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PEOPLE MANAGEMENT

PEOPLE MANAGEMENT . CLIENTS – COMMUNICATION, CORRESPONDENCE AND GUIDANCE.

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PEOPLE MANAGEMENT

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  1. PEOPLE MANAGEMENT • CLIENTS – COMMUNICATION, CORRESPONDENCE AND GUIDANCE

  2. Paralegals can’t get away from the fact that everything we do involves communication. Whether it is communicating with a client, the court, a judge or even the local copy shop, we need to know how to communicate. Paralegals are called on to be the liaison between clients, witnesses, experts and counsel. Strong communication and writing skills are essential in fulfilling this role. This is not something that is easily taught and/or learned in a classroom. For most of us, this is something we learn over time and/or while on the job. As liaison, you must thoroughly understand the legal concepts of confidential communications, work-product and conflicts of interest. You must also understand the dangers of giving legal advice which is often sought.

  3. COMMUNICATION • CLIENT INTERVIEW • DISCOVERY • TRIAL

  4. CLIENT INTERVIEW • PURPOSE FOR INTERVIEW • PREPARE FOR INTERVIEW • CONDUCT INTERVIEW • FOLLOWING INTERVIEW

  5. DISCOVERY • WRITTEN DISCOVERY • DEPOSITIONS

  6. TRIAL • TRIAL PREPARATION • INSTRUCTIONS TO CLIENT

  7. CORRESPONDENCE • ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE • WORK-PRODUCT • CONFLICT OF INTEREST • DANGER OF GIVING LEGAL ADVISE

  8. ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE Attorney-client privilege is a legal concept which protects communications between a client and his or her attorney and keeps those communications confidential. This privilege encourages open and honest communication between clients and attorneys

  9. Guideline 6, ABA Model Guidelines for utilization of paralegal services: • It is the responsibility of a lawyer to take reasonable measures to ensure that all client confidences are preserved by a paralegal

  10. NFPA Model Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility and Guidelines for Enforcement • Canon 5, A paralegal shall preserve all confidential information provided by the client or acquired from other sources before, during and after the course of the professional relationship • EC-1.5, A paralegal must protect the confidences of a client, and it shall be unethical for a paralegal to violate any statute now in effect or hereafter to be enacted controlling privileged communications • EC-1.5(b), A paralegal shall not use confidential information to the disadvantage of the client

  11. WORK-PRODUCT DOCTRINE “tangible material or its intangible equivalent" that is collected or prepared in anticipation of litigation

  12. WORK PRODUCT RULE • The work product doctrine was stated in a 1947 case, Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495 • The doctrine was codified in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 26(b)(3), which is the model for the work product rule in many states • In Hickman the Supreme Court created a qualified immunity from discovery for a lawyer’s trial preparation • If the opposition finds such informational material essential to its case and does not have an effective substitute, it may obtain the material by court order • The client may also waive such protection by actual or implied consent

  13. The work of paralegals in preparing litigated matters is protected by the work product rule • NFPA Model Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility and Guidelines for Enforcement - Canon 1.5, A paralegal shall preserve all confidential information provided by the client or acquired from other sources before, during, and after the course of the professional relationship

  14. CONFLICT OF INTEREST In the legal profession, the duty of loyalty owed to a client prohibits an attorney (or a law firm) from representing any other party with interests adverse to those of a client

  15. Guideline 7, ABA Model Guidelines for the Utilization of Legal Assistant Services • A lawyer should take reasonable measures to prevent conflicts of interest resulting from a legal assistant’s other employment or interests insofar as such other employment or interests would present a conflict of interest if it were that of the lawyer

  16. NFPA Model Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility and Guidelines for Enforcement • EC1.5(e), A paralegal shall keep those individuals responsible for the legal representation of a client fully informed of any confidential information the paralegal may have pertaining to that client • Canon 1.6, A paralegal shall avoid conflicts of interest and shall disclose any possible conflict to the employer or client, as well as to the prospective employers or clients • EC-1.6(a), A paralegal shall act within the bounds of the law, solely for the benefit of the client, and shall be free of compromising influences and loyalties. Neither the paralegal’s personal or business interest, nor those of other clients or third persons, should compromise the paralegal’s professional judgment and loyalty to the client • EC-1.6(b), A paralegal shall avoid conflicts of interest that may arise from previous assignments, whether for a present or past employer or client • EC-1.6(c), A paralegal shall avoid conflicts of interest that may arise from family relationships and from personal and business interests • EC-1.6(d), In order to be able to determine whether an actual or potential conflict of interest exists a paralegal shall create and maintain an effective recordkeeping system that identifies clients, matters and parties with which the paralegal has worked • EC-1.6(e), A paralegal shall reveal non-confidential information about a client or former client to reasonably ascertain if an actual or potential conflict of interest exists

  17. LEGAL ADVICE Legal advice is the giving of a formal and binding opinion regarding the substance or procedure of the law by an officer of the court, ordinarily in exchange for financial or other tangible compensation

  18. NFPA Model Code of Ethics and Professional Responsibility and Guidelines for Enforcement • EC-1.7(a), A paralegal’s title shall clearly indicate the individual’s status and shall be disclosed in all business and professional communications to avoid misunderstandings and misconceptions about the paralegal’s role and responsibilities • Canon-1.8, A lawyer may not delegate to a paralegal (1). Responsibility for establishing an attorney-client relationship; (2). Responsibility for establishing the amount of fees to be charged for legal services; and (3). Responsibility for a legal opinion rendered to a client • Canon 7, A paralegal shall not engage in the unauthorized practice of law • EF-7.1, A paralegal shall comply with the applicable legal authority governing the unauthorized practice of law in the jurisdiction in which the paralegal practices

  19. IN WHICH OF THE FOLLING SCENARIOS WOULD A PARALEGAL BE CONSIDERED TO BE GIVING LEGAL ADVISE? • The firm’s client hasn’t paid the bill. After checking with the lawyer, the paralegal tells the client, “The lawyer told me that if you don’t pay your bill in 30 days, legal proceedings will begin.” • A new lawyer asks an experienced family law paralegal what to tell a divorce client about the chances of having sole custody of the children. The paralegal tells the lawyer, About 70-30 in the client’s favor.” • A client is upset because the trial begins tomorrow and the paralegal advises, “Try not to look so worried when you’re in court. Try to stay calm.” • A client requests information on how to classify a car on a self-help form.

