Maryland Bar Ruling Banning NonLawyer/Lawyer Referral Groups Discriminates Against Solo and Small Firms

Sometimes a bar association issues a decision that’s so impervious to the realities of legal practice that you have to wonder whether those who drafted it ever practiced law.  That’s my thought about the Maryland Disciplinary Committee’s recent Ethics Decision, Ethics Docket 05-11,  Participation in For-Profit Referral Organization with Non-Attorneys and discussed further in this article from the ABA e-report (4/22/05), Referral Clubs May Cause Trouble.  I take issue with so many aspects of the decision, from the cowardly way that it addresses a particular referral group, BNI, but doesn’t mention it by name to the decision’s failure to trust lawyers enough to exercise good judgment in making referrals to its willingness to ignore the same type of lawyer/non-lawyer networking activity that takes place every day at large law firms.  But before I launch into my extended tirade, I should point out the following.  First, I’ve been a member in good standing of the Maryland bar since June 2002 – and I hope that nothing that I write here changes that!  Second, I considered joining BNI and attended a couple of meetings a few years ago – but I didn’t feel that it had much to offer my regulatory practice (though a number of my colleagues with probate, small business and family law practices have praised it).  Third, I’ve discussed the decision with other solos and many disagree with my position, so I want to emphasize that the views here are mine only; I do not speak on behalf of solo and small firm lawyers as a group.

A.  The Maryland Decision

Here’s an excerpt from the Maryland decision that gives a good overview:

The Maryland Bar was asked to comment on the ethics networking and referral organization. This organization has multiple chapters around the world. Each chapter consists of various professionals and business people who seek to obtain referrals and learn marketing techniques. Only one person from any given profession or line of business can join any individual chapter. The particular chapter that has approached you includes, among others, a beauty consultant, heating and air conditioning contractor, investment advisor, and AFLAC insurance agent.

The chapters hold weekly meetings. At these meetings, there is usually a general presentation on how to better market your business. A chapter officer may also draw attention to other seminars that are taking place in the area that address marketing techniques. This is followed by a detailed presentation by one member educating the others about his or her business. Finally, at the end of the meeting, members exchange referrals they have obtained for each other (if any) during the course of the past week.

The referral organization is a for profit entity. It earns its revenue through annual membership fees paid by each member. The members do not pay fees to each other and the organization does not make any referrals. You characterize the organization’s role as helping to bring people together to make “free referrals among themselves.”

You further state that there is no requirement that you provide referrals to other members, or that you obtain referrals from them. You write that it is “theoretically possible to join a chapter only for the various educational programs they provide.” The organization has no quotas and there are no “quid pro quo referrals.”

You ask whether participation in this organization would violate Rule 1.7, 5.4 or 7.2 and, if not, are there any limits on the extent to which you would be permitted to participate. In the Committee’s judgment, participation in this organization would violate the current Rules of Professional Conduct.

Essentially, the committee found the following problems with the referral group.  First, the committee found that the group’s practice of encouraging cross referrals violated ethics rules by which attorneys cannot give “something of value” in exchange for receiving a referral.  Here, the “something of value” would be the lawyer’s promise to make referrals to other group members in exchange for referrals to the lawyer.   Second, the committee found that  membership in the group would compromise a lawyer’s independent judgment because lawyers would make referrals not based on the merits of another service provider, but rather, because the group allegedly obligated lawyers to make the referral.  Finally, the committee found that having a non-attorney distribute a lawyer’s business card was essentially an end-run around the bar on in-person solicitations.

The Committee concluded its decision with these words:

Nor is the Committee persuaded that attorneys can carve out a separate, ethically compliant, niche for themselves in this organization. Although the organization’s web site advises lawyers that they are directed to follow their profession’s own ethical guidelines, the Committee is not naive.
Participation in this organization is intended to harness the efforts of others to market your legal services. The possibility of joining solely for the educational benefits strikes the Committee as purely “theoretical.”

