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MARYLAND
RULES OF PROCEDURE
TITLE 16
- COURTS, JUDGES, AND ATTORNEYS
CHAPTER
900 - PRO BONO LEGAL SERVICE |
Rule 16-901. STATE
PRO BONO COMMITTEE AND PLAN
(a)
Standing Committee on Pro Bono Legal Service
(1) Creation
(2) Members
(3) Terms; Chair
(4) Consultants
(b)
Duties of the Standing Committee
(c)
State Pro Bono Action Plan
(1) Generally
(2) Contents
(d) Publication
(e)
Consideration by the Court of Appeals Rule 16-902. LOCAL
PRO BONO COMMITTEES AND PLANS
(a)
Local Pro Bono Committees
(1) Creation
(2) Members
(3) Term
(4) Chair
(5) Full Membership
(6) Consultants
(b)
Duties of the Committee
(c)
Local Pro Bono Action Plans
(1) Generally
(2) Contents
Rule 16-903.
REPORTING PRO BONO LEGAL SERVICE (a)
Required as a Condition of Practice
(b)
Designated Employee of the Administrative Office of the Courts
(c)
Mailing by the Administrative Office of the Courts
(d) Due
Date
(e) Enforcement
(1) Notice of
Default
(2) Additional
Discretionary Notice of Default
(3) List of Defaulting
Lawyers
(4) Certification
of Default; Order of Decertification
(5) Mailing of
Decertification Order
(6) Rescission
(7) Notices to
Clerks
(f)
Certain Information Furnished to the Standing Committee on Pro Bono Legal
Service
(g)
Confidentiality
RULES
OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT - Rule 6.1 Pro Bono Publico Legal Service
ADD new Rule 16-901, as follows: Rule 16-901.
STATE PRO BONO COMMITTEE AND PLAN
(a)
Standing Committee on Pro Bono Legal Service (1) Creation
There is a Standing Committee of the Court of Appeals on Pro Bono Legal
Service.
(2) Members
The Standing Committee consists of 13 members appointed by the Court of
Appeals, as follows:
(A) eight members of the Maryland Bar, including one from each appellate
judicial circuit and one selected from the State at large;
(B) a circuit court judge selected from among at least three nominees submitted
by the Conference of Circuit Judges;
(C) a District Court judge selected from at least three nominees submitted
by the Chief Judge of the District Court;
(D) the Public Defender or a designee of the Public Defender;
(E) a representative from a legal services provider organization who does
not serve on a Local Pro Bono Committee; and
(F) a member of the general public.
(3) Terms; Chair
The Court of
Appeals shall fix the terms of the members and designate one of the members
as the chair.
(4) Consultants
The Standing
Committee may designate a reasonable number of consultants from among court
personnel or representatives of other organizations or agencies concerned
with the provision of legal services to persons of limited means.
(b)
Duties of the Standing Committee
The Standing Committee
shall:
(1) develop standard
forms for use by the Local Pro Bono Committees in developing and articulating
the Local Pro Bono Action Plans and making their annual reports;
(2) recommend
uniform standards for use by the Local Pro Bono Committees to assess the
need for pro bono legal services in their communities;
(3) review and
evaluate the Local Pro Bono Action Plans and the annual reports of the
Local Pro Bono Committees;
(4) collect and
make available to Local Pro Bono Committees information about pro bono
projects;
(5) at the request
of a Local Pro Bono Committee, provide guidance about the Rules in this
Chapter and Rule 6.1 of the Maryland Lawyers' Rules of Professional Conduct;
(6) file with
the Court of Appeals an annual report and recommendations about the implementation
and effectiveness of the Local Pro Bono Action Plans, the Rules in this
Chapter, and Rule 6.1 of the Maryland Lawyers' Rules of Professional Conduct;
and
(7) prepare a
State Pro Bono Action Plan as provided in section (c) of this Rule.
(c)
State Pro Bono Action Plan
(1) Generally
Within three
years after the effective date of this Rule, the Standing Committee shall
submit to the Court of Appeals a State Pro Bono Action Plan to promote
increased efforts on the part of lawyers to provide legal assistance to
persons of limited means. In developing the Plan, the Standing Committee
shall:
(A) review and assess the results of the Local Pro Bono Action Plans;
(B) assess the data generated by the reports required by Rule 16-903;
(C) gather and consider information pertinent to the existence, nature,
and extent of the need for pro bono legal services in Maryland; and
(D) provide the opportunity for one or more public hearings.
