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Is Lawyer Ghost-Writing of Self-Represented Litigants' Briefs Unethical?
The issue has come up in the Shiva Ayyadurai lawsuit against Massachusetts officials over his deplatforming from Twitter (though Ayyadurai claims that his brief wasn’t written by lawyers, but just reviewed by them).
Surprisingly, there's no clear answer, though in the First Circuit (where the lawsuit is being litigated), a 1971 case disapproves of such ghost-writing. From In re Liu (2d Cir. 2011) (and see also In re Hood (11th Cir. 2013)):
[W]e conclude that [Liu's] ghostwriting did not constitute sanctionable misconduct.
Although there have been a number of recent cases in this Court in which a pro se party's pleadings were drafted, or appeared to have been drafted, by an attorney, this Court has not yet addressed the issue of attorney ghostwriting. However, a number of other federal courts have found that attorneys who had ghostwritten briefs or other pleadings for ostensibly pro se litigants had engaged in misconduct. In Duran v. Carris (2001), for example, the Tenth Circuit admonished an attorney for ghostwriting a pro se brief for his former client without acknowledging his participation by signing the brief. The court stated that the attorney's conduct had inappropriately afforded the former client the benefit of the liberal construction rule for pro se pleadings, had shielded the attorney from accountability for his actions, and conflicted with the requirement of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11(a) that all pleadings, motions, and papers be signed by the party's attorney. See also, e.g., Ellis v. Maine (1st Cir. 1971) (disapproving of members of bar "represent[ing] petitioners, informally or otherwise, and prepar[ing] briefs for them which the assisting lawyers do not sign, and thus escape the obligation imposed on members of the bar … of representing to the court that there is good ground to support the assertions made"); Ira P. Robbins, Ghostwriting: Filling in the Gaps of Pro se Prisoners' Access to the Courts, 23 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 271 (2010) ("The federal courts have almost universally condemned ghostwriting." (collecting cases)).
On the other hand, a number of bar association ethics committees have been more accepting of ghostwriting. The ethics committee opinions described in the following paragraphs are representative of the range of views on the subject and suggest a possible trend toward greater acceptance of various forms of ghostwriting.
A 1987 opinion of the New York City Bar's Committee on Professional and Judicial Ethics requires an attorney who drafts "any pleadings" for a pro se litigant, other than a "previously prepared form devised particularly for use by pro se litigants," to disclose that role to adverse counsel and the court, although the pleading need only note that it had been prepared by counsel without identifying the attorney. A somewhat different conclusion was reached in a 1990 ethics opinion of the New York State Bar Association ("NYSBA") Committee on Professional Ethics, which permits attorneys to advise, and prepare pleadings for, pro se litigants, but only if: the attorney's name is disclosed to the court and opposing parties, the scope and consequences of the limited representation are disclosed to the client, and the attorney adequately investigates the pleadings and prepares them in good faith. The NYSBA opinion disagreed with the New York City Bar's 1987 opinion to the extent that the latter opinion did not require disclosure of the attorney's name.
In contrast to the authorities described above, a more recent opinion of the ABA's Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility concluded that "[a] lawyer may provide legal assistance to litigants appearing before tribunals 'pro se' and help them prepare written submissions without disclosing or ensuring the disclosure of the nature or extent of such assistance." ABA Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Resp., Formal Op. 07–446, Undisclosed Legal Assistance to Pro Se Litigants (2007). The ABA committee found that providing undisclosed legal assistance to pro se litigants constituted a form of limited representation, pursuant to ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 1.2(c), which states that "[a] lawyer may limit the scope of the representation [of a client] if the limitation is reasonable under the circumstances and the client gives informed consent."
Regarding the benefit of liberal construction afforded to pro se pleadings, the ABA opinion stated that, "if the undisclosed lawyer has provided effective assistance, the fact that a lawyer was involved will be evident to the tribunal" and, in any event, when a pleading is of higher quality, there will be no reason to apply liberal construction. On the other hand, according to the ABA opinion, "[i]f the assistance has been ineffective, the pro se litigant will not have secured an unfair advantage." The opinion concluded that, "[b]ecause there is no reasonable concern that a litigant appearing pro se will receive an unfair benefit from a tribunal as a result of behind-the-scenes legal assistance, the nature or extent of such assistance is immaterial and need not be disclosed."