B.  Critique

1.  Committee Does Not Name the Association At Issue

My first complaint is why the Committee didn’t simply name the group at issue – BNI.  It’s pretty easy to figure out that the Committee was addressing membership in BNI by searching Google for the descriptive words used in the Committee’s decision.  Was the Committee afraid that it might be sued for defamation for inaccurately portraying BNI policies?  Was it concerned that someone from BNI might challenge the decision and the Committee would have a court appeal on its hands.   A specific request was made to the Committee regarding a particular group, namely BNI, something that’s fairly easy to figure out from the decision.  And the decision addresses the group’s particular practices.  Other referral groups might have different practices; the Committee’s decision seems specific to the particular policies and practices of this group.  Why not come out and say so?

Personally, I don’t see how the Committee’s decision can withstand a
constitutional challenge on First Amendment speech and free association
grounds.  As I discuss later, the Committee bars participation in BNI with a broad brush where it could have narrowly tailored the decision or addressed violations on a case by case basis.   A  single attorney is unlikely to  have the  time or inclination to serve as a  test  case.  But a well funded organization like BNI might be up to the challenge.

2.  Why Can’t the Bar Trust Our Judgment?

Let’s face it, when we attorneys make a referral, our reputation is on the line.  Even if Brenda-the-Beauty-Shop owner or Isidor-the-Insurance-Agent promises me all the clients in the state, I’m not going to refer them to one of my clients if I can’t vouch for the quality of their service.  Because if I refer people to incompetents, that’s going to hurt my business in the long run.  At the same time, a group like BNI allows me to get to know Brenda or Isidor, to learn about their business and ask questions about their practices.  And if based on these contacts, I believe that Brenda or Isidor have something to offer my clients, I’ll gladly refer them.

Similarly, as a lawyer, why can’t I be trusted to explain my professional obligations to others.  Why can’t I tell Tommy-the-Tow Truck driver that he really should not give out my card if he’s called to the scene of an accident – because that would constitute an improper in-person solicitation.  But what’s wrong with Barry-the-Broker recommending me to one of his clients who wants to sue a business partner?  That happens all the time; why is it wrong for Barry to make the recommendation if he meets me through BNI as opposed to meeting me at a fancy trade association dinner?

Certainly, there will be lawyers who abuse the system.  But it seems to me that the bar can deal with abuses on a case-by-case basis.  If for example, a lawyer refers an inept painter to a client and the painter botches the job, the client can file a complaint against the lawyer or sue for negligent referral.  That’s a far better way to address possible violations than to prohibit participation in nonlawyer groups with one broad stroke.

3.  People Refer All the Time – But Now the Bar Makes It Too Hard for Solo and Small Firms to Have Access to NonLawyers

For many solo and small firm lawyers, BNI provides the only forum for meeting non-lawyers in different fields.  Outside of possibly joining a Chamber of Commerce, there are few networking groups where general practice lawyers can meet and get to know other business people.  By contrast, in biglaw practice, lawyers have a chance to meet and network with people all the time.  If I join a couple of $500/year energy regulatory trade associations and get active in committee work, I may meet accountants or engineers who’ll refer me cases and vice versa.  In fact, in my field, lawyers and non-lawyers (economists, engineers and accountants) routinely work together for trade associations and bring each other in and out of cases – even though arguably, there might be another firm or engineer who’s better for the job.  Hey, engineers and nonlawyers can even join the Energy Bar Association and even certain ABA Committees.  So why is that type of lawyer-nonlawyer interaction OK?  Because it’s sanctioned by the Bar?  What bothers me is that the Maryland Bar decision deprives solo and small firm lawyers of a vital networking tool that is regularly used by our large firm counterparts – and that’s just not fair.

4.  How Is BNI Different from Bar Referral Services

The Bar runs referral programs as well.  Lawyers often pay a fee to sign up and may, depending upon the bar, be obligated to share a cut of the earnings yielded from the case.  Don’t those lawyers give something of value to get a referral?  Or is that different because the Bar is running the program – and if so, why?

