unless and until proven guilty.

        6. Statement by a criminal defendant

          In a criminal case, you can’t talk about (1) the possibility of a plea of guilty; (2) the existence or substance of any confession, admission, or statement by a defendant; or (3) the defendant’s refusal to make a statement.

      3. Members of the lawyer’s firm

        The prohibition on prejudicial statements outside the courtroom also applies to statements made by members of the participating lawyer’s firm.

      4. Which statements permitted

        The rule lists certain kinds of statements that a lawyer may make outside the courtroom. Note that they are limited to basic or readily available facts, procedural issues, or public-safety concerns. Remember Daily PRICES.

        1. Danger warning

          When a lawyer has reason to believe that there’s a likelihood of substantial harm to an individual or to the public, she can warn that a person is dangerous.

        2. Public information

          Information that’s available in a public record is fair game for an extrajudicial statement.

        3. Response to adverse publicity

          A lawyer may respond to adverse publicity if it’s necessary to protect a client from substantial, undue, prejudicial effects. The belief that the statement is necessary must be reasonable, and the publicity must not have been initiated by the lawyer or client.

        4. Investigation ongoing

          A lawyer may state the fact that there’s an ongoing investigation into a matter.

        5. Claims and defenses

          A lawyer may state the claim, charge, or defense involved in a matter and identify the parties involved, unless prohibited by law. One instance in which identifying a party may be prohibited is a case involving a victim or criminal defendant who’s a minor.

        6. Evidence request

          A lawyer may make a request for assistance in obtaining evidence and provide information that’s necessary to do so.

        7. Scheduling and outcomes

          Statements about the scheduling or outcome of any step in litigation are permitted (e.g., when a sentencing statement will take place or whether a client prevailed on a motion for summary judgment).

      5. Additional statements permitted in a criminal matter

        In a criminal matter, lawyers can make a few additional types of extrajudicial statements.

        1. About the accused

          A lawyer can disclose the identity, residence, occupation, and family status of the accused.

        2. About arrest or apprehension

          If the accused has been arrested, a lawyer can disclose the fact of the arrest and the time and place it occurred. If the accused has not been arrested, a lawyer can provide information necessary to aid in apprehension.

        3. About the investigation

          It’s okay to disclose the identities of investigating and arresting officers or agencies and the length of the investigation.

    7. Lawyer as witness (MRPC 3.7)

      A jury can be confused when a lawyer in a case also testifies as a witness—both explaining evidence given by others and offering evidence of her own. To avoid this ambiguity between advocate and witness, MRPC 1.7 strictly limits the ability of a lawyer to play both roles.

      1. Limit on witness’s ability to advocate

        In general, a lawyer can’t represent a client at a trial if she’s likely to be a necessary witness.

        1. Exceptions

          There are three instances in which a lawyer may act as both advocate and witness.

          1. Uncontested issue

            The lawyer’s testimony relates to an uncontested issue. In this case, there’s unlikely to be any jury confusion or prejudice to the other party.

          2. About the lawyer’s services

            The lawyer’s testimony is about the nature and value of the services she provided in the case.

          3. Substantial hardship for the client

            Disqualifying the lawyer would cause the client substantial hardship. Even if there’s a risk of jury confusion, the court should consider the effect of disqualification on the client.

      2. Lawyer from same firm as witness

        A lawyer may represent a client at a trial even if another lawyer in her firm is likely to be called as a witness, unless it would violate MRPC 1.7 (conflicts with current clients) or MRPC 1.9 (conflicts with former clients). See the Conflicts of interest section for more on those rules.

  8. Transactions and communications with third persons

    Questions from this category should account for 2-8% of the MPRE.

    1. Truthfulness in statements to others (MRPC 4.1)

      When representing a client, a lawyer owes certain duties to third parties.

      1. Misrepresentations

        A lawyer may not knowingly misrepresent a material fact or a rule of law to a third party.

        1. False or misleading

          Misrepresentations include blatant falsehoods and statements that are partially true but misleading.

        2. Affirming another’s statement

          A lawyer can also make a misrepresentation by affirming another person’s statement that she knows to be false.

        3. Material facts

          Some statements don’t count as material facts in certain circumstances. For instance, in settlement negotiations, you may make statements about the value of a claim or what your client is willing to pay. It’s common sense that both sides are trying to get the best deal for their respective clients. Those statements are negotiation postures, not statements of fact.

