The Florida Bar v. CONSOLIDATED BUS., ETC.
This text of 386 So. 2d 797 (The Florida Bar v. CONSOLIDATED BUS., ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
THE FLORIDA BAR, Petitioner,
v.
CONSOLIDATED BUSINESS AND LEGAL FORMS, INC., Etc., Respondent.
Supreme Court of Florida.
Ronald R. Richmond, Chairman of the Standing Committee on Unauthorized Practice of Law, New Port Richey, Martin Errol Rice, Bar Counsel, St. Petersburg, and H. Glenn Boggs, Asst. Staff Counsel-UPL, Tallahassee, for The Florida Bar, petitioner.
Stephen D. Hughes, Largo, for respondent.
*798 PER CURIAM.
Petitioner, The Florida Bar, filed a petition in this Court pursuant to article V, section 15, Florida Constitution, charging the respondent corporation, Consolidated Business and Legal Forms, Inc., with engaging in the unauthorized practice of law. We issued an order directing respondent to show cause why it should not be enjoined from the unauthorized practice of law. Subsequently, respondent filed a motion to dismiss which was denied by this Court. Circuit court Judge David F. Patterson, appointed by this Court as referee, conducted hearings in this matter and on June 26, 1979, filed his findings and recommendations with the Court. Because of the comprehensive manner in which the referee dealt with this cause, we set out in full his findings and recommendations:
This is a proceeding conducted pursuant to Integration Rule, Article XVI (III)(A)(4) wherein a final evidentiary hearing was held before the undersigned Referee on May 10, 1979. The question presented is whether or not the respondent is engaged in the unauthorized practice of law and should be enjoined from the continuing of its business as presently constituted. For the reasons stated below this question is answered in the affirmative.
The respondent is a Florida corporation for profit, now known as Consolidated Systems, Incorporated, engaged in the business of offering legal services through members of The Florida Bar who are its full time employees. The officers and stockholders of the respondent are non-lawyers with no legal training who supervise and control the day to day business of the corporation for the sole purpose of personal financial gain derived from providing legal services to individuals who have no other business relationship with the respondent to which such services are related. The practice therefore differs from businesses who maintain lawyers as full time employees primarily to further a course of business other than the practice of law.
Notwithstanding conflicts in the testimony, it is clear that the respondent, through its non lawyer officers, maintains a degree of control over the legal services it furnishes through its lawyer employees for the purpose of maintaining cost efficiency and profit. The manner in which the lawyer employees are compensated encourages the lawyer to conduct a high volume turnover of clients in order to increase his income. The use of standardized forms is encouraged or mandated and the lawyer's time spent in court is organized to limit the time of his absence from the respondent's office where one of the lawyer's primary functions is new client intake. Some of the lawyers employed by the respondent have little or no prior experience in the practice of law and lack sufficient knowledge and experience to render some of the legal services which the respondent offers through media advertising. We find here the unique circumstance wherein the owners of a business are prohibited by law from rendering the services which they offer to the public (F.S. 454.23) are not competent by training to judge the quality of their product, are not subject to the licensing authority which regulates the distribution of their product and who purport to exercise no ultimate control over their primary employees. This concept, alien to the world of business, does greater violence to the accepted ideals of the professions, which must balance service to the public against the need to show a profit. There is no evidence that the respondent has made any attempt to balance the requirements of the Code of Professional Responsibility against its profit motives nor that the owners have the training or ability to make such an evaluation. To the contrary the respondent has established a pattern of conduct in the transferring of pending case files upon the resignation or discharge of an employee lawyer which evinces a disregard for the individual interest of the client. The evidence establishes injury to individual clients by reason of these practices. The petitioner cites many instances of control *799 by lay officers of the corporation to establish that the respondent is engaged in the unauthorized practice of law and this Referee does find that the evidence supports no other conclusion. Assuming that these practices could be corrected by the respondent, would the respondent then be free of the charge of unauthorized practice? It is the finding of this Referee that this question must be answered in the negative. The respondent has shown no other means of producing income other than by the providing of legal services which is clearly the practice of law. Were the respondent to cease the providing of such services, then it would cease to exist as an income producing enterprise. The nature of the corporate business is such that it must be deemed to be engaged in the unauthorized practice of law with or without the examples of lay control which the evidence shows:
In addition to the foregoing the Referee finds:
1. The respondent is organized as a for profit corporation and has filed Articles of Incorporation with the secretary of state's office. The respondent's proper name has been changed, after the initiation of this litigation to CONSOLIDATED SYSTEMS, INCORPORATED.
2. The officers of the corporation are DESMOND JUDGE, President; DANIEL WARD, Vice President and SHEILA HARRIS, Secretary. None of these officers is now, nor has ever been licensed to practice law in Florida. None of them have had any legal training.
3. The respondent maintains offices in several Florida cities, including: Clearwater, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Jacksonville, Holiday, Fort Lauderdale, Altamonte Springs and Sarasota.
4. The respondent employs persons to staff it offices who are licensed to practice law in Florida. Respondent pays these lawyer employees a salary plus a percentage of the gross fees received all fees paid by the clients are paid to the corporate employer. The respondent also employs lay persons to assist its lawyer employees in delivering legal services to the general public.
5. The respondent advertises to the general public that certain specified legal services may be obtained from its offices in exchange for a fee to be paid to the respondent.
6. Services offered by the respondent have included such legal work as: (1) uncontested dissolution of marriage (2) personal bankruptcy (3) change of name (4) simple wills and (5) uncontested adoptions. This list is not intended to be all inclusive and the respondent may provide other legal services in addition to the foregoing.
7. The respondent through its lay employees establishes rules and policies normally reserved to a duly licensed practitioner such as:
a. the establishing of the amount of the fee to be charged for a specific service.
b. the limitation of client conference time per individual case.
c.
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386 So. 2d 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-florida-bar-v-consolidated-bus-etc-fla-1980.