Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Colorado Lawyers Beware: Anstine V. Alexander And The Attorney's New Duty To Non-Clients, Michael David Delcour
Colorado Lawyers Beware: Anstine V. Alexander And The Attorney's New Duty To Non-Clients, Michael David Delcour
University of Colorado Law Review
In Anstine v. Alexander, the Colorado Court of Appeals addressed the issue of whether an attorney can be found liable for aiding and abetting his client's breach of fiduciary duty to a non-client. Although the attorneys in question were absolved of legal malpractice liability to the corporation they represented, the defendant-attorneys were found liable for aiding and abetting the president's breach of fiduciary duty to the corporation's creditors. Interestingly, the same piece of advice that was given by the attorneys to the president of the corporation was at the heart of both the malpractice claim and the aiding and abetting …
Updating Our Understanding Of The Role Of Lawyers: Lessons From Mastercard, Scott R. Peppet
Updating Our Understanding Of The Role Of Lawyers: Lessons From Mastercard, Scott R. Peppet
Publications
No abstract provided.
Sensational Reports: The Ethical Duty Of Cause Lawyers To Be Competent In Public Advocacy, Deborah J. Cantrell
Sensational Reports: The Ethical Duty Of Cause Lawyers To Be Competent In Public Advocacy, Deborah J. Cantrell
Publications
This article argues that cause lawyers - those lawyers whose primary focus is on social change rather than on for-profit client-based work - have an ethical responsibility to be competent in public advocacy. That responsibility stems from a cause lawyer's commitment to the principles embodied in the particular social movement in which the lawyer is acting. It is reinforced by the requirement of competency under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct. To illustrate the contours of a competent public advocacy strategy, the article highlights two cause lawyering organizations, Legal Momentum and the Institute for Justice, and considers how each organization …