      2. No affirmative duty to disclose

        While a lawyer has to be truthful with third persons, there’s generally no affirmative duty to inform an opposing party of relevant facts.

        1. Crime-fraud exception

          But a lawyer does have a duty to disclose information to a third party when it’s necessary to avoid assisting the client in a crime or fraud.

          1. Last resort

            Ordinarily, a lawyer can avoid assisting a client’s crime or fraud by withdrawing from the representation. If disclosure is the only option, however, the lawyer is required to disclose, unless the duty of confidentiality prohibits it. See MRPC 1.6.

    2. Communication with a person represented by counsel (MRPC 4.2)

      If you know a person is represented by counsel in a matter, you can’t communicate directly with that person about the matter. If you have something to say, you have to say it to the person's counsel.

    3. Communications with unrepresented persons (MRPC 4.3)

      When a lawyer is dealing with an unrepresented person on behalf of her client, there’s a concern that the unrepresented person will view the lawyer as a disinterested authority on the law—someone who is neutral in the dispute. MRPC 4.3 clarifies what you have to do to avoid that misimpression.

      1. No misleading statement or implication

        You must not state or imply that you are disinterested in the matter.

      2. Correcting misunderstandings

        If you know or reasonably should know that the unrepresented person misunderstands your role in the matter, you have to make reasonable efforts to correct the mistake.

      3. No advice if adverse

        You must not give legal advice to an unrepresented person if you know or reasonably should know the person may be adverse to your client in the matter. The one exception is to advise the person to obtain counsel.

      4. Negotiation and settlement permitted

        As long as a lawyer explains whom she represents and whom she doesn’t, she can negotiate a transaction or settle a dispute with an unrepresented person. That includes preparing a contract or a settlement agreement for the person to sign and explaining what she thinks the document means.

    4. Respect for the rights of third persons (MRPC 4.4)

      This is the general “don’t be a jerk” rule for third parties. Lawyers are supposed to advocate for their clients but should not show total disregard for everyone else.

      1. Embarrass, delay, or burden

        A lawyer can’t use means to represent a client that have no real purpose besides embarrassing, delaying, or burdening a third person.

      2. Obtaining evidence

        A lawyer can’t obtain evidence using methods that violate a third person’s legal rights.

      3. Inadvertent receipt of documents

        If a lawyer receives a document or electronically stored information relating to a client matter and she knows or reasonably should know that it was sent inadvertently, she has to notify the sender promptly of the mistake.

        1. Notification, not return or destruction

          The MRPC do not address whether a lawyer has to return or destroy a document or ESI sent to her inadvertently. That’s a matter for court rules and state law or for the lawyer’s judgment in the absence of any governing authority.

  9. Roles of the lawyer

    The MPRE tests the various roles lawyers play outside of advocacy. Questions on this topic usually comprise 4-10% of the exam.

    1. Advisor (MRPC 2.1)

      A lawyer must exercise independent professional judgment and render candid advice when representing a client.

      1. Straightforward and honest

        A lawyer should give every client a straightforward assessment of the facts and the law. Even if you think the advice will make your client unhappy, you have to be honest about your analysis.

      2. Considerations beyond law

        In deciding how to advise a client, a lawyer can include non-legal considerations, like moral, economic, social, and political factors that are relevant to the client's situation. Those factors may affect how the law will apply to the client’s matter, and you may need to take them into account if you’re going to provide advice that genuinely informs and guides the client.

      3. When advice required

        In general, a lawyer does not have to give a client advice until the client asks her to do so.

      4. No duty to investigate

        There’s no duty to investigate a client’s activities to find out if the client needs advice, though a lawyer is free to do so if she thinks it’s in the client’s interest.

      5. Avoiding adverse consequences

        If a client proposes a course of action that you know is likely to cause substantial, adverse legal consequences, you may have a duty under MRPC 1.4 to tell your client, even when the client hasn’t asked for your opinion.

      6. Alternatives to litigation

        Another situation in which there might be a duty to advise under MRPC 1.4 is where a matter is likely to result in litigation. In that case, you should discuss whether any alternative forms of dispute resolution would be to the client’s advantage.

