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47 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. Online 1 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/fsuon47 and id is 1 raw text is: 





        THE PARAMETERS OF MODEL RULE 3.4(f)'S
        EXCEPTION FOR A CLIENT'S EMPLOYEES:
   MAY A LAWYER ETHICALLY THREATEN A CLIENT'S
   EMPLOYEE WITH DISCHARGE FOR VOLUNTARILY
     GIVING INFORMATION TO AN OPPOSING PARTY?

                        ERNEST F. LIDGE III*

                             ABSTRACT
   In our justice system, there is an inherent tension between policies
favoring granting parties informal access to information and the right
of organizational employers to exercise some control over the flow of in-
formation from their employees. Model Rule 3.4(f) of the American Bar
Association's Model Rules of Professional Conduct balances these inter-
ests. The Rule bars lawyers from requesting a person other than a cli-
ent to refrain from giving information to another party unless (1) the
person is a relative or an employee or other agent of a client and (2) the
lawyer reasonably believes that the person's interests will not be ad-
versely affected by refraining from giving such information.
   Rule 3.4(f) promotes the policy favoring informal access to infor-
mation by barring lawyers, in most circumstances, from requesting per-
sons to refrain from communicating with opposing parties. However,
the Rule's exception for employees ensures fairness to organizations by
allowing an organization's lawyer to ask a client's employees to refrain
from voluntarily giving information to opposing parties, thereby requir-
ing opposing attorneys to use formal means of obtaining information
such as depositions, interrogatories, and testimony at trial.
   This Article addresses a question left open by Rule 3.4(f). Assume
that a lawyer reasonably believes that the interests of a client's employee
will not be adversely affected if the employee refrains from voluntarily
giving information to an opposing party. Under these circumstances,
the Rule would permit the lawyer to ask the employee to not informally
communicate with the opposing party. May the organization's lawyer,
with the client's permission, go a step further and threaten the employee
with discharge if the employee voluntarily gives information to the op-
posing party? After discussing the policies behind Rule 3.4(f) and an
employee's duty of loyalty to his employer, this Article concludes that if
the employee's discharge would violate other law, then the attorney may
not ethically threaten the employee with discharge. If the employee's
discharge would not violate other law, this Article concludes that the

    * Professor of Law, The University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law;
B.S. Ed., Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, 1976; M.A., University of Illinois,
Chicago, Illinois, 1981; J.D., University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois, 1984. I would like to
thank my research assistants Zachary J. Burkhalter, Caleb J. Sanders, and Whitney C.
Snow. I would also like to thank The University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of
Law for providing a grant that supported the research for this article.

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