In re Association of the Bar

222 A.D. 580, 227 N.Y.S. 1, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8118
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 222 A.D. 580 (In re Association of the Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Association of the Bar, 222 A.D. 580, 227 N.Y.S. 1, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8118 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Dowling, P. J.

The Association of the Bar of the City of New York, New York County Lawyers’ Association and Bronx County Bar Association, the three representative associations of lawyers in the First Department, have presented to this court a joint petition, wherein they set forth that there exists in this department a practice commonly known as ambulance chasing,” that is, the solicitation by lawyers of their employment to prosecute damage cases on the basis of the contingent fees, the amount of which is not fixed with reference to the nature or extent of the prospective services. Such agreements of retainer are frequently signed by injured persons, improvidently or ignorantly, when they are suffering from injuries recently received, which render them incapable of exercising a discriminating judgment.

“ Ambulance chasing ” is described more in detail as follows: Lawyers engaged in the practice referred to, by themselves or through their agents who are sometimes laymen, promise or give [582]*582to persons sustaining personal injuries some valuable consideration to induce them to employ such lawyers to prosecute claims for damages for their injuries. Such lawyers, through their agents, in some instances, maintain a well-organized and effective system of solicitation by which they obtain prompt information of accidents resulting in personal injuries, from hospital employees, ambulance drivers, taxicab drivers and others who are so situated as to have early knowledge, and they pay them compensation for such information. Solicitation for such business frequently takes place immediately after an injury has been received, often on the same day, in hospitals, in homes, and at the bedsides of injured persons, while they are in pain or otherwise distressed on account of their injuries.

In some instances the lawyer or his agent agrees to advance the costs of legal proceedings and to assume the payment of hospital expenses and medical bills as an inducement to the employment of the lawyer. The injured persons are solicited to sign printed contracts of retainer, and they frequently do so with only vague comprehension of what the papers contain or of their purpose and effect and without having at the time any knowledge of the character or standing or ability of the person retained except from a person or persons interested, frequently in a pecuniary way, in securing the retainer.

It is alleged that ambulance chasing ” pursued in the manner above described has been systematized to such an extent that the lawyers engaged in it control a large number of the so-called personal injury actions upon the calendars of the courts in this department, and these cases constitute a substantial proportion of the cases on the jury calendar of the Supreme Court. It is largely on account of the accumulation of such cases upon the calendars of the Trial Terms of the Supreme and other courts that the present congestion in the courts exists.

It is further set forth that lawyers in this department who engage in systematic “ ambulance chasing ” are relatively few in number; that the practice is condemned by the great majority of the bar as disreputable and calculated undeservedly to bring discredit upon the administration of justice and the profession at large, and that it is not consistent with honorable' and ethical standards of professional conduct and in many cases is in violation of law.

The petition further recites that from the practices above described there flow other harmful results, among which are the following: Poor and ignorant claimants are overreached and oppressed by importunate' lawyers, insensible to the obligations of their calling, or by solicitors acting in their behalf; claims to a great [583]*583number and involving a large aggregate amount come into the control of a single lawyer, who in many cases advances filing and jury fees, views the business as a commercial transaction, and settles or litigates the claims on the basis of the pecuniary advantage to himself rather than in the best interest of the client; clients are compelled to pay unconscionable fees, wholly incommensurate with the services performed or the results obtained; lawyers are tempted to, and sometimes do, resort to improper and illegal practices, frequently induced by reason of their financial interest in the result, and they otherwise violate.their obligations to the courts and to the profession; and finally, thousands of suits are brought without merit, and without any intention by the attorneys for the. claimant to bring them to trial.

It is further averred that the evils inherent in the practice of ambulance chasing ” are by no means confined to the activities of lawyers for the claimants, but they have brought in their wake activities on the part of representatives of defendants in those cases, which are equally improper and unlawful. In many instances, it is a race between solicitors for lawyers, who seek to get retainers from the unfortunate injured persons, and representatives of the prospective defendants, who seek to get releases from the same injured persons for little or nothing, as to which of these would reach the bedside first. In that way the poor unfortunates are overreached, their signatures are obtained to retainers or releases, at a time when, by reason of suffering, ignorance or lack of time toyconsider, the injured person can exercise no proper judgment in the protection of his or her rights. To the extent that members of the bar are concerned in such practices, on behalf of defendants, either by themselves, or through directing or suggesting the activities of others, their conduct is as reprehensible as that of lawyers for claimants.

The petition recites that there has been widespread public criticism of the practices referred to and that such practices with their attendant evils, tend to undermine public confidence in the administration of justice.

The petitioners, therefore, pray (1) that an investigation be ordered by this court, to be conducted by itself or by such other appropriate procedure as it shall determine, in order that a judicial inquiry may be made into the practices hereinbefore alleged to exist and into any other legal and improper practices.

(2) That upon the conclusion of such investigation all parties found to have been participating in any such practices be brought into court in some appropriate action or proceeding and dealt with according to law; and that such other remedy or remedies may [584]*584be granted, and such judicial discipline exercised, as may be found to be effective and proper, to correct the abuses that may be found to exist.

This court is appreciative of the motives which have led the members of these associations to initiate this proceeding to clear the profession which is dear to them of the practices and the practitioners that have aroused the criticism which has been directed against the acts complained of, and which must inevitably weaken public confidence in it, unless steps are promptly taken to ascertain how far the criticism is justified; to end such abuses in so far as they are found to exist, and to take such remedial measures as may be found advisable to prevent the danger of their recurrence; with such disciplinary action as may be found to be required by the proof adduced.

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Bluebook (online)
222 A.D. 580, 227 N.Y.S. 1, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-association-of-the-bar-nyappdiv-1928.