    2. Evaluation for use by third parties (MRPC 2.3)

      Sometimes, a lawyer may provide an evaluation of a matter affecting a client for the use of someone other than the client.

      1. The “when” of third-party opinion letters

        Third-party opinion letters pop up in a variety of circumstances. Here are a few common examples of fact patterns you might see on the MPRE. If your client is selling a business, the buyer’s attorney may ask you for a letter evaluating certain aspects of the company. If your client is trying to get a mortgage or title insurance, the lender or insurer may ask you for an opinion about whether the client has good title to the property. If your client is making a public stock offering, you may have to provide a letter to the SEC about whether the shares comply with federal and state securities laws.

      2. The “what” of third-party opinion letters

        Preparing an opinion letter requires a lawyer to investigate the subject matter (e.g., to do a title search) and give the third party an honest assessment. If that sounds potentially problematic for your client, it is. That’s why we have MRPC 2.3 to tell us when providing an opinion letter is appropriate.

        1. Compatibility with lawyer-client relationship

          The lawyer must reasonably believe, in her professional judgment, that making the evaluation is compatible with other aspects of the lawyer's relationship with the client.

        2. Informed consent

          When the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the evaluation is likely to have a material, adverse effect on the client's interests, she has to get informed consent before providing the evaluation.

        3. Defining scope of inquiry

          It's important when preparing an opinion letter to describe any material limitations on the scope of the lawyer's investigation or conclusions. A lawyer should mention any issues or sources that were excluded and be very clear about what her opinions do and don't cover.

      3. No false statements (MRPC 4.1)

        A lawyer must not knowingly make a false statement of material fact or law in providing an evaluation.

        1. Liability to third parties

          A lawyer who makes a false statement in an opinion letter may be liable to a third party who relies on it. Claims could be based on a negligence theory or an intentional tort theory.

    3. Lawyer serving as third-party neutral (MRPC 2.4)

      A lawyer must follow this rule when she serves as a mediator or an arbitrator to help parties that are not her clients resolve a dispute.

    4. Informing unrepresented parties

      A lawyer serving as a third-party neutral must inform unrepresented parties that she’s not representing them.

    5. Correct misunderstandings

      If the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that a party does not understand her role, the lawyer must explain the difference between advocating for a client and serving as a third-party neutral.

      1. No attorney-client privilege

        That may include explaining that there’s no attorney-client privilege between herself and the parties.

    6. Special responsibilities of a prosecutor (MRPC 3.8)

      Prosecutors in criminal cases are considered both advocates and ministers of justice. There are several special rules that apply to them.

      1. Probable cause

        A prosecutor must refrain from prosecuting a charge that she knows is not supported by probable cause.

      2. Right to counsel

        A prosecutor must make reasonable efforts to ensure that the accused has been (1) advised of the right to counsel and the procedure for obtaining counsel; and (2) given reasonable opportunity to exercise that right.

      3. Unrepresented parties’ rights

        If a party is unrepresented, a prosecutor must not seek to obtain a waiver of important pretrial rights, like the right to a preliminary hearing to challenge probable cause.

        1. Okay if pro se

          This rule does not apply if the tribunal has approved the defendant’s request to appear pro se.

      4. Disclosure of exculpatory and mitigating evidence

        The prosecutor must timely disclose to the defense all evidence or information she knows of that tends to exculpate the defendant or mitigate the offense.

        1. Including at sentencing

          At the sentencing phase, the prosecutor has to disclose all unprivileged mitigating information she knows about to both the defense and the tribunal, unless there’s a protective order that relieves her of that duty.

      5. Subpoenas to lawyers

        A prosecutor can only subpoena a lawyer in a grand jury or other criminal proceeding to present evidence about a former or current client if she reasonably believes all of the following.

        1. No privilege

          There’s no privilege that protects the evidence sought from disclosure.

        2. Essential

          The evidence sought is essential to complete an ongoing investigation or prosecution.

        3. No alternative

          There is no feasible alternative to obtain the information.

      6. Extrajudicial statements

        A prosecutor has two duties when it comes to statements made outside the courtroom.

        1. Refrain from certain statements

          A prosecutor must refrain from making extrajudicial statements that are substantially likely to increase the public condemnation of the defendant.