5.  No Sense of Reality By the Bar

What angers me most about the Maryland decision is the cavalier nature of its approach.  The decision expresses no empathy towards lawyers who participate in BNI and  may lose a substantial source of revenue as a result of the decision.  It offers no alternatives to replace this type of networking, nor does it acknowlege that most lawyers can be trusted not to violate these rules.  In fact, the Committee goes to the other extremes and assumes that lawyers will not even have the ability to limit their participation in BNI to educational purposes and not partake in the practices that the Committee finds objectionable.  (this alone ought to be reason enough to make the decision subject to challenge – the Committee won’t even let Maryland lawyers attend meetings to learn more about how other people market?  Ridiculous!  I wonder if I violated any rules by attending Lex Think.  There were nonlawyers there after all; we did get to know each other and exchange ideas…)

Yes, ethics are important, but it’s also important to apply ethics rules with reference to real practice, not theory.  And ethics rules must be applied in a way that doesn’t disproportionally impact one segment of the bar.  Finally, the bars need to regulate in a way that entrusts lawyers to exercise discretion and to live up the standards that the Professional Rules set.  In this case, the Maryland Bar technically may have done the ethical thing, but it’s certainly not the right thing or the fair thing.  And that makes this ethics decision plain wrong.

6 Comments

  1. Joel s. on May 2, 2005 at 11:41 am

    Isn’t the distinction between BNI and, say, the Chamber of Commerce related to the fact that BNI exists ONLY for referrals? I don’t know. On the one hand, I think the bar ruling is overly broad; on the other hand, I attended a BNI meeting, and based on what I saw, I certainly wouldn’t feel comfortable becoming a member. I’m a solo practitioner, and the only people I come into contact with are my clients and other attorneys. If a client asks whether I know of someone who cleans rugs/sells jewelry/whatever, I’m happy to give a name if I know one. But (1) I’m certainly not going to initiate the referral discussion, (2) I’m only going to refer someone if I’m aware that they do good work and (3) I’m not going to violate rules (1) and (2) just because I think I can get reciprocal referrals for doing so. I felt uncomfortable with BNI because I felt like my choices were:
    (a) Get referrals for other members, but make myself look unprofessional; or
    (b) Fail to “pull my weight” in giving referrals.



  2. Carolyn Elefant on May 3, 2005 at 9:31 am

    This is part of my point – lawyers like the above commenter are able to exercise discretion in making a decision about whether to join or not. And, perhaps it’s possible that BNI would allow a type of “education only” category where lawyers could attend to learn about other fields and pick up new marketing techniques and participate in the referral system to the extent permitted by applicable rules. I take issue with the Bar’s decision to ban BNI participation entirely and in so doing, prevent attorneys from exercising their own judgment.



  3. Danny Bronski on May 3, 2005 at 11:05 am

    Carolyn, you have put forth a very compelling and well thought out argument here.
    On the one hand, I have a personal distaste for organizations like BNI. As a young solo eager to spread the word, I act as a professional networker as much as I do a professional attorney, and of course I tried a similar organization; it didn’t work for me because the pressure to refer without regard to the qualifications of the other members left a bad taste in my mouth.
    On the other hand (and more importantly), we shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that BNI does not seriously compromise an attorney’s ability to use judgement as to when a referral is appropriate. Promoting only what you like and believe in is good business and not just good ethics, and a good attorney would not be swayed from this crede by subtle peer pressure.
    As a more general (and more infuriating) matter, it seems that bar associations are more interested in regulating networking activities when solos are involved — ‘cuz I don’t see much attention paid to techniques used by those in larger firms. This ruling is nothing more than “de facto” discrimination against solos’ ability to market a practice. The presumption that we solos can’t be trusted to use judgment seems to hang in the air.
    Twenty years from now we will all laugh at the pathetic attempts of bar associations and other annointed members of our profession to keep attorneys from being successful entrepreneurs within our profession.
    Allowing entrepreneurial thinking (including the absence of overly broad and foolish restrictions on entrepreneurial activity) leads to innovation and ultimately better service and more value to clients, which should be the main goal of our profession and the main goal of those regulating it.