Regarding the attorney's potential dishonesty in avoiding accountability for his representation, the ABA opinion explained that "[w]hether it is dishonest for the lawyer to provide undisclosed assistance to a pro se litigant turns on whether the court would be misled by failure to disclose such assistance." However, the opinion concluded that there is no such dishonesty as long as the client does not make an affirmative representation, attributable to the attorney, that the pleadings were prepared without an attorney's assistance.
Similarly, in 2010, the Committee on Professional Ethics for the New York County Lawyers' Association ("NYCLA") concluded that "it is now ethically permissible for an attorney, with the informed consent of his or her client, to play a limited role and prepare pleadings and other submissions for a pro se litigant without disclosing the lawyer's participation to the tribunal and adverse counsel." The NYCLA committee stated that "[d]isclosure of the fact that a pleading or submission was prepared by counsel need only be made" when required by a rule, order, or statute, or when nondisclosure would constitute a misrepresentation. In those instances, "unless required by the particular rule, order or circumstance mandating disclosure, the attorney need not reveal his or her identity and may instead indicate on the ghostwritten document that it was 'Prepared with the assistance of counsel admitted in New York.'" In reaching these conclusions, the NYCLA committee found, inter alia, that ghostwritten pleadings would not be unfairly accorded liberal construction, or hamper the courts' ability to sanction frivolous behavior by the parties or counsel.
{For present purposes, we do not exhaustively survey the many court and ethics committee opinions addressing the ghostwriting issue. However, we note that, in contrast to the federal court precedents, a majority of state courts and state ethics committees are reportedly more open to undisclosed ghostwriting, although that majority might be described as slim. See Robbins, supra (stating that, of twenty-four states that have addressed the issue, thirteen permit ghostwriting and, of those thirteen states, ten permit undisclosed ghostwriting while three require the pleading to indicate that it was prepared with the assistance of counsel; ten states expressly forbid ghostwriting).}
In light of the ABA's 2007 ethics opinion, and the other recent ethics opinions permitting various forms of ghostwriting, it is possible that the courts and bars that previously disapproved of attorney ghostwriting of pro se filings will modify their opinion of that practice. See Robbins, supra ("Almost all of the federal cases and state ethics opinions opposing ghostwriting were issued before the May 2007 ABA opinion. Because most states look to the ABA Model Rules when adopting and amending their own rules of professional conduct, the coming years may see a number of courts and states take a more relaxed stance on ghostwriting."); NYCLA Comm. on Prof'l Ethics, Op. 742 at 3 (noting "trend in favor of ghostwriting").
In the present case, the Committee concluded that Liu's undisclosed ghostwriting violated her duty of candor to the Court, contrary to the provision of the New York Lawyer's Code of Professional Responsibility barring her from "[e]ngag[ing] in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation." However, a determination that Liu violated D.R. 1–102(A)(4) would require, at the very least, a finding that she knew, or should have known, of either (a) an existing obligation to disclose her drafting of pleadings, or (b) even in the absence of such a general obligation, the possibility that nondisclosure in a particular case would mislead the court in some material fashion.
In light of this Court's lack of any rule or precedent governing attorney ghostwriting, and the various authorities that permit that practice, we conclude that Liu could not have been aware of any general obligation to disclose her participation to this Court.We also conclude that there is no evidence suggesting that Liu knew, or should have known, that she was withholding material information from the Court or that she otherwise acted in bad faith. The petitions for review now at issue were fairly simple and unlikely to have caused any confusion or prejudice. Additionally, there is no indication that Liu sought, or was aware that she might obtain, any unfair advantage through her ghostwriting. Finally, Liu's motive in preparing the petitions—to preserve the petitioners' right of review by satisfying the thirty-day jurisdictional deadline—demonstrated concern for her clients rather than a desire to mislead this Court or opposing parties. Under these circumstances, we conclude that Liu's ghostwriting did not constitute misconduct and therefore does not warrant the imposition of discipline.
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Doesn't sound like there's a good reason for the anti-ghostwriting rule. The courts are supposed to evaluate the arguments, not who's making the arguments.
The concern I would have is the ghost writer using the complainant to shield their own identity. Courts might grant leeway to the self represented if the argument is poorly written or frivolous, leeway that might not be given to an accredited lawyer.
I think you can't answer that question as a pure matter of principle - you need to look at expectations and practice.