        2. Prevent others from commenting

          In addition, a prosecutor must exercise reasonable care to prevent investigators, law enforcement personnel, employees, and other people associated with her from making those kinds of extrajudicial statements.

        3. Which statements permitted

          A prosecutor can make extrajudicial statements that (1) are necessary to inform the public of the nature and extent of her actions and (2) serve a legitimate law enforcement purpose.

      7. Post-conviction evidence

        A prosecutor has certain obligations when she learns of new evidence that is credible and material and that creates a reasonable likelihood that a convicted defendant did not commit the offense.

        1. Disclosure to the court

          She must promptly disclose the evidence to an appropriate court or authority.

        2. Disclosure to the defendant

          If the conviction was obtained in her jurisdiction, she must promptly disclose the evidence to the defendant (unless the court approves a delay).

        3. Further investigation

          If the conviction was obtained in her jurisdiction, the prosecutor must investigate or make reasonable efforts to get someone else to investigate to determine if the defendant was wrongfully convicted.

      8. Wrongful conviction

        If a prosecutor knows of clear and convincing evidence that a defendant in her jurisdiction was convicted of an offense he did not commit, the prosecutor must seek to overturn the conviction.

    7. Advocate in non-adjudicative proceedings (MRPC 3.9)

      This rule applies when a lawyer represents a client at an official hearing/meeting of a government agency or legislative body where the lawyer or client is presenting evidence or argument.

      1. Like a court

        A lawyer in this situation has to treat the agency or body like she would a court. She has to disclose that she’s appearing in a representative capacity, and she has to comply with the rules about candor before the tribunal (MRPC 3.3), fairness toward opposing parties and counsel (MRPC 3.4), and impartiality and decorum (MRPC 3.5).

      2. When it does not apply

        Lawyers interact with government agencies on their clients’ behalf in a variety of other contexts, like negotiating to secure a license, helping a client fulfill reporting requirements, and representing a client in an agency investigation. Those kinds of matters are governed by the rules discussed in the section on Transactions with third parties. See MRPC 4.1-4.4.

  10. Safekeeping of funds and other property (MRPC 1.15)

    A lawyer has a fiduciary duty to safeguard the property of both clients and third parties that are in her possession. Questions on this topic usually account for 2-8% of the MPRE.

    1. Separation from lawyer's property

      Lawyers have to hold the property of clients or third persons separate from their own property.

      1. Money

        For money, that means a separate account in the state where the lawyer's office is situated (unless the client or third person consents to a different state).

        1. Narrow exception for service charges

          A lawyer may deposit her own money in a client trust account to the extent necessary to pay any banking service charges.

        2. IOLTA accounts

          The trust funds that lawyers set up to hold their clients’ funds can be interest-bearing or non-interest-bearing. The interest-bearing ones are called IOLTA accounts, a term you may see on the MPRE. (IOLTA stands for Interest on Lawyers' Trust Accounts.) The interest that accrues on an IOLTA account does not go to the client or to the attorney. It’s used for charitable purposes, often at the direction of the state bar or legislature.

      2. Other property

        For other property, the appropriate method of safeguarding will depend on what the item is.

    2. Recordkeeping

      The lawyer has to keep complete records of accounts and other property for five years after the representation ends.

    3. Notice and transfer

      When a lawyer receives money or other property, she has to promptly notify any client or third party who has an interest in it and promptly deliver to them whatever portion they are entitled to receive.

    4. Accounting upon request

      If a client or third person requests it, the lawyer has to make a full, prompt accounting of the money or other property.

    5. Disputed property (including fee disputes)

      When a lawyer possesses property in which two or more people claim an interest, the disputed property has to be kept separate until the claimants resolve the dispute. Any portion of the property that’s not in dispute can be distributed. This provision applies to fee disputes between lawyers and their clients where the clients have prepaid.

  11. Code of judicial conduct

    The MPRE tests certain aspects of the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct (MCJC), which consists of four general “canons” and a bunch of more detailed rules. You can expect judicial conduct to account for 2-8% of the exam.

    1. The four I’s of judicial conduct (MCJC Canon 1)

      A judge must uphold and promote the judiciary’s independence, integrity, and impartiality and must avoid both impropriety and the appearance of impropriety.

