HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 28, No. 6 | Page 28

tHougHtS oN proFeSSioNaLiSm iN CoLLaBorative praCtiCe Collaborative law Section Chairs: Tina Tenret - ProVise Management Group & Ellie Probasco - Probasco Law A A client’s decisions According must be informed to Rule 4-1.1, by both legal and competent non-legal representation considerations. “requires the Collaborative legal knowledge, clients also deserve skill, thorough - to have their ness, and representation be preparation afforded the speed reasonably only by delivering and diligence necessary for the required by Bar representation.” collaborative legal Rule 4-1.3. The The challenge representation with comments to Bar for the collabora - Rule 4-1.3 note tive practitioner the highest level of that “[p]erhaps often lies at professionalism, will no professional the intersection we succeed. shortcoming is of these two more widely concepts — legal resented than knowledge and procrastination.” non-legal Collaborative lawyers must guard considerations – which, ideally, against devoting less attention to meet and merge when a competent collaborative matters because they attorney takes them together to have no court-imposed deadlines or advise a client in a manner that hearings. Client satisfac tion requires enables the client to make legally providing clients with at least the informed decisions in an interest- timely attention and preparation based process. provided to matters with deadlines. But there are risks in both For the collaborative process to directions: excessive focus on the thrive, collaborative clients must not law in a vacuum, without regard to have to choose between traditional its application or the client’s non- representation that delivers profes - legal interests on the one hand, and sionalism and collaborative represen - relaxing one’s knowledge of the law tation that delivers lawyering “lite.” or loosening legal drafting skills on Only by delivering collaborative the other. Unbridled advocacy and legal representation with the highest “positioning” is inconsistent with level of profes - the highest levels of professionalism sion alism, will we because it ignores the client’s non- succeed in making legal interest in a less adversarial it the kind of process and unnecessarily risks practice that we impasse. Focusing only on a client’s know it can be. non-legal interests, rationalizing that collaborative clients require a lesser degree of legal knowledge Author: Ellen E. and advice, similarly lacks the Ware – Ware Law professionalism every client deserves. Group, PA © Can Stock Photo / designer491 s we celebrate the one-year anniversary of Florida’s Collaborative Law Process Act, collaborative attorneys should pause to consider how our role as practitioners can influence public perception of the collaborative process. For the process to flourish, we must vigorously maintain and attend to our professionalism. We risk damaging public perception if we relax and enjoy the benefits of the Act without thinking about our responsibilities. The Act brings with it a new ethical rule: Bar Rule 4-1.19. But we should not disregard our preexisting professional responsibilities — they continue to be our guiding principles no matter the process — and several deserve special attention. For example, Bar Rule 4-2.1, which governs the lawyer’s role as an adviser, reminds lawyers that in rendering advice, they may “refer not only to law but to other considerations such as moral, economic, social and political factors that may be relevant to the client situation.” This should be second nature to collaborative practitioners. But how does that interface with Bar Rule 4-1.1 regarding competence? Get social with the HCBA on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram! 26 SUMMER 2018 | HCBA LAWYER