An increasing number of tasks once reserved to lawyers are now being performed by non-lawyers. That reality seems likely to continue. The question then becomes against what standard of performance such “amateur” practice should be assessed. One answer might be that a non-lawyer should be guilty of malpractice if the work is performed below the level of quality to which a lawyer would be held. This paper argues that the work should instead be judged against the standard of performance the non-lawyer purported to be able to deliver
In my annual address to the Nebraska State Bar Association in October 1969, I suggested that much ha...
This paper explores some of the misalignment in the legal profession in terms of allocation to parti...
This paper explores some of the misalignment in the legal profession in terms of allocation to parti...
This Article will review existing case law and commentary, and propose a new formula for application...
Attacks have been lodged against the legal profession for many years, indeed, since even before Shak...
Until recently, when we spoke of malpractice we invariably meant medical malpractice. Less than 20 y...
The weaknesses within unauthorized practice of law (UPL) laws, coupled with shaky and fragmented enf...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
An attorney is not an insurer of the result of a case in which he is employed, without a special con...
Professor Hazard discusses the dimensions of the lawyer conduct prohibited by DR 7-102(A)(7) of the ...
The last forty years have seen a marked rise in legal malpractice lawsuits. Recent numbers show that...
Lawyers err every day, in hard and easy cases, in trials and transactions, and in large and small fi...
There is significant risk today that lawyers will become the target of a disciplinary or legal malpr...
In torts law, the standard of care in negligence is the objective standard of the "ordinary" or "rea...
Our most distinguished professions do not maintain congruency between membership standards and actua...
In my annual address to the Nebraska State Bar Association in October 1969, I suggested that much ha...
This paper explores some of the misalignment in the legal profession in terms of allocation to parti...
This paper explores some of the misalignment in the legal profession in terms of allocation to parti...
This Article will review existing case law and commentary, and propose a new formula for application...
Attacks have been lodged against the legal profession for many years, indeed, since even before Shak...
Until recently, when we spoke of malpractice we invariably meant medical malpractice. Less than 20 y...
The weaknesses within unauthorized practice of law (UPL) laws, coupled with shaky and fragmented enf...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
An attorney is not an insurer of the result of a case in which he is employed, without a special con...
Professor Hazard discusses the dimensions of the lawyer conduct prohibited by DR 7-102(A)(7) of the ...
The last forty years have seen a marked rise in legal malpractice lawsuits. Recent numbers show that...
Lawyers err every day, in hard and easy cases, in trials and transactions, and in large and small fi...
There is significant risk today that lawyers will become the target of a disciplinary or legal malpr...
In torts law, the standard of care in negligence is the objective standard of the "ordinary" or "rea...
Our most distinguished professions do not maintain congruency between membership standards and actua...
In my annual address to the Nebraska State Bar Association in October 1969, I suggested that much ha...
This paper explores some of the misalignment in the legal profession in terms of allocation to parti...
This paper explores some of the misalignment in the legal profession in terms of allocation to parti...