  4. Anonymous on May 19, 2005 at 1:11 pm

    Carolyn, you’re absolutely right. Is the bar association able to personally vouch for the attorneys on the bar referral list?
    What a joke that they would carve out an exception for the association that’s not available to business owners interested in focusing time and attention on relationship marketing. I mean who amongst us doesn’t expect a referral back when we make one to a colleague. This decision was a feeble attempt to demonize a simple and innocent concept.
    Overzealous bar counsel who couldn’t make it in the practice of law themselves is one of the things that pushes legitimate practitioners out, leaving clients with fewer choices.
    If you ever wonder why these things are not directed at larger law firms take a look at who the officers of the bar associations typically are. How pathetic this whole scene is. I’m just glad to be officially retired from the practice of law. It’s no longer worth the headache with so many other non-regulated ways to help people.



  5. Doe on November 7, 2005 at 1:56 am

    The following is based on an actual situation:
    A “service business” installed a manufacturer’s product and a part needed to be replaced, so the serviceman told the customer they ordered the replacement part and it would be there in a week. A few days later, out of the clear blue sky, the customer contacts the “service business” threatening to sue and demanding they immediately remove the installed product and they wanted their money back. The “service business” not wanting trouble sent the serviceman out that same day to remove the product. The refund check could not be issued until the original payment had cleared.
    Within the next two days, the “service business” received a letter from an attorney demanding a hefty sum to settle with his clients (aka the customers), alleging several causes of action and threatening to report this “service business” The allegations in the letter were backed up with a competitor’s assessment. The competitor findings were based on his qualifications and experience. He found the “service business” did improper installment, estimated cost to fix damages and costs to replace the product. The assessments and costs totaled about 4 times as much as the original job the “service business” charged. The letter concluded if the demand amount was not received within a number of days his client would file a civil action. If a civil action is filed the “service business” will incur attorney fees to defend and the demand in the complaint will be higher.
    The “service business” called the client’s attorney and explained he had the product removed at the customers request and disagreed with the allegations of improper installment and replacement costs. Thereafter the “service business” was served with a summons and complaint. The complaint formally restated that which was in the letter and true to the attorneys word, the demand was much greater.
    To make a long story short, the “service business” had to get an attorney. The attorney having a gut feeling that something was out of whack started investigating.
    Turns out, the attorneys in the law firm that represent the plaintiff all belong to different chapters of a “Referral Group” consisting of different types of non-attorney businesses. One attorney belongs to Chapter A, another belongs to Chapter B and anther to Chapter C. The attorney who belongs to Chapter C was the attorney who wrote the letter and signed the complaint. Lo and behold, the competitor business is a member of Chapter A.
    Apparently the competitor business got wind of the customers problem with the faulty part upon installing the product and advised the customers that they had a law suit, referred them to attorney in Chapter A, and then the attorney in Chapter C (distancing the potential conflict issues) used the referring competitor to back up the demands.
    Further investigation into the competitor revealed the competitor was not qualified as he represented and was actually unlawfully in business (Like a paralegal giving legal advice, that kind of unlawful) . . . .
    This is where my story ends, I don’t know what the status is right now. But I just wanted to point out what kind of problems can arise from attorneys joining referral groups with non-attorneys. An unethical group of (or one) attorneys could actually conspire with other non-attorneys to create referrals for the attorneys and business for the non-attorneys. What’s worse, an ethical attorney who is in “good faith” relying on the relationships developed with the non-attorney business members could be lured into a false sense of trust by an unethical non-attorney looking for a fast buck.
    Ethics rules differ from state to state on this subject –



  6. Dave on July 2, 2013 at 5:16 pm

    Does this ethics opinion from 2005 still stand? If so, have any attorneys been disciplined for participating in such a group?



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