To read about the lawsuit against Legal Zoom for Unauthorized Practice of Law, see:
http://
www.elawyeringredux.com/articles/legalzoom/
Limited Legal Services in Indiana
Effective January 1, 2010, under Indiana Rule of Professional Conduct
1.2, (Scope of Representation and Allocation of Authority between
Client and Lawyer) a lawyer may limit the scope and objectives of the
representation if the limitation is reasonable under the circumstances
and the client gives informed consent.
The scope of services to be provided by a lawyer may be limited by
agreement with the client or by the terms under which the lawyer's
services are made available to the client. When a lawyer has been
retained by an insurer to represent an insured, for example, the
representation may be limited to matters related to the insurance
coverage. A limited representation may be appropriate because the
client has limited objectives for the representation. In addition, the
terms upon which representation is undertaken may exclude specific
means that might otherwise be used to accomplish the client's
objectives. Such limitations may exclude actions that the client thinks
are too costly or that the lawyer regards as repugnant, unethical, or
imprudent.
Although this Rule affords the lawyer and client substantial latitude
to limit the representation, the limitation must be reasonable under
the circumstances. If, for example, a client's objective is limited to
securing general information about the law the client needs in order to
handle a common and typically uncomplicated legal problem, the lawyer
and client may agree that the lawyer's services will be limited to a
brief telephone consultation. Such a limitation, however, would not be
reasonable if the time allotted was not sufficient to yield advice upon
which the client could rely. Although an agreement for a limited
representation does not exempt a lawyer from the duty to provide
competent representation, the limitation is a factor to be considered
when determining the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness and
preparation reasonably necessary for the representation. See Rule 1.1.
All agreements concerning a lawyer's representation of a client must
accord with the Rules of Professional Conduct and other law. See, e.g.,
Rules 1.1, 1.8 and 5.6.
Effective January 1, 2010, under Rule 6.5 (Nonprofit and Court-Annexed
Limited Legal Service Programs) Nonprofit organizations have programs
through which lawyers provide short-term limited legal services such as
advice or filling out legal forms that assist people in addressing
their legal problems without further representation by a lawyer. In
these programs, a lawyer-client relationship is established but there
is no expectation that the lawyer’s representation of the client will
continue beyond the limited consultation. Such programs are normally
operated under circumstances in which it is not feasible for a lawyer
to systematically screen for conflicts of interest as is generally
expected before undertaking a representation. A lawyer who provides
short-term limited legal services under this rule must secure the
client’s informed consent to the limited scope of representation. If a
short-term representation would not be reasonable under the
circumstances, the lawyer may offer advice to the client but must also
advise the client of the need for further assistance of counsel. Rules
1.6 and 1.9(c) apply to the limited representation. If, after beginning
a limited, short-term representation, a lawyer begins to represent a
client on an ongoing basis, Rules 1.7, 1.9 and 1.10 (conflicts of
interest) become applicable.
Source:
http://www.in.gov/judiciary/rules/prof_conduct/index.html
For information concerning ethics and the future of the legal profession, please see ABA Ethics 20/20 Commission section at:
http://
www.directlaw.com/uplresources.asp