      1. Compliance (MCJC 1.1)

        The first step toward satisfying Canon 1 is the judge’s compliance with the law and the MCJC.

      2. Active outreach (MCJC 1.2)

        Judges should participate in activities that promote ethical conduct among judges and lawyers, support professionalism within the judiciary and the legal profession, and promote access to justice for all. A judge should initiate and participate in community outreach activities for the purpose of promoting public understanding of and confidence in the administration of justice.

      3. Appearance of impropriety

        The test for appearance of impropriety is whether the conduct (1) would cause a reasonable person to think the judge had violated the MCJC or (2) would cast doubt on the judge’s honesty, impartiality, temperament, or fitness to serve as a judge.

      4. Abuse of office (MCJC 1.3)

        A judge must not abuse the prestige of judicial office for personal gain or allow others to do so.

    2. Performing judicial duties (MCJC Canon 2)

      A judge must perform the duties of judicial office impartially, competently, and diligently.

      1. Impartiality and fairness (MCJC 2.2)

        A judge must be objective and open-minded. She must interpret and apply the law, regardless of whether she approves or disapproves of the law in question.

        1. Good-faith errors

          Good-faith errors of fact or law do not violate this Rule.

        2. Pro se litigants

          A judge can make reasonable accommodations to pro se litigants so their matters can be heard fairly without violating the duty of impartiality.

      2. Bias, prejudice, and harassment (MCJC 2.3)

        A judge must perform all duties of judicial office without bias, prejudice, or harassment in her words or conduct.

        1. Broadly defined

          This duty is very broad and includes bias, prejudice, or harassment based on race, sex, gender, religion, national origin, ethnicity, disability, age, sexual orientation, marital status, socioeconomic status, and political affiliation.

        2. Supervisory duty

          The judge also has a responsibility to police the conduct of court staff, court officials, lawyers appearing before her, and anyone else subject to her direction and control. The judge must not allow any of those people to show bias, prejudice, or harassment in judicial proceedings.

      3. External influences (MCJC 2.4)

        Canon 2 also requires that a judge avoid being swayed by external influences or giving the impression that she is.

        1. Actual influence

          A judge must not be influenced by fear of public criticism or by other interests or relationships (e.g., family, social, political, or financial).

        2. Impression of influence

          A judge also must not convey that any person or organization has influence over her or allow another person to convey that impression.

      4. Competence (MCJC 2.5)

        Competence means the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness, and preparation reasonably necessary to perform a judge’s responsibilities.

      5. Diligence (MCJC 2.5)

        A judge should supervise cases in ways that reduce or eliminate avoidable delays and unnecessary costs.

        1. Ensuring the right to be heard (MCJC 2.6)

          A judge must give everyone with a legal interest in a proceeding the right to be heard.

          1. Encouraging settlement

            The right to be heard doesn’t mean that a judge can’t encourage parties to settle a lawsuit. But it does raise some issues the judge needs to think about when deciding whether to participate in settlement discussions.

            1. No coercion

              A judge cannot coerce a party into settling a matter.

            2. Effect on the judge

              Participating in settlement discussions may affect how the judge thinks about the case and how the lawyers and parties think about the judge. If the discussions fail, the case goes forward, and the judge continues to preside, those perceptions might matter. There are a few factors to consider.

              1. Parties’ request or consent

                Have the parties asked the judge to participate or consented to her involvement?

              2. Sophistication of parties and counsel

                Are the parties and their counsel relatively sophisticated in legal proceedings, and is any of the parties unrepresented?

              3. Bench or jury trial

                Will the judge ultimately be finding facts in the case, or will that role be left to a jury?

              4. Civil or criminal

                A judge’s involvement may seem more coercive in a criminal case (e.g., where a prison sentence might be at stake) than in a civil matter.

      6. Ex parte communications (MCJC 2.9)

        A judge shall not initiate, permit, or consider ex parte communications (i.e., by a party or her lawyer). In addition, the judge must not consider other communications (i.e., by third parties) made to the judge outside the presence of the parties or their lawyers.

        1. Exceptions

          There are several exceptions to this general rule.

          1. Scheduling, administrative, or emergency purposes

            Ex parte communications are permitted for scheduling, administrative, or emergency purposes, as long as these three requirements are met.

