Title: In Re: Amendments to the Rules Regulating The Florida Bar - Rules 11-1.3 And 11-1.9 (Biennial Petition)

State: florida

Issuer: Florida Supreme Court

Document:

Supreme Court of Florida 
 
 
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No. SC16-1963 
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IN RE:  AMENDMENTS TO THE RULES REGULATING THE FLORIDA 
BAR—RULES 11-1.3 AND 11-1.9 (BIENNIAL PETITION). 
 
[April 13, 2017] 
 
PER CURIAM. 
 
This matter is before the Court for consideration of proposed amendments to 
the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar (Bar Rules).  We have jurisdiction.  See art. 
V, § 15, Fla. Const. 
The Florida Bar (Bar) has filed its biennial petition proposing amendments 
to Bar Rules 11-1.3 (Requirements and Limitations) and 11-1.9 (Continuation of 
Practice Program After Completion of Law School Program or Graduation), 
regarding certified legal interns.  Pursuant to Bar Rule 1-12.1(g), the Bar published 
formal notice of its intent to file a petition recommending these amendments in 
The Florida Bar News.  This notice was published on September 1, 2016, and 
allowed interested persons thirty days after the filing of the Bar’s petition to 
provide comments to the Court.  No comments were filed with the Court.   
 
 
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BACKGROUND 
In September 2003, The Florida Bar’s Special Board Committee to Study 
the Law School Practice Program (Committee) undertook the task of reviewing 
and studying Chapter 11 of the Rules Regulating the Florida Bar for the purpose of 
suggesting possible amendments to the rules governing the Law School Practice 
Program in order to address certain perceived shortcomings.  See In re Amends. to 
R. Regulating Fla. Bar re Chapter 11 Task Force, 964 So. 2d 690 (Fla. 2007).  In 
June 2005, the Committee submitted three proposed revisions to Chapter 11 to the 
Court for its consideration, one of which was a proposal to amend rules 11-1.3 and 
11-1.9 to require law school students and graduates wishing to participate in a 
certified legal intern program to apply for admission to The Florida Bar and obtain 
a letter of initial clearance as to character and fitness from the Florida Board of Bar 
Examiners as a prerequisite to participation.  Id. at 691.  At that time, multiple 
comments were filed opposing this change; however, the Florida Board of Bar 
Examiners supported the amendments.  Ultimately, the Court adopted a modified 
version of the proposal which required registration as a certified legal intern 
registrant and receipt of a “letter of clearance as to character and fitness from the 
Florida Board of Bar Examiners.”  Id. at 692.  This change was applied 
prospectively only to law school students entering a law school practice program 
on August 1, 2008, or later.  Id. at 694.  In its opinion, the Court stated: 
 
 
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Under the current versions of rules 11–1.3(a) and 11–1.9(b), the 
analysis of an applicant's character and fitness has been the 
responsibility of the applicant's law school dean and the agency or 
office where the applicant applies to serve.  In the past, this has led to 
a wide disparity in the quality and quantity of the background 
investigations conducted and very serious problems.  Not surprisingly, 
this resulted in some persons being approved for participation who, 
because of disqualifying or other negative incidents in the past, should 
not have been accepted if the background information had been 
otherwise disclosed.  Accordingly, we asked the Committee to 
propose an amendment which would provide a plan for a uniform and 
high-quality background investigation to be conducted on every 
person prior to certification by this Court of authorization to become a 
certified intern for acceptance into a law school practice program or as 
a post-graduate certified legal intern. 
We first address the proposed amendment to rule 11–1.3 
(Requirements and Limitations) to add a new subdivision (a).  The 
proposed amendment would require all law students who seek to be 
authorized as certified interns to complete and submit to the Board an 
application for admission to the Bar and to obtain an initial clearance 
letter from the Board as a prerequisite to participation in the program. 
See generally Fla. Bar Admiss. R. 2–21, 2–21.2 & 2–23. 
We agree that the Board should be the entity to conduct the 
fitness and character screening of law students for participation in the 
certified intern program.  The Board possesses the most experience in 
conducting background investigations designed to determine issues of 
character and fitness for the practice of law.  It is the entity 
responsible for screening applicants for admission to the Bar to ensure 
the continued quality and character of those admitted to the practice of 
law in this state.  It has established an impressive track record of 
success in this area over many years and has the staff and expertise to 
perform this function. 
While we realize that students who seek to become certified 
interns are not attorneys and have not taken or passed the bar 
examination, we nevertheless believe these students, who actually 
provide legal representation to others under the supervision of 
members of The Florida Bar, must have the requisite character and 
fitness for eventual admission, either to the Bar of this state or other 
state bar of their choice.  We repose our trust for the accomplishment 
of this purpose in the Board.  Those certified actually provide legal 
 
 
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representation to others, albeit under the supervision of a member of 
the Bar. 
 