From my brief time in practice, I recall that it was not an uncommon practice. Or at least I heard of it being done said in a relatively offhand manner. (If I understood correctly - this was from when I was just a summer associate and not even done with law school).
I saw this on the bottom of p 56:
On October 20, 2020, Dr. Shiva had a private attorney file a complaint and a motion for a Temporary Restraining Order to stop Galvin from continuing to cause Twitter to silence his political speech during the few days left before Election Day. Despite being a licensed member of the Massachusetts Bar, the attorney filed for monetary damages in Federal court against a state official sued in his official capacity, which, as all lawyers are required to know, has been barred for a hundred years by the Eleventh Amendment. However, this allowed an emergency hearing to be held under the Ex parte Young exception as the TRO motion sought prospective injunctive relief, namely restraint on Galvin again silencing Dr. Shiva’s political speech on Twitter between then and Election Day.
First of all, I doubt this complaint (really, mostly a screed) was ghost written, in the sense that it was 100% written by a lawyer. If this complaint were written by a lawyer, they need to get a refund on their tuition and go back to school IMO.
In fact, Ayyadurai would do well to actually get real representation and follow their advice.
My sense is that a lawyer may have helped him frame some valid legal arguments within this screed, and also advised him not to put things in there, which Ayyadurai went ahead and did anyway. The paragraph above I cited, I think, indicates the relationship. The lawyer may have even edited that paragraph to signal ("Hey I told him that was not allowed but I put in the TRO because my client told me to...")
Is it unethical? Hard to say. I certainly would not have put my name on that complaint when my client was ignoring my advice, blatantly sabotaging his own case by adding a lot of irrelevant details, and asking for items which are barred.
My defense would simply be: Yes I helped him frame the complaint, but he ignored my advice and included a lot of stuff I said to leave out. I told him if he puts in in there, I can't file it. He went ahead anyway, ergo I did not ghost write it.
If the ghostwriter received any compensation for the assistance given, I would say they must acknowledge their participation. I would also say that that the ghostwriter's participation must be acknowledged if the judge in the case requests.
If the lawyer is providing pro bono assistance to a self-represented party, disclosure should not be required. But it's a more difficult question when the party hires the lawyer to work on the brief. On the one hand, lawyers should not be permitted to shield their identities from the court. On the other hand, if the party is self-represented, the lawyer isn't making the strategic decisions. If a lawyer works on a portion of a brief and the self-represented party thereafter adds perjurious, defamatory, or otherwise sanctionable material, adding the lawyer's name may give added weight to the filing and expose the lawyer to liability for something over which he or she had no control.
"if the party is self-represented, the lawyer isn’t making the strategic decisions."
The client is supposed to be making the strategic decisions, represented or not. The lawyer's rule is to advise, not usurp.
The problem with disavowing a ghostwritten court filing is the corresponding disavowal of the malpractice liability if the work was done poorly.
I would think the courts would be ecstatic when a pro se litigant can find a lawyer to ghost write stuff just because it won't then be the usual gobbledegook that frequently appears in pro se filings.
And I can think of a number of perfectly legitimate reasons for why an attorney may not wish to sign it: Potential conflict of interest, unwillingness to be publicly identified with the case, the fact that it's a losing case but the attorney is still giving the pro se litigant a small fighting chance. Some of those issues may even have First Amendment implications.
Say what? If the attorney has a conflict of interest, it exists whether or not he admits publicly that he does.
Wanting to shield his identity in court filings he's writing strongly suggests that he's got something to hide. Like say, a conflict of interest or disclosure of client's confidential information.
There's one countervailing argument, even an unpopular party deserves representation to the best of the lawyer's ability, and visibly defending the rights of an unpopular party might adversely affect the lawyer's ability to find other, less-unpopular clients. The problem with working as a criminal defense lawyer is that you mostly work for criminals.
It's not an uncommon practice. I've done it myself, several times. But you're putting the pro se party at risk. If you screw up, he likely has no recourse against you. This is why if possible I ask that the person retain me officially, even for a very low rate if he's short on cash.
The better practice is "as a friend" to help via phone call with tightening up the language and making the point more clearly and objectively. Most pro se's go on and on and use purple language which doesn't convince judges or lawyers.
"Most pro se’s go on and on and use purple language which doesn’t convince judges or lawyers."