          2. No substantive matters

            The communication does not address any substantive matters.

          3. No advantage

            The judge reasonably believes that the communication will not give any party a procedural, substantive, or tactical advantage.

          4. Notification and response

            The judge promptly notifies all other parties of the content of the communication and gives them a chance to respond.

          5. Court staff and officials

            A judge may consult with court staff and officials who help carry out her duties or with other judges.

            1. No facts outside the record

              The judge must make reasonable efforts to avoid learning any facts that are not part of the record in the case.

            2. No delegation

              The judge can’t delegate the responsibility to decide the matter personally (e.g., to rule on the motion) to the person she consults.

          6. Settlement

            If all parties consent, the judge may confer separately with the parties and their lawyers to conduct settlement discussions.

          7. Authorization by law

            If a law expressly authorizes a judge to initiate, permit, or consider ex parte communications, doing so doesn’t violate the MCJC.

        2. Inadvertent communications

          A judge who inadvertently receives an unauthorized ex parte communication about the substance of a matter must promptly notify the parties of the content of the communication and give them a chance to respond.

        3. No investigation

          A judge must not investigate the facts independently. She can only consider the evidence presented by the parties and any facts she may judicially notice.

        4. Supervisory duty

          In addition to refraining from ex parte communications, a judge has to make reasonable efforts to ensure that court staff, officials, and others under her direction and control follow this rule.

      7. Avoiding certain statements (MCJC 2.10)

        The MCJC puts some limits on judicial speech to preserve impartiality (and the appearance of it).

        1. Cases in any court

          A judge must not make public or non-public statements that might reasonably be expected to affect the outcome or impair the fairness of a matter pending or impending in any court.

        2. Cases before the judge

          In connection with cases or issues that are likely to come before her, the judge must not make promises or commitments that are inconsistent with the duty of impartiality.

        3. Supervisory duty

          A judge must also ensure that court staff, officials, and others under her direction and control follow this rule.

        4. Exceptions

          There are three narrow exceptions to these limits on judicial speech.

          1. Court procedures

            A judge may publicly explain court procedures.

          2. Judge as litigant

            A judge may make public statements about any case in which she is a litigant in her personal capacity.

          3. Allegations about judicial conduct

            A judge may respond to allegations about her conduct in a matter, or ask a third party to respond for her, but only if the statement would not affect the outcome or impair the fairness of the proceeding. This rule includes responses to media coverage.

      8. Disqualification (MCJC 2.11)

        A judge must disqualify (a.k.a. recuse) herself from any proceeding in which her impartiality could reasonably be questioned.

        1. Grounds for disqualification

          The rule provides a bunch of examples of disqualifying circumstances that you should know for the exam. Remember the mnemonic P BRICKS.

          1. Past participation in the matter

            A judge is disqualified if she was previously involved in the matter.

            1. As a lawyer

              Recusal is required if the judge or a lawyer in her firm served as a lawyer in the matter.

            2. As a judge

              Recusal is required if the judge previously presided over the matter in another court.

            3. As a government employee

              Recusal is required if the judge personally and substantially participated in the matter as a government lawyer or public official or if she expressed an opinion on the merits in that capacity.

            4. As a witness

              Recusal is required if the judge was a material witness concerning the matter.

          2. Bias

            The judge has a personal bias or prejudice concerning a party or a party’s lawyer.

          3. Relationship with key figure

            The judge knows that someone related to the judge or the judge’s spouse or domestic partner is going to play a key role in the proceedings.

            1. Third-degree relatives

              Involvement of anyone within the third degree of relationship to the judge or the judge’s spouse/partner is grounds for recusal. That means not only children, grandchildren, parents, and siblings but also first cousins and great-grandchildren. Involvement by the relative’s spouse or domestic partner is also grounds for recusal.

              1. When in doubt, recuse

                Because the definition of “related” is so broad in this rule, the best answer on the MPRE is going to be that the judge should recuse, unless the question says the relative is the judge’s third cousin five times removed.

            2. What roles

              Recusal is appropriate if the relative (or her spouse/partner) is (1) a party to the proceeding; (2) an officer, director, general partner, managing member, or trustee of a party; (3) acting as a lawyer; (4) someone with more than a de minimis interest in the outcome; or (5) likely to be a material witness.

