Court Opinion

ID: 4030253
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-08-31 16:07:27.374239+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:18:06.920638
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MINNESOTA

                                  IN SUPREME COURT

                                         A15-2078

 Original Jurisdiction                                                        Per Curiam
                                                     Dissenting, Anderson, Lillehaug, and
                                                                              Chutich, JJ.

 In re Charges of Unprofessional Conduct
 in Panel File No. 39302

                                                                   Filed: August 31, 2016
                                                                Office of Appellate Courts

                               ________________________

Susan M. Humiston, Director, Binh T. Toung, Assistant Director, Office of Lawyers
Professional Responsibility, Saint Paul, Minnesota, for respondent.

Eric T. Cooperstein, Law Office of Eric T. Cooperstein, PLLC, Minneapolis, Minnesota,
for appellant.

                               ________________________

                                     SYLLABUS

       1.     Based on appellant’s representation of Minnesota residents with respect to a

Minnesota judgment and attempt to negotiate with a Minnesota lawyer, via e-mail, the

satisfaction of that judgment, the Panel’s finding that appellant engaged in the unauthorized

                                             1
practice of law in Minnesota in violation of Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a), even though

appellant was not physically present in Minnesota, was not clearly erroneous.

      2.     The Panel’s finding that appellant was not authorized to practice law in

Minnesota temporarily, pursuant to Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c), was not clearly

erroneous where appellant took no steps to find local counsel or be admitted to practice

pro hac vice, and appellant’s clients were Minnesota residents with a debt owed to a

Minnesota resident that was governed by Minnesota law.

      3.     In this case, an admonition is the appropriate disposition for an out-of-state

attorney who engaged in the unauthorized practice of law in Minnesota.

      Affirmed.

                                     OPINION

PER CURIAM.

      The Director of the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility (the Director)

issued a private admonition to appellant for engaging in the unauthorized practice of law

in Minnesota. Appellant demanded that the Director present the charge to a Panel of the

Lawyers Professional Responsibility Board (the Panel). Following an evidentiary hearing,

the Panel affirmed the Director’s admonition, finding that appellant had engaged in the

unauthorized practice of law in Minnesota, in violation of Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a),

and that the misconduct was isolated and non-serious. Appellant filed a notice of appeal,

contesting the Panel’s determination that his conduct violated Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5.

See Rule 9(m), Rules on Lawyers Professional Responsibility (RLPR). We hold that

                                            2
engaging in e-mail communications with people in Minnesota may constitute the

unauthorized practice of law in Minnesota, in violation of Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a),

even if the lawyer is not physically present in Minnesota. The Panel’s finding that appellant

engaged in the unauthorized practice of law in Minnesota, in violation of Minn. R. Prof.

Conduct 5.5(a), was not clearly erroneous. Appellant represented a Minnesota couple with

respect to a Minnesota judgment and attempted to negotiate, via e-mail, the satisfaction of

that judgment with a Minnesota lawyer, and was not authorized to practice law in

Minnesota temporarily. We further conclude that the appropriate disposition for this

misconduct is an admonition.

                                             I.

       Appellant is an attorney licensed to practice law in the state of Colorado, where he

maintains an office and has been practicing environmental law since 1986. He has also

practiced personal injury law for approximately 7 years. Part of his litigation practice

includes debt collection. Appellant is admitted to practice law in New York, Florida, and

Alaska, but is currently on inactive status in those states. Appellant is also admitted to

practice in federal court in the District of Colorado, the District of Alaska, the Southern

and Western Districts of New York, and the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth

and Tenth Circuits. Appellant is not licensed to practice law in Minnesota.

       Appellant’s mother- and father-in-law live in Minnesota. They contacted appellant

in May 2014 to obtain assistance regarding a judgment entered against them in conciliation

court in Minnesota for $2,368.13 in favor of their condominium association, Voyager

                                             3
Condominium Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (VCHA). The couple told appellant that

VCHA’s attorney, D.R., a Minnesota-based lawyer and the complainant in this case, was

harassing them with telephone calls attempting to collect on the judgment. The couple

asked appellant for his assistance in negotiating with D.R. regarding payment of the

outstanding judgment.

         Appellant sent an e-mail to D.R. in late May 2014, informing D.R. that he was

representing his in-laws and instructing D.R. to direct all future communications to him

instead. Appellant and D.R. exchanged approximately two dozen e-mails between May

2014 and September 2014. In his first responsive e-mail to appellant, D.R. asked whether

appellant was licensed to practice law in Minnesota. Appellant replied that he was not

licensed in Minnesota and that if he needed to file suit in Minnesota he would hire local

counsel. The subsequent e-mails consisted of discussions regarding the in-laws’ assets and

ability to pay and whether the VCHA judgment would have priority in a foreclosure sale.

Appellant attached financial disclosure forms to one of his e-mails and made a settlement

offer.

         In the penultimate e-mail exchange between the two attorneys, D.R. asserted that

appellant was engaging in the unauthorized practice of law because he was not licensed in

Minnesota. The final e-mail prior to D.R. filing an ethics complaint was a settlement

proposal from appellant to D.R. on that same day. The Director received D.R.’s ethics

complaint in October 2014. Approximately 2 months after filing the complaint, D.R. sent

additional e-mails to appellant to determine whether the settlement offer was still available

                                             4
and whether appellant still represented his in-laws. Appellant did not respond to the

subsequent e-mails and had no further involvement in the case.

       Nothing in the record shows that appellant researched whether his activities

constituted the unauthorized practice of law under the Minnesota Rules of Professional

Conduct. When asked by the Panel at the evidentiary hearing whether he researched the

rules in Minnesota, appellant said that he did not recall. Appellant admitted that he had

not researched Minnesota law on foreclosure and how it would apply to his in-laws’ case.

Appellant also admitted that when he considered the relevant law and the rules of

professional conduct, he was more familiar with the laws and rules in Colorado.

       The Panel affirmed the Director’s admonition, finding that clear and convincing

evidence demonstrated a violation of Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a). See Rule 9(j)(1)(iii),

RLPR. The Panel found that appellant “is not licensed in Minnesota . . . . He is licensed in

Colorado . . . . He was—although maybe not paid, he certainly has held out the fact that he

represented clients, which regardless of whether they’re related or not, he did represent

them, admitted to representing them in a purely