Regulation of lawyer conduct in the State of Nebraska. Upon the Nebraska Supreme Court\u27s adoption of the Nebraska Rules of Professional Conduct ( Nebraska Rules ) through its ruling on In re Petition of the Nebraska State Bar Association to Adopt Rules of Professional Conduct Governing Attorneys, the state shed its distinct position as one of only six jurisdictions not yet utilizing some form of the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct. The new system represents the first complete revision of the professional ethical standards to which Nebraska lawyers are held accountable since the adoption of the Code of Professional Responsibility ( Nebraska Code ), and embodies a few key departures from the former standards in both substance and s...
I. Introduction . . . . . 313 II. General Applicability to Trusts Created before January 1, 2005 . ....
This Note first addresses the facts of the Nebraska Court of Appeals decision in Meyer v. Board of R...
The analytic thesis of this article is that the functional analysis suggested in State v. Turner, in...
Regulation of lawyer conduct in the State of Nebraska. Upon the Nebraska Supreme Court\u27s adoption...
An introduction to the articles resulting from a panel discussion at the November 15, 2002, ethics c...
This article sets out the existing Nebraska law of multiple client conflicts for the purpose of comp...
Consideration of legislative enactment of statutory forms requires a comparative analysis of current...
Opening remarks to the November 15, 2002, University of Nebraska College of Law ethics conference on...
In the last five years the organized bar in the United States—represented by the American Bar Associ...
Thirty years ago, the Nebraska Supreme Court adopted the American Bar Association\u27s 1969 Model Co...
With increased growth and mobility in the legal profession, attorney conflicts of interest have also...
I. Introduction II. Appellate Justice and the Precipitation of United States Supreme Court Activity ...
The Nebraska Law Review is pleased to introduce in this issue a section devoted exclusively to recen...
Lawyers are highly educated and, allegedly, of higher than average intelligence, but sometimes indiv...
I. Introduction II. General Principles of Professional Practice … A. Statutory Bases … B. Adjudicati...
I. Introduction . . . . . 313 II. General Applicability to Trusts Created before January 1, 2005 . ....
This Note first addresses the facts of the Nebraska Court of Appeals decision in Meyer v. Board of R...
The analytic thesis of this article is that the functional analysis suggested in State v. Turner, in...
Regulation of lawyer conduct in the State of Nebraska. Upon the Nebraska Supreme Court\u27s adoption...
An introduction to the articles resulting from a panel discussion at the November 15, 2002, ethics c...
This article sets out the existing Nebraska law of multiple client conflicts for the purpose of comp...
Consideration of legislative enactment of statutory forms requires a comparative analysis of current...
Opening remarks to the November 15, 2002, University of Nebraska College of Law ethics conference on...
In the last five years the organized bar in the United States—represented by the American Bar Associ...
Thirty years ago, the Nebraska Supreme Court adopted the American Bar Association\u27s 1969 Model Co...
With increased growth and mobility in the legal profession, attorney conflicts of interest have also...
I. Introduction II. Appellate Justice and the Precipitation of United States Supreme Court Activity ...
The Nebraska Law Review is pleased to introduce in this issue a section devoted exclusively to recen...
Lawyers are highly educated and, allegedly, of higher than average intelligence, but sometimes indiv...
I. Introduction II. General Principles of Professional Practice … A. Statutory Bases … B. Adjudicati...
I. Introduction . . . . . 313 II. General Applicability to Trusts Created before January 1, 2005 . ....
This Note first addresses the facts of the Nebraska Court of Appeals decision in Meyer v. Board of R...
The analytic thesis of this article is that the functional analysis suggested in State v. Turner, in...