(2) Contents
The State Pro
Bono Action Plan may include a recommendation for increasing or decreasing
the aspirational goals for pro bono publico legal service set forth in
Rule 6.1 of the Maryland Lawyers' Rules of Professional Conduct. The Plan
should include suggestions for the kinds of pro bono activities that will
be most helpful in meeting the need for pro bono legal service throughout
the State and should address long-range pro bono service issues.
Committee note: Examples
of long-range issues that may be addressed include opportunities for transactional
lawyers, government lawyers, business lawyers, and in-house counsel to
render pro bono legal service; opportunities for pro bono legal service
by lawyers who are unable to provide direct client representation; "collective
responsibility" for pro bono legal service when a law firm designates certain
lawyers to handle only pro bono matters; and encouraging pro bono legal
service among law students and in the legal academic setting.
(d) Publication
The Clerk of the Court of Appeals
shall cause the State Action Plan submitted by the Standing Committee to
be published in the Maryland Register and such other publications as the
Court directs and shall establish a reasonable period for public comment. (e)
Consideration by the Court of Appeals
After the comment period, the Court
of Appeals shall hold a public hearing and take appropriate action on the
Plan.
Source: This Rule is new.
AMEND Rule 16-902 to delete the limitation on the number of representatives of certain organizations who may serve on a Local Pro Bono Committee, to add judges to the composition of a Local Pro Bono Committee, to require a Local Pro Bono Committee to establish a procedure for new membership, to require a Local Pro Bono Committee to establish lengths of terms, to revise the procedure for determining the chair of a Local Pro Bono Committee, to provide a procedure for ensuring full membership of a Local Pro Bono Committee, to add language concerning the role of consultants, to add a date by which the annual report of a Local Pro Bono Committee shall be submitted, to allow the formation of a Regional Pro Bono Committee under certain circumstances, and to correct the lettering of certain subsections, as follows:
Rule 16‑902. LOCAL PRO BONO COMMITTEES AND PLANS
(a) Local Pro Bono Committees (1) Creation There is a Local Pro Bono Committee for each county. (2) Members
(A) The Local Pro Bono Committee consists of no more than 11 members at least two representatives nominated by legal services organizations and pro bono referral organizations that provide services in the county and selected by the County Administrative Judge and the District Administrative Judge, and no more than nine additional members, as follows:
(i) (A) the District Public Defender for the county or an assistant public defender selected by the District Public Defender;
(ii) (B) at least three but no more than five lawyers, appointed by the president of the county bar association, who practice in the county and at least one of whom is an officer of the county bar association;
(iii) at least two but no more than three representatives nominated by legal services organizations and pro bono referral organizations that provide services in the county and selected by the County Administrative Judge and the District Administrative Judge; and
(iv) (C) at least one but no more than two persons from the general public, appointed jointly by the County Administrative Judge and the District Administrative Judge.; and
(D) at least one but no more than two trial court judges, with the selection of any circuit court judge made by the County Administrative Judge and the selection of any District Court judge made by the County Administrative Judge with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the District Court.
(3) Term
Each Committee shall establish a procedure for new membership, including articulating length of terms, to ensure member rotation and involvement.
(3) (4) Chair
The County Administrative Judge shall appoint a member of the Committee to serve as temporary chair. The temporary chair shall convene a meeting at which the Committee shall elect a member to serve as chair. Each Committee shall establish a procedure by which its chair will be replaced.
(5) Full Membership
On at least an annual basis, the County Administrative Judge shall assess the composition of the Committee and take steps to ensure full membership of the Committee.
(4) (6) Consultants
The Committee may designate a reasonable number of consultants from among court personnel or representatives of other organizations or agencies concerned with the provision of legal services to persons of limited means. Each consultant should be encouraged to attend meetings and participate as a member, providing input and assisting in the development and implementation of the plan, where appropriate, without being a voting member of the Committee.