          4. Interest in the outcome

            The judge knows that she or her spouse/partner or her family member has an economic interest in the proceeding.

            1. Whose interests matter

              The judge must recuse if she has an interest in the matter in her individual capacity or as a fiduciary. The rule also covers the judge’s parent, child, or any other family member who resides in the judge’s household.

          5. Contributions to judge's campaign

            The judge has received significant campaign contributions from a party, a party’s lawyer, or the firm of a party’s lawyer. The Model Rule leaves it up to each jurisdiction to decide how big a contribution is required to trigger disqualification and whether to count aggregate contributions over time (e.g., all donations during the last 10 years). In most jurisdictions, a judge may receive reasonable contributions from parties and lawyers without needing to recuse herself.

          6. Knowledge

            The judge has personal knowledge of facts that are in dispute in the proceeding.

          7. Statements made in public

            The judge has made a public statement that commits or appears to commit the judge to making a particular ruling in the case. The statement must have been made (1) while serving as a judge or as a judicial candidate and (2) outside of a court proceeding, judicial decision, or opinion.

        2. Duty to keep informed

          A judge has to keep informed about her personal and fiduciary economic interests. She also has to make a reasonable effort to keep informed about the economic interests of her spouse or domestic partner and any minor children residing in her household.

        3. Disclosure

          If a judge would be subject to disqualification under this rule, she may disclose on the record the basis for disqualification and ask the parties and their lawyers to consider whether they want to waive the disqualification.

        4. Parties’ consent

          The parties and lawyers then consult outside the presence of the judge and court personnel. If they agree that the judge should not be disqualified, the judge may continue to preside, and the agreement becomes part of the record.

          1. Not bias

            This disclosure-and-consent procedure is not available if the judge’s bias is the basis for disqualification. The parties can’t consent to let a biased judge preside.

        5. Exception for necessity

          Sometimes, a matter requires immediate action by a judge (think: probable cause hearing or TRO). If that’s the case, the judge should (1) disclose any possible basis for disqualification on the record; (2) take whatever action is necessary; and (3) make reasonable efforts to transfer the matter to another judge as soon as practicable.

    3. Extrajudicial activities

      A judge must prioritize the duties of judicial office over all personal and extrajudicial activities. See MCJC 2.11.

      1. Minimizing conflicts (MCJC Canon 3)

        A judge must conduct personal and extrajudicial activities to minimize the risk of conflict with judicial duties.

      2. Limits on government appointments (MCJC 3.4)

        A judge shall not accept appointment to a government committee, board, commission, or other government position, unless it concerns the law, the legal system, or the administration of justice.

      3. No arbitration, mediation, other judicial functions (MCJC 3.9)

        A judge shall not act as an arbitrator or a mediator or perform other judicial functions apart from her official duties, unless expressly authorized by law.

      4. No practice of law (MCJC 3.10)

        A judge shall not practice law.

        1. Pro se permitted

          A judge can appear pro se in a proceeding.

      5. Financial, business, or remunerative activities (MCJC 3.11)

        A judge may participate in limited financial or business activities if they are consistent with her judicial duties.

        1. Permitted investments

          A judge may hold and manage her own investments and those of her family members.

        2. Permitted business activities

          A judge can only serve as an officer, director, manager, general partner, advisor, or employee for a business entity if (1) it is closely held by the judge or her family; or (2) it is primarily engaged in investing the financial resources of the judge or her family.

        3. When prohibited

          A judge shall not engage in these investment or business activities if they will: (1) interfere with proper performance of judicial duties; (2) lead to frequent disqualification; (3) involve frequent transactions or continuing business relationships with lawyers or other people likely to come before the court; or (4) violate other MCJC provisions.

      6. Compensation for extrajudicial activities (MCJC 3.12)

        A judge may accept reasonable compensation for extrajudicial activities unless it would appear to a reasonable person to undermine the judge’s independence, integrity, or impartiality.

      7. Gifts or other benefits (MCJC 3.13)

        A judge shall not accept any gifts, loans, or other things of value, if it would appear to a reasonable person to undermine the judge’s independence, integrity, or impartiality.

        1. De minimis gifts

          There's an exception for de minimis gifts.

        2. Same terms as non-judges

          A judge can take advantage of loans or commercial opportunities if they are offered on the same terms that are available to non-judges.