Id. at 691-92.   
PROPOSED AMENDMENTS 
The Bar now proposes amending rules 11-1.3 (Requirements and 
Limitations) and 11-1.9 (Continuation of Practice Program After Completion of 
Law School Program or Graduation), to allow a law student or graduate to become 
a certified legal intern after passing a Level 2 background investigation, a process 
which the Bar states can be completed in one to three weeks.  The Bar states that 
the process under the current rule can take six to nine months.  The proposal aims 
to expedite and streamline the process for law students and graduates to obtain 
initial clearance from the Florida Board of Bar Examiners in order to participate in 
certified legal intern programs.  The proposal requires the law student to register 
with the Board as a certified legal intern registrant and furnish his or her 
fingerprints to enable the Board to conduct a Level 2 background investigation.  
Under the proposal, the Board would conduct the investigation “as soon as possible 
after the law student submits the registration and appropriate fee” and “issue an 
initial letter of clearance to the law student if the results of the Level 2 background 
investigation do not demonstrate a lack of honesty, trustworthiness, diligence or 
reliability.”  The Bar states that this process will ensure that the public is protected 
by confirming that the law student has a clear criminal history before being 
 
 
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certified as a legal intern; it allows the law student to be certified in one to three 
weeks, rather than six to nine months; and it requires early application for 
admission to The Florida Bar.   
According to the petition in this case, during development of the proposals, 
the Bar received several comments which noted that since the adoption of the 
current rule, participation in certified legal intern programs has significantly fallen 
due, at least in part, to the amount of time it takes for a registrant to receive 
clearance from the Florida Board of Bar Examiners.  Also during the development 
of the proposals, the Board made its objections known to the Bar.  The Board 
objected to the Bar’s proposals on several grounds.  First, the Board disputed that 
under the current rule, clearance of individuals takes six to nine months; rather, the 
Board asserted that from October 2010 through September 2015, the average time 
ranged from approximately four to five and a half months.  Second, the Board 
maintained that it is not possible to determine requisite character and fitness for 
eventual admission to The Florida Bar with just a Level 2 background check, 
especially when criminal conduct is only one of the fourteen areas of potentially 
disqualifying conduct the Board is required to consider under Rule of the Supreme 
Court Relating to Admissions to the Bar 3-12.  Third, the Board contended that the 
standard to be met under the rule—i.e, that the Board will issue a letter of initial 
clearance “if the results of the Level 2 background investigation do not 
 
 
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demonstrate a lack of honesty, trustworthiness, diligence, or reliability”—is very 
unclear.  And finally, the Board contended that the amendments would have the 
unintended consequence of more law students delaying filing the student 
registration because there would be no requirement to file an early application to 
obtain certification as a legal intern.  
CONCLUSION 
  
On balance, we conclude that the Bar’s proposal in this case is not an 
acceptable compromise between the position of the Florida Board of Bar 
Examiners—the entity in which we have reposed our trust to carry out the 
responsibility of screening the character and fitness of certified legal intern 
registrants—and the positions of the law schools and programs who rely on the 
participation of certified legal interns to help serve their clients.  Although we are 
concerned that the current rule may have contributed to the reduced participation in 
certified legal intern programs, and we agree that this reduction in participation is 
detrimental to law students, law schools, and the programs themselves, we cannot 
place those interests, no matter how important, above our duty to ensure that the 
participating students and graduates, who actually provide legal representation 
under the supervision of members of The Florida Bar, possess the requisite 
character and fitness for eventual admission to the practice of law, either in this 
state or another state of their choice.  For this reason, we decline to adopt the 
 
 
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proposed amendments at this time.  The Florida Board of Bar Examiners and the 
law schools should continue to stress the benefits of participation and the need for 
early application to the various clinical and internship opportunities that are 
available.  We strongly encourage law school students to continue to participate in 
certified legal intern programs and to register early with the Florida Board of Bar 
Examiners in order to timely receive clearance under the current rules.     
 
It is so ordered. 
LABARGA, C.J., and PARIENTE, QUINCE, POLSTON, and LAWSON, JJ., 
concur. 
LEWIS, J., concurs in result. 
CANADY, J., concurs in result with an opinion. 
 
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND 
IF FILED, DETERMINED. 
 
CANADY, J., concurring in result. 
 
I agree that we should not adopt the proposed rule changes.  But I would 
refer the matter back to the Bar for the development of a proposal that would shift 
responsibility for providing letters of clearance for certified legal interns from the 
Board of Bar Examiners to the Bar itself.  I believe that the public interest can be 
adequately protected through the suggested Level 2 background investigation 
coupled with supervision of interns by members of The Florida Bar.  And I believe 
that this approach can most appropriately be implemented by the Bar.   
Original Proceeding – Rules Regulating The Florida Bar 
 
 
 
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John F. Harkness, Jr., Executive Director, William J. Schifino, Jr., President, 
Michael J. Higer, President-elect, Gordon J. Glover, Young Lawyers Division 
President 2015-16, Lori S. Holcomb, Director, Division of Ethics and Consumer 
Protection, and Elizabeth Clark Tarbert, Ethics Counsel, The Florida Bar, 
Tallahassee, Florida, 
 
 
for Petitioner