(b) Duties of the Committee
The Local Pro Bono Committee shall:
(1) assess the needs in the county for pro bono legal service, including the needs of non‑English speaking, minority, and isolated populations;
(2) determine the nature and extent of existing and proposed free or low‑cost legal services, both staff and volunteer, for persons of limited means in the county;
(3) establish goals and priorities for pro bono legal service in the county;
(4) prepare a Local Pro Bono Action Plan as provided in section (c) of this Rule;
(5) in accordance with the policies and directives established by the Standing Committee or the Court of Appeals, implement or monitor the implementation of the Plan; and
(6) submit an annual report about the Plan to the Standing Committee by May 1.
(c) Local Pro Bono Action Plans
(1) Generally
The Local Pro Bono Committee shall develop, in coordination with existing legal services organizations and pro bono referral organizations that provide services in the county, a detailed Local Pro Bono Action Plan to promote pro bono legal service to meet the needs of persons of limited means in the county. The Plan shall be submitted to the Standing Committee within one year after creation of the Local Committee. The Local Pro Bono Committees of two or more adjoining counties may collaborate and form a Regional Pro Bono Committee with approval of the Administrative Judges of the counties that wish to collaborate. With the approval of the Standing Committee, a single joint Pro Bono Action Plan may be developed for two or more adjoining counties, by collaboration of the Local Pro Bono Committees.
(2) Contents
The Local Pro Bono Action Plan shall address the following matters:
(A) screening applicants for pro bono representation and referring them to appropriate referral sources or panels of participating attorneys;
(B) establishing or expanding attorney referral panels;
(C) continuing and supporting current services provided by existing pro bono and legal services organizations;
(D) a procedure for matching cases with individual attorney expertise, including specialized panels;
(E) support for participating attorneys, including
(i) providing litigation resources and out‑of‑pocket expenses for pro bono cases;
(ii) providing or supplementing legal malpractice insurance for participating attorneys;
(iii) providing legal education and training for participating attorneys in specialized areas of the law relevant to pro bono legal service, including consultation services with attorneys who have expertise in areas of law in which participating attorneys seek to provide pro bono service; and
(iv) recommending court scheduling and docketing preferences for pro bono cases;
(F) methods of informing lawyers about the ways in which they may provide pro bono legal service;
Committee note: Ways in which lawyers may provide pro bono legal service include assisting in the screening and intake process; interviewing prospective clients and providing basic consultation; participating in pro se clinics or other programs in which lawyers provide advice and counsel, assist persons in drafting letters or documents, or assist persons in planning transactions or resolving disputes without the need for litigation; representing clients through case referral; acting as co‑counsel with legal service providers or other participating attorneys; providing consultation to legal service providers for case reviews and evaluations; training or consulting with other participating attorneys or staff attorneys affiliated with a legal service provider; engaging in legal research and writing; and, if qualified through training and experience, serving as a mediator, arbitrator, or neutral evaluator.
(G) coordinating implementation of the Plan with the courts, county bar associations, and other agencies and organizations;
(H) the number of hours of pro bono legal services needed annually to meet the needs of persons of limited means in the county; and
(I) programs to recognize lawyers who provide pro bono legal services.
Source: This Rule is new.
ADD new Rule 16-903, as follows: Rule 16-903.
REPORTING PRO BONO LEGAL SERVICE
(a)
Required as a Condition of Practice
As a condition
precedent to the practice of law, each lawyer authorized to practice law
in Maryland shall file annually with the Administrative Office of the Courts
a Pro Bono Legal Service Report on a form approved by the Court of Appeals.
The form shall not require the identification of pro bono clients.
Committee note: The purpose of
pro bono legal service reporting is to document the pro bono legal service
performed by lawyers in Maryland and determine the effectiveness of the
Local Pro Bono Action Plans, the State Pro Bono Action Plan, the Rules
in this Chapter, and Rule 6.1 of the Maryland Lawyers' Rules of Professional
Conduct.
