Authorisation and scope of practice Flashcards
No practice without authorisation
You must not carry on any reserved legal activity unless you are entitled to do so under the Legal Services Act.
Legal service or reserved legal activity?
- Legal services include providing legal advice, providing legal representation and drafting or settling any statement of case, witness statement, affidavit or other legal document.
- Unregistered barristers may provide legal services, but may not carry out reserved legal activities.
- Reserved legal activities: exercise of a right of audience (professional right to conduct advocacy in a court/tribunal), conduct of litigation (issuing, commencing and defending proceedings before any court - normally done by solicitors), reserved instrument activities (any activity which involves preparing an instrument relating to real or personal estate), probate activities, notarial activities, administration of oaths
Practising certificates
- In order to provide legal services and/or carry out reserved legal activities as a barrister, you must have a valid practising certificate.
- If you are an individual and you do not have a practising certificate, you:
(a) may not practice as a barrister
(b) are not authorised to carry out any reserved legal activity
Obtaining a full practising certificate
The key provisions are that you are eligible for a full practising certificate if:
(a) You have satisfactorily completed pupillage or have been exempted;
(b) Within the last five years you have:
(i) Held a practising certificate; or
(ii) Satisfactorily completed or been exempted from pupillage; or
(iii) Complied with training requirements imposed by the BSB.
Obtaining a provisional practising certificate
- With a provisional certificate you have the same rights of audience as a fully qualified barrister, i.e. before every court in relation to any proceedings.
- If you don’t have a provisional certificate, you have no rights of audience as a pupil. You are however permitted to accept a noting brief with permission of your supervisor or head of chambers.
Importance of instructions
- If you are a self-employed barrister and have a practising certificate (provisional or full), there are further restrictions on whether you can carry on a reserved legal activity or provide legal services.
- Self-employed barristers must:
(a) Be instructed by the court or a professional client (solicitor) or licensed access client
(b) If instructed directly by a member of the public, have complied with the public access rules and notified the BSB you are willing to accept public access instructions
(c) If instructed to conduct litigation, have a litigation extension to your certificate and you have notified the BSB that you are willing to accept instructions from lay clients.
Employed barristers
- Different scope of practice rules apply to employed barristers, e.g. those who work in house for a law firm, local government, or central government department. You need a practising certificate to carry on reserved legal activities, just like a self-employed barrister.
- The key provisions are that you may supply legal services to:
(a) Your employer
(b) Any employer, director or company secretary of your employer in a matter arising from that person’s employment
(c) If you work for a public authority, another public authority with which they have arrangements to supply legal services
(d) If you work for central government, any minister or officer of the crown
(e) If you work for the Legal Aid Agency, members of the public
(f) If you supply legal services free of charge, members of the public
The cab rank rule
You are obliged to accept instructions in a case which are addressed specifically to you, unless certain exceptions apply.
When the cab rank rule applies
The rule applies only when:
(a) You are a self employed barrister instructed by a professional client; and
(b) The instructions are appropriate taking into account your:
(i) Experience
(ii) Seniority
(iii) Field of practice
It does not apply to direct public access instructions.
Effect of the cab rank rule
If the cab rank rule applies, you must accept the instructions regardless of:
(a) identity of the client
(b) nature of the case to which the instructions relate
(c) whether the client is paying privately or is publicly funded; and
(d) any belief or opinion which you may have formed as to the character, reputation, cause, conduct, guilt or innocence of the client.
Exceptions to the cab rank rule
The cab rank rule does not apply if:
(a) You are required to refuse to accept instructions for the reasons set out in rC21.
(b) Accepting the instructions would require you to do something other than in the course of your ordinary working time, e.g. you would have to work over the next 3 weekends to carry out the instructions
(c) Accepting the instructions would require you to cancel a commitment already in your diary e.g. another trial
(d) The insurance cover available to you wouldn’t be enough if you were sued for professional negligence on the case
(e) Accepting the instructions would require you to do work outside the jurisdiction
(f) The professional client does not accept liability for your fees, is an unacceptable credit risk, or is instructing you in their personal capacity and not as a professional client
(g) You have not been offered a proper fee, or any fee which was agreed has not been paid, or the client wants you act on terms other than your standard terms of work.
rC21 - Situations in which you must refuse instructions
- Diary clash
- Too busy
- Conflict of interest
- Too little knowledge/experience
- Conditional instructions from professional client
Refusing instructions where there is a conflict of interest, or a real risk of conflict
(a) between your own personal interests and the interests of the prospective client
(b) between the prospective client and one or more of your former or existing clients in respect of the particular matter unless all of the clients give their informed consent to you acting in such circumstances
(c) a real risk that information confidential to another former or existing client, or any other person to whom you owe duties of confidence, may be relevant to the matter
- The test is ‘real risk.’
- If there is no risk, you should accept.
- If there is some risk, you should think about the degree of risk and refuse it if you think it is a real risk (and not only remotely possible). Consult client if appropriate.
- If there is a conflict of interest, you should refuse. If there is a real risk of conflict arising in the future, you should also refuse.
gC69 - Informed consent
The client cannot give informed consent to a conflict of interest between the barrister and client. They can only give consent to conflict with another client.
Confirmation in writing
When you first accept instructions, you must confirm in writing:
(a) That you accept the instructions
(b) The terms on which you will do the work
(c) The basis of charging
If you are a self-employed barrister in chambers, your clerk can confirm acceptance and terms on your behalf.