  20. PARALEGALS WRITTEN COMMUNICATION WITH CLIENT • USE CLEAR LANGUAGE • CORRECT GRAMMAR • CORRECT SPELLING • INDICATE TITLE • USE “ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE” • PROVIDE CLIENT WITH COPIES OF ALL CORRESPONDENCES, PLEADINGS AND DISCOVERY • PROVIDE CLIENT WITH COPIES OF ALL WORK-PRODUCT

  21. Letter Writing Techniques • Always carefully proofread and edit any letters • Delete any unnecessary words or legalese • Write as you speak • Use plain English rather than legalese • Use proper grammar, punctuation, and capitalization • Avoid slang, profanity, fad words, or other sloppy language

  22. Common Errors in Letter Writing • Writing so your reader has trouble understanding you • Talking down to your reader • Failing to be clear about the things you want your correspondent to do and when

  23. Follow the Golden Rule • If you don’t need to say it, don’t say it at all

  24. GUIDANCE • Traditional paralegal • Freelance/contract paralegal • Independent paralegal

  25. TRADITIONAL PARALEGAL • A PARALEGAL WHO WORKS WITH SUPERVISION BY AND/OR ACCOUNTABILITY TO A LAWYER

  26. FREELANCE/CONTRACT PARALEGAL • A PARALEGAL WHO WORKS AS AN INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR WITH SUPERVISION BY AND/OR ACCOUNTABILITY TO A LAWYER

  27. INDEPENDENT PARALEGAL • A PARALEGAL WHO PROVIDES SERVICES TO CONSUMERS WITH REGARD TO A PROCESS IN WHICH THE LAW IS INVOLVED AND FOR WHOSE WORK NO LAWYER IS ACCOUNTABLE

  28. Also included under the category of Independent Paralegal are the following: • Special Advocate • Agency Representative

  29. Special Advocate • A paralegal who is authorized to participate in court proceedings involving specified classes of parties or cases. The special advocate may be referred to as a “court appointed special advocate” (CASA)

  30. Agency Representative • A paralegal who is authorized by statute or agency rule to provide representation in agency proceedings

  31. Harkness v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review • Employers can be represented by non-lawyers at unemployment compensation proceedings, a deeply split Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled

  32. WITNESSES AND EXPERTS

  33. WITNESSES • Witnesses are persons who give evidence in a cause before a court and who attests or swears to facts or gives or bears testimony under oath

  34. WITNESSES • IDENTIFY ALL POTENTIAL WITNESSES TO A CASE • KEEP A LIST OF ALL NAMED WITNESSES • DECIDE WHETHER YOU WILL DEPOSE WITNESSES • SUBPOENA WITNESSES FOR DEPOSITIONS • NAME ALL WITNESSES IN PRE-TRIAL MEMORANDUM • SUBPOENA ALL POTENTIAL WITNESSES FOR TRIAL

  35. EXPERT WITNESSES • Expert witnesses are persons with specialized knowledge, skill, experience, training or education who, once qualified, are able to provide testimony concerning opinions formed

  36. EXPERTS • LOCATING POTENTIAL EXPERTS • INTERVIEWING POTENTIAL EXPERTS • CONDUCTING BACKGROUND INVESTIGATION ON EXPERTS • SERVING AS LIAISON WITH EXPERTS • PREPARING EXPERTS FOR LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

  37. FOCUS GROUPS/MOCK TRIALS • WHAT IS A FOCUS GROUP • WHAT IS A MOCK TRIAL • WHY RESEARCH? • QUALITY JURY RESEARCH • PARLEGAL FUNCTION IN COORDINATING FOCUS GROUP/MOCK TRIAL

  38. FOCUS GROUP • A focus group is an exploratory, creative conversation with jurors guided by one or two consultants. A focus group usually takes half a day or an evening

  39. MOCK TRIALS • A mock trial is a structured, argumentative case presentation in which attorneys present both sides of the case. A mock trial usually takes at least one day if not more

  40. WHY RESEARCH? • Jury research is any of several types of exercise using surrogate jurors. It is designed to answer any question we may have about how jurors may receive the case as a whole, or any piece of it

  41. Situation . To gain better understanding of general opinions in a particular venue ----- . To help us begin to put our case story together early in discovery--- . To determine how best to test one or two particular issues when we have a limited budget for a case--- . To see how jurors value a case to inform settlement negotiations----- . To test our key themes and strategies as we approach trial--- . To assess how jurors are receiving our case and our witnesses at trial Research Solution . Community attitude telephone survey . Neutral format to see how jurors develop story . Case issue study or abbreviated focus group . Damage assessment research . Focus group . Shadow jury RESEARCH TAKES MANY FORMS DEPENDING ON USE

  42. Quality Jury Research • Is conducted in trial venue (or matched) • Uses surrogate jurors matched to venue demographics • Ensures confidentiality • Is conducted by social science research/statistical experts

  43. PARALEGAL FUNCTION IN COORDINATING FOCUS GROUP/MOCK TRIAL . SEARCHES TO FIND PROVIDER . WORKING WITH PROVIDER TO COORDINATE FOCUS GROUP/MOCK TRIAL

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