(b)
Designated Employee of the Administrative Office of the Courts
The Court of Appeals
shall designate an employee of the Administrative Office of the Courts
to oversee the reporting process set forth in this Rule. (c)
Mailing by the Administrative Office of the Courts
On or before January
10 of each year, the Administrative Office of the Courts shall mail a Pro
Bono Legal Service Report form to each lawyer on the list maintained by
the Clients' Security Trust Fund. The addresses on that list shall be used
for all notices and correspondence pertaining to the reports.
(d) Due
Date
Pro Bono Legal
Service Reports for a given calendar year shall be filed with the Administrative
Office of the Courts on or before February 15 of the following calendar
year.
(e)
Enforcement
(1) Notice of
Default
As soon as practicable
after May 1 of each year, the Administrative Office of the Courts shall
give notice of the failure to file a report to each defaulting lawyer.
The notice shall (A) state that the lawyer has not filed the Pro Bono Legal
Service Report for the previous calendar year, (B) state that continued
failure to file the Report may result in the entry of an order by the Court
of Appeals prohibiting the lawyer from practicing law in the State, and
(C) be sent by first class mail. The mailing of the notice of default shall
constitute service.
(2) Additional
Discretionary Notice of Default
In addition to
the mailed notice, the Administrative Office of the Courts may give additional
notice to defaulting lawyers by any of the means enumerated in Rule 16-811
g 3.
(3) List of Defaulting
Lawyers
As soon as practicable
after July 1 of each year but no later than August 1, the Administrative
Office of the Courts shall prepare, certify, and file with the Court of
Appeals a list that includes the name and address of each lawyer engaged
in the practice of law who has failed to file the Pro Bono Legal Service
Report for the previous year.
(4) Certification
of Default; Order of Decertification
The Administrative
Office of the Courts shall submit with the list a proposed Decertification
Order stating the names and addresses of those lawyers who have failed
to file their Pro Bono Legal Service Reports for the specified calendar
year. At the request of the Court of Appeals, the Administrative Office
of the Courts also shall furnish additional information from its records
or give further notice to the defaulting lawyers. If satisfied that the
Administrative Office of the Courts has given the required notice to each
lawyer named on the proposed Decertification Order, the Court of Appeals
shall enter a Decertification Order prohibiting each of them from practicing
law in the State.
(5) Mailing of
Decertification Order
The Administrative
Office of the Courts shall mail by first class mail a copy of the Decertification
Order to each lawyer named in the Order. The mailing of the copy of the
Decertification Order shall constitute service.
(6) Rescission
If a lawyer files
the outstanding Pro Bono Legal Service Report, the Administrative Office
of the Courts shall request the Court of Appeals to enter an order rescinding
its Decertification Order as to that lawyer. Upon entry of a Rescission
Order, the Administrative Office of the Courts promptly shall furnish confirmation
to the lawyer.
(7) Notices to
Clerks
The Clerk of
the Court of Appeals shall send a copy of each Decertification Order and
Rescission Order entered pursuant to this Rule to the Clerk of the Court
of Special Appeals, the Clerk of each circuit court, the Chief Clerk of
the District Court, and the Register of Wills for each county.
(f)
Certain Information Furnished to the Standing Committee on Pro Bono Legal
Service
The Administrative
Office of the Courts shall submit promptly to the Standing Committee on
Pro Bono Legal Service a compilation of non-identifying information and
data from the Pro Bono Legal Service Reports.
(g)
Confidentiality
Pro Bono Legal
Service Reports are confidential and are not subject to inspection or disclosure
under Code, State Government Article, §10-615 (2)(iii). The Administrative
Office of the Courts shall not release the Reports to any person or agency,
except upon order of the Court of Appeals. Non-identifying information
and data contained in a lawyer's Pro Bono Legal Service Report are not
confidential.
Source: This Rule is new.
MARYLAND RULES OF PROCEDURE
RULES
OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
Rule 6.1 Pro Bono Publico
Legal Service
AMEND Rule 6.1 to add certain provisions
concerning aspirational goals for pro bono publico legal service, to state
that the rule is aspirational and not mandatory, to provide that noncompliance
with the Rule is not grounds for disciplinary action or other sanctions,
to add certain commentary concerning the aspirational goals, and to make
certain stylistic changes, as follows: Rule
6.1. Pro Bono Publico Legal Service
(a)
Professional Responsibility
A lawyer [should
render public interest] has a professional responsibility to
render pro bono publico legal service. [A lawyer may discharge
this responsibility by providing professional services at no fee or a reduced
fee to persons of limited means or to public service or charitable groups
or organizations, by service in activities for improving the law, the legal
system or the legal profession, or by financial support for organizations
that provide legal services to persons of limited means.]
