|
helpful
brochures from the Missouri Bar Association |
you and your lawyer...
when to go to a
lawyer
The best time is
before, not after, you are in some legal trouble. Just as your
doctor can better help you if given a chance to practice
preventive medicine, so your lawyer can save you both money and
difficulties if you consult your lawyer when any legal change in
your position is planned.
preventative law
A person too often
thinks of his lawyer as a "last resort," to be consulted only
when a dispute seems likely to result in litigation. Many
disputes could be avoided, at small cost to the client, by
agreements and contracts correctly and properly drawn in the
first place. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure in
the courts. As a service to the public, The Missouri Bar has
undertaken a program designed to point out, through brochures
and other means, some of the situations where "preventive" law
will help people avoid trouble and loss.
a lawyer's duties
A lawyer's first
duty is to see that clients are given the benefit of all the
legal rights they enjoy in connection with their problems. A
lawyer is sworn to conduct cases and matters in an orderly
manner and so that they may be decided upon their merits. A
lawyer may not make any agreements or incur any obligations
which might jeopardize a client's interests.
your duty to your
lawyer
You should give your
lawyer all of the facts concerning the case or other matter and
make a full and fair disclosure of the entire situation. Your
lawyer needs all the facts because the application of the law
may vary with each fact and circumstance concerning a case. The
relationship between lawyer and client is confidential, and any
confidential information that a client gives a lawyer, even the
confession of a crime, is considered privileged, and the lawyer
cannot divulge it without the client's consent. A lawyer,
furthermore, cannot represent both sides unless with their full
knowledge and consent.
a lawyer's duty to
you in civil cases
A lawyer's whole
career depends upon unswerving loyalty to clients. A lawyer may,
however, see weakness in a particular case and may know that a
court fight will be both expensive and probably futile for a
client. In such a case, a lawyer may advise the client to
bargain or, with the client's permission, may bargain for the
client. It has, with truth, been said that a settlement, even
though for an amount less than claimed, may be far better than
an expensive, lengthy lawsuit, the result of which is uncertain.
Litigation can be a luxury. Lawyers recognize this and pursue
conciliation and settlement wherever possible and advisable.
a lawyer's duty to
you in criminal cases
It is one of the
glories of America that every person is considered innocent
until proven guilty. Therefore, every defendant in a criminal
case has a right to all the protection which the law gives to an
innocent person. It is the duty of an accused person's lawyer to
see that a client has the benefit of all rights under the
Constitution of the United States and of the state, the laws
passed by the duly elected legislative bodies and the decisions
announced by the courts over centuries of human experience. A
lawyer must see that the client receives a fair trial and is
tried for the alleged crime only on the basis of competent
evidence, properly produced. The mere fact that a client's case
is an unpopular one even to the extent of being notorious should
not lessen the vigor with which a lawyer defends the client.
services lawyers render
A lawyer can help
whenever you have a problem or perform an act that involves the
law. Any business transaction, every instrument you sign or
agreement you make, any accident you have, or actions you take
involving property, taxes, sales and countless other situations
may require the advice of your lawyer. Your lawyer: can give you
advice on your legal problems by telling you what to do or not
to do; can prepare written instruments, such as contracts and
deeds; may be able to settle disputes for you out of court with
a saving of trouble and expense; can represent you in the civil
courts where disputes over property, money, damages and family
relationships are determined; and can render innumerable other
services because of training and experience in the law.
a lawyer's
qualifications
No one but duly
admitted members of the bar may practice law. A lawyer is
trained to prepare legal documents for clients, to explain the
law, to advise on personal and business matters, and to
represent clients before courts and government
agencies. In order to qualify for admission to the bar in
Missouri, an applicant must be a citizen of the United States
and have completed the equivalent of at least six years of
college training, the last three of them in an accredited law
school. An applicant must display moral fitness to practice law,
as determined by an investigation, and must successfully pass a
rigorous examination in many fields of law given by the Missouri
Board of Law Examiners, under the general supervision of the
Supreme Court of Missouri. A lawyer admitted to practice becomes
an officer of the court.
a lawyer's
knowledge of the rules of evidence
Trials are conducted
under rules of evidence which have been developed over the
centuries to produce fair trials. Witnesses often attempt to
make statements regarding facts of which they do not have
personal knowledge. Such testimony is called hearsay evidence.
If it were allowed to become a part of the records of the trial,
the result might be injustice. Rules of evidence, therefore,
prohibit a witness from telling what someone else, who is not
present in court, told him. Similarly, testimony regarding a
conversation with a person who is dead at the time of the trial
may be ruled out because there is no one who can prove that the
testimony is true or false. A lawyer protects the client by
seeing, in court, that the rules of evidence are followed and
enforced. Likewise, only lawyers can properly advise clients as
to their rights and effectively represent them in a host of
matters involving business, personal, tax and other problems,
because of their knowledge of evidence and its use.
how lawyers charge
for services
A lawyer generally
makes only a nominal charge, if any, for a first visit. Only
when actual time is spent in working on a case is there a
charge. When a monetary settlement is involved, the charge may
be on a percentage basis. More often, your lawyer charges for
actual time spent on such details as assembling facts and
looking up the many possible laws affecting the case. When a
lawyer charges for "advice," this does not mean an offhand
personal opinion. A lawyer's advice is a conclusion reached
after perhaps hours or days combing through volumes of law to
exhaust all the authorities and find all the law affecting your
problem.
bar associations
All persons,
including judges, entitled to practice law in Missouri are
members of The Missouri Bar. The Missouri Bar was created by
rule of the Supreme court of Missouri to the end that its
members "strive at all times to uphold the honor and maintain
the dignity of the profession and to improve not only
the law but the administration of justice."
legal ethics
The legal profession
maintains a high standard of professional conduct based
on the concept that loyalty to the client is a lawyer's first
duty. Committees of the bar are working quietly but effectively
to maintain these public service standards.
unauthorized
practice
Unauthorized
practice is the rendering of legal service or advice by a person
not admitted by the Supreme Court to the practice of law.
Lawyers object to the unauthorized practice of law, not because
of self-interest (for frequently they could make higher fees in
correcting the work done by untrained, unauthorized persons),
but because lawyers know that the rendering of legal service or
advice by such persons constitutes a real danger to members of
the public. Lawyers know that while a non-lawyer may have some
knowledge about one phase of the law, in any given instance the
facts may make applicable other laws of which the non-lawyer is
ignorant. It is far safer for the public to rely on an expert in
any field of endeavor, be it law, medicine or any other
professional field.
call 816.279.3900
|