Code of Professional Conduct
CHAPTER VIII. PRESERVATION OF CLIENTS' PROPERTY
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RULE
The lawyer owes a duty to the client to observe
all relevant laws and rules respecting the preservation and safekeeping of
the client's property entrusted to the lawyer. Where there are no such laws or rules,
or the lawyer is in any doubt, the lawyer should take the same care of such property as a careful
and prudent owner would when dealing with property of like description.1
Commentary
Guiding Principles
1. The lawyer's duties with respect to safekeeping, preserving and
accounting for the clients' monies and other property are generally the
subject of special rules.2 In the absence of such rules the lawyer should adhere to the
minimum standards set out in the note.3
"Property", apart from clients' monies, includes
securities such as mortgages, negotiable instruments, stocks, bonds, etc.,
original documents such as wills, title deeds, minute books, licences,
certificates, etc., other papers such as clients' correspondence files,
reports, invoices, etc., as well as chattels such as jewelry, silver, etc.4
2. The lawyer should promptly notify the client upon receiving any
property of or relating to the client unless satisfied that the client
knows that it has come into the lawyer's custody.5
3. The lawyer should clearly label and identify the client's property
and place it in safekeeping separate and apart from the lawyer's own
property.
4. The lawyer should maintain adequate records of clients' property in
the lawyer's custody so that it may be promptly accounted for, or
delivered to, or to the order of, the client upon request.
The lawyer should ensure that such property is delivered to the
right person and, in case of dispute as to the person entitled, may have
recourse to the courts.6
5. The duties here expressed are closely related to those concerning
confidential information.7
The lawyer should keep clients' papers and other property out of
sight as well as out of reach of those not entitled to see them and
should, subject to any right of lien,8
return them promptly to the clients upon
request or at the conclusion of the lawyer's retainer.
Privilege
6. The lawyer should be alert to claim on behalf of
clients any lawful privilege respecting information about their affairs,
including their files and property if seized or attempted to be seized by a
third party. In this regard the lawyer
should be familiar with the nature of clients' privilege, and with relevant
statutory provisions such as those in the Income Tax Act,9
the Criminal
Code, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and other statutes.
NOTES
- Cf. CBA-COD 7; CBA 3(8); Que. 3.02.06; ABA-MR 1.15; ABA DR
9‑102(B). Although the
basic duty here declared may parallel the legal duty under the law of
bailment, it is reiterated as being a matter of professional
responsibility quite apart from the position in law. (Return
to Rule)
- See Part 13 of The Rules of The Law Society of
Saskatchewan.
(Return to Commentary 1)
[Chapter VIII Footnote 2 Amended December 11, 1992]
- The minimum standards are:
- paying into and keeping
monies received or held by the lawyer for or on behalf of clients in a
trust bank account or accounts separate from the bank account of the
lawyer or the lawyer's firm;
- keeping properly written
books and accounts of all monies received, held or paid by the lawyer for
or on behalf of each of the lawyer's clients which clearly distinguish
such monies from the monies of every other client and from the monies of
the lawyer and the lawyer's firm;
- not retaining for an
unnecessarily long period, without the express authority of the client,
monies received for or on behalf of such client;
- subject to rules
prescribed by the governing body of the province, no lawyer shall take
fees, as opposed to disbursements, from funds held in trust for a client
without the client's express authority unless the work being done by the
lawyer for the client has been performed and a proper account in respect
thereof has been rendered to the client.
Where a client authorizes the payment of fees from trust funds
before an account has been rendered, this arrangement should be recorded
in writing and an interim account sent to the client forthwith;
- the lawyer should not
estimate a lump sum that may in the aggregate be owed by a number of
clients and then transfer that sum in bulk from a trust account to the
lawyer's general account without allocating specific amounts to each
client and rendering an account to each client. (Return
to Commentary 1)
- In some provinces statutes authorize the depositing of valuable
documents with public officials for safekeeping.
As to wills, see Comment in (1970) 4 Law Soc. U.C. Gaz. 117. (Return
to Commentary 1)
- Cf. ABA DR 9-102 (B)(1).
(Return to Commentary 2)
- For example, by seeking leave to interplead.
(Return to Commentary 4)
- Cf. the Rule relating to confidential information.
(Return to Commentary 5)
- Cf. para. 10 of the Rule relating to withdrawal.
As to the proper disposition of papers, which is frequently a
perplexing problem, see Cordery on
Solicitors (6th ed. 1968) at pp. 118-20 for a discussion of law and
principles and a table of categories with supporting authorities.
The lawyer's arrangements and procedures for the storage and
eventual destruction of completed files should reflect the foregoing
considerations and particularly the continuing obligation as to
confidentiality.
Further, statutes such as the Income
Tax Act and the operation of limitations statutes pertinent to the
client's position may preclude the destruction of files or particular
papers. Section 61 of The Legal Profession Act, 1990, provides for the appointment of a
trustee of the property of a member pertaining to the practice of the
member where the member has died, absconded, has neglected the practice or
is unable to practice. The trustee is to respect a solicitor's lien (Section 62).
(Return to Commentary 5)
[Chapter VIII Footnote 8 Amended December 11, 1992]
- See Freedman, "Solicitor-Client Privilege under the Income Tax
Act" (1969) 12 Can. B.J. 93. (Return to
Commentary 6)
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