(b)
Discharge of Professional Responsibility
A lawyer in
the full-time practice of law should aspire to render at least 50 hours
per year of pro bono publico legal service, and a lawyer in part-time practice
should aspire to render at least a pro rata number of hours.
(1) Unless
a lawyer is prohibited by law from rendering the legal services described
below, a substantial portion of the applicable hours should be devoted
to rendering legal service, without fee or expectation of fee, or at a
substantially reduced fee, to:
(A)
people of limited means;
(B)
charitable, religious, civic, community, governmental, or educational organizations
in matters designed primarily to address the needs of people of limited
means;
(C) individuals, groups, or organizations seeking to secure or protect
civil rights, civil liberties, or public rights; or
(D)
charitable, religious, civic, community, governmental, or educational organizations
in matters in furtherance of their organizational purposes when the payment
of the standard legal fees would significantly deplete the organization's
economic resources or would otherwise be inappropriate.
(2) The remainder
of the applicable hours may be devoted to activities for improving the
law, the legal system, or the legal profession.
(3) A lawyer
also may discharge the professional responsibility set forth in this Rule
by contributing financial support to organizations that provide legal services
to persons of limited means.
(c)
Effect of Noncompliance
This Rule is aspirational, not
mandatory. Noncompliance with this Rule shall not be grounds for disciplinary
action or other sanctions.
COMMENT
The ABA House of Delegates has formally
acknowledged "the basic responsibility of each lawyer engaged in the practice
of law to provide public interest legal services" without fee, or at a
substantially reduced fee, in one or more of the following areas: poverty
law, civil rights law, public rights law, charitable organization representation,
and the administration of justice. This Rule expresses that policy but
is not intended to be enforced through the disciplinary process. The rights and responsibilities of
individuals and organizations in the United States are increasingly defined
in legal terms. As a consequence, legal assistance in coping with the web
of statutes, rules, and regulations is imperative for persons of modest
and limited means, as well as for the relatively well-to-do.
The basic responsibility for providing
legal services for those unable to pay ultimately rests upon the individual
lawyer, and personal involvement in the problems of the disadvantaged can
be one of the most rewarding experiences in the life of a lawyer. Every
lawyer, regardless of professional prominence or professional workload,
should find time to participate in or otherwise support the provision of
legal services to the disadvantaged. The provision of free legal services
to those unable to pay reasonable fees continues to be an obligation of
each lawyer as well as the profession generally, but the efforts of individual
lawyers are often not enough to meet the need. Thus, it has been necessary
for the profession, the government, and the courts to institute
additional programs to provide legal services. Accordingly, legal aid offices,
lawyer referral services, and other related programs have been developed,
and [others] more will be developed by the profession,
the government, and the courts. Every lawyer should support
all proper efforts to meet this need for legal services.
The goal of 50 hours per year
for pro bono legal service established in paragraph (b) of this Rule is
aspirational; it is a goal, not a requirement. The number used is intended
as an average yearly amount over the course of the lawyer's career.
A lawyer in government service
who is prohibited by constitutional, statutory, or regulatory restrictions
from performing the pro bono legal services described in paragraph (b)(1)
of the Rule may discharge the lawyer's responsibility by participating
in activities described in paragraph (b)(2).
Code Comparison.-- There is no counterpart
of Rule 6.1 in the Disciplinary Rules of the Code. EC 2-25 states that
"The basic responsibility for providing legal services for those unable
to pay ultimately rests upon the individual lawyer ... . Every lawyer,
regardless of professional prominence or professional workload, should
find time to participate in serving the disadvantaged." EC 8-9 states that
"The advancement of our legal system is of vital importance in maintaining
the rule of law ... and lawyers should encourage, and should aid in making
needed changes and improvements." EC 8-3 states that "Those persons unable
to pay for legal services should be provided needed services."
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