        3. Gifts that disqualify the judge

          A judge can accept gifts from friends or family whose appearance before the judge would require him to disqualify himself anyway. (If someone can’t appear before a judge, then there’s no danger of bias as the result of a gift.)

      8. Expenses (MCJC 3.14)

        In general, judges can be reimbursed for expenses or can accept waivers of fees that are associated with extrajudicial activities.

        1. Reimbursement

          A judge may accept reimbursement of necessary and reasonable expenses for travel, food, lodging, or other incidental expenses if the expenses are associated with extrajudicial activities permitted by the MCJC. The reimbursement does not have to come from the judge's employer (i.e., from the court system).

          1. Actual costs

            Reimbursement must be limited to actual costs reasonably incurred by the judge and, when appropriate, by the judge's spouse, domestic partner, or guest.

        2. Waiver

          A judge may also accept a full or partial waiver of fees or charges for registration, tuition, and similar items.

      9. Reporting required (MCJC 3.15)

        Judges have to meet certain reporting obligations with respect to extrajudicial activities.

        1. Compensation and gifts

          Judges have to file an annual report detailing any compensation for extrajudicial activities and any gifts they have received.

        2. Reimbursements and waivers

          A judge who receives an expense reimbursement or a fee waiver must report it within 30 days after the event.

      10. Political or campaign activities (MCJC Canon 4)

        A judge or candidate for judicial office shall not engage in political or campaign activity that is inconsistent with the independence, integrity, or impartiality of the judiciary. Remember PILES oF SPICES.

        1. Private benefit

          Use or permit the use of campaign contributions for the private benefit of the judge, the candidate, or others

        2. Identification or endorsement

          Publicly identify herself as a candidate of a political organization or seek or accept endorsements from a political organization

          1. Exceptions for partisan elections

            This prohibition does not apply if the judge/candidate is participating in a partisan election. Some states permit judges to identify as Democrats, Republicans, or members of another party as an integral part of the election process.

        3. Leadership

          Acting as a leader or officer in a political organization

        4. Endorsement or opposition

          Publicly endorsing or opposing a candidate for public office, including a member of the judge's family

        5. Solicit or make contributions for others

          Soliciting or making contributions to a political organization or a candidate for public office

        6. False statements

          Knowingly, or with reckless disregard for the truth, make any false or misleading statement

        7. Solicit or accept contributions for self

          Soliciting or accepting contributions for herself, except through a campaign committee that meets certain standards

          1. Campaign committees for judicial candidates (MCJC 4.4)

            A judicial candidate subject to public election may establish a committee to manage her campaign. The candidate must instruct her committee to do the following things.

            1. Reasonable amounts

              The campaign committee may only solicit and accept campaign contributions that are reasonable. Excessive contributions would create the impression that the judge might be biased in favor of the donor.

            2. Timing

              The committee must not solicit or accept contributions too far before or after an election takes place. The idea here is that contributions that aren't made close to an election look more like bribes than permitted political speech. The model rule leaves it up to individual jurisdictions to decide what timeframe is appropriate.

            3. Disclosure and divestiture

              The committee must comply with all statutory requirements for disclosure and divestiture of campaign contributions. That includes filing a report that identifies all donors whose contributions exceed a certain amount (tbd by each jurisdiction).

        8. Pledges or promises

          Make pledges or promises about cases, controversies, or issues that are likely to come before the court that are inconsistent with impartial judging

          1. Pledges about judicial administration

            A judicial candidate may make campaign promises related to judicial administration or court management (e.g., a promise to dispose of a backlog of cases).

          2. Pledges about action outside the courtroom

            A candidate may pledge to take action outside the courtroom, like improving the jury selection system or renovating the courthouse.

        9. Impending and current cases

          Make any statement that could reasonably affect the outcome or impair the fairness of a current or impending court case

        10. Court resources

          Use court staff, facilities, or other resources in a campaign for judicial office

        11. Events

          Attend or purchase tickets for events sponsored by a political organization or a candidate for public office

        12. Speeches

          Making speeches on behalf of a political organization

      11. Supervisory duty

        A judge or judicial candidate must take reasonable measures to ensure that other people do not engage in any of these activities on her behalf.

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