ALWAYS READ GOVERNING DOCUMENT; ALWAYS KEEP IN MIND WHO HOLDS LEGAL TITLE- AUTHORITY TO SIGN DOCUMENT>> WILL ALWAYS BE FIDUCIARY.
Professional Responsibility/Representation issues
Nature of Representation: focus= distinction btwn representing someone in individual v fiduciary capacity
First Q = Who is the Client in Trust/Estate context? (i.e., Who do I represent?)
Second Q = Do I represent that Client in his individual capacity or fiduciary capacity? (i.e., In what capacity do I represent the client?; fiduciary? BFY?)
If I represent trustee who is being sued (e.g., beneficiary suing for mismanagement) is that me representing trustee in his individual capacity? BOTH (If been representing him all along-then been representing them in fiduciary capacity, but if now being sued>sued in individual capacity)
Actual–can’t rep. both clients b/c nature of conflict is such that>impossible for you to represent both
E.g., you cannot represent A and B when A sues B, OR A&B fighting over prop OR fighting over a certain bequest (saying each is the “sole BFY”); OR when BFY is accusing FDY of inappropriate conduct
FOCUS: Cannot effectively represent both cause you’d cause one to necessarily suffer
Helping 1 party win would mean helping the other lose
If rep 2 parties & actual conflict arises, withdraw frm both of them; CAN continue w/one only if other consents
Potential – could exist whenever you represent multiple clients on a particular matter
E.g., representing husband and wife on a joint estate plan; 2 ppl making partnership agreement; OR representing the same person in their FDY & BFY capacity, FDY and BFYs in same matter, or multiple BFY’s
Fully-Informed Written Consent REQUIRED – before can represent both/all parties involved
Duties Owed to Clients
Duty of Care
Duty of Confidentiality
Joint: no duty of confidentiality
Separate: yes, duty; cannot disclose what one client tells you to the other
NOTE: for estate plans, attorney for testator owes a duty to beneficiaries of the estate plan he is drafting
Beneficiaries can sue on theory of
Tort (malpractice)
Contract (3rd party beneficiary)
NOTE: attorney for fiduciary DOES NOT mean he represents the BFY (unless both written approve)
Example – recognize that these relationships can become very complicated very quickly
You represent H & W for joint estate plan – they create an IrrT for benefit of kids with wife’s sister as trustee of trust
You represent husband and wife in their individual capacity to create estate plan
If wife’s sister turns to you for legal advice represent wife’s sister in her fiduciary capacity
Owe duty of care & confidentiality to fiduciary; can’t communicate info> BFY w/o fid’s approval
Mother of wife dies wife and wife’s sister are executors and beneficiaries
you represent W in her fiduciary capacity as executor-estate & in her individual capacity as estate BFY
You could also represent the sister in those same capacities (UNLESS conflict of interests)
Trustee may need 2 lawyers if he’s acting as both TRUSTEE & BFY (one advising in FDY capacity; other in BFY) if BFY sues Trustee (cause sued in his individual capacity) Might be Prudent to get another attorney: separate advice