Yep. I think thats what happened here.
This sounds to me like one of those issues where it's more important that we have some definite rule rather than any particular rule.
I'm puzzled by the concept of 'unfair advantage' discussed.
How can the system be biased unreasonably by simply having especially able representation; bring on the dream team of Jackie Chiles, Matlock, and Perry Mason.
Unless the joke about 'what do you call a lawyer who graduated last in his class' is true.
A lawyer who won't sign their name to their work is more likely to have not given the preparation of the document their full attention than is the one who signs and adds their bar number. Now, is partial attention from an experienced attorney better than no attention from an experienced attorney? Very likely yes (whether your pro se filing is assisted by Hamilton Burger or by Perry Mason).
I can relate a personal anecdote. In the county I resided in at the time, it was possible to go to the courthouse to receive not-legal-assistance with filing family-law documents. They'd provide properly-formatted documents for people who wanted to file for divorce or challenge child-custody decisions, but the documents were not reviewed by a licensed attorney. My ex-wife used this resource to file multiple spurious child-custody claims. Part of the job of attorney includes telling the client "No, you can't put that in your filing." and that is a failing that led to a never-ending custody fight. Every year the court would accept a request for a re-hearing, and my ex-wife would file a request for one every year, then we'd go to court, and she'd explain to the judge why nothing had changed since that last hearing, and therefore she should be given custody. When we got to my daughter's wedding, my ex-wife conceded that "we" had done a pretty good job raising her.
Judges are supposed to go out of their way to assist pro se litigants and give them the benefit of the doubt in ways that would be inappropriate for represented parties. This technique thus allows "pro se" litigants to get the benefit of having a lawyer argue their case without the accountability that would normally accompany it.
"How can the system be biased unreasonably by simply having especially able representation"
If you're on the fence between hiring or not hiring a lawyer, knowing (or thinking) that the other party is unrepresented may push you to the "not hiring a lawyer" side of the decision. If it turns out that they did, too, have a lawyer's advice and assistance drafting filings would then be unfair.
Like Sarcastr0 says, it's context-dependent to an extent, but I don't view it as too problematic generally.
That said, one area I can see it potentially causing issues is with an opposing party represented by counsel. Suppose opposing counsel wants to contact the nominally "pro se" party. Is doing so directly ok because no counsel has formally appeared, or, given the presence of the ghostwriting attorney, does it violate the ban on contacting represented parties?
If the ghost-writer won't sign their name to the document, is the pro se party "represented"? I don't think so. Note that the duty to not contact represented parties directly hinges on the disclosure of representation.
The model rule is
In representing a client, a lawyer shall not communicate about the subject of the representation with a person the lawyer knows to be represented by another lawyer in the matter, unless the lawyer has the consent of the other lawyer or is authorized to do so by law or a court order.
The interesting part is whether Dilan Esper, the potential ghostwriter, is going to appear after the court orders it a second time. Once you’ve written the court clerk an e-mail saying you’re not appearing, you’re kind of committed to that strategy.
After all these years, you'd think we'd have earned a comment from Dilan personally.
(No, I don't really blame him for shutting up. Working for Charles Harder, on the other hand....)
If it is an ethical violation, the problem is with the duty of candor to the court. If the party files a document that was written by an attorney but the attorney's name is not on the document, this is a lie of omission.
What is needed is a place that the attorney can attach a statement that says, basically, "I advised on this matter but the final product is not my work." and identifies the attorney who helped on it and another block that says "my attorney told me not to file this document but I did it anyway", with a signature block for the party to sign his own filing.
Then, allow sanctions on the party who filed a document with frivolous components, against attorney's advice.
Basically, filing a legal document after a lawyer told you take out parts of it should be treated roughly equivalent to leaving a hospital against medical advice.
For those who think legal assistance must be identified in some way, how do you handle the case where a lawyer is fired or withdraws, and the client later uses the lawyer's work to file a document with the court?
"how do you handle the case where a lawyer is fired or withdraws, and the client later uses the lawyer’s work to file a document with the court?"
How did the client get a document from a lawyer who declines to represent him?
"Hey I withdrew from represenring that d-bag before that document was filed" seems like an argument to be raised when (if) the court holds a sanctions hearing to consider sanctioning the lawyer. Should be easy to prove, if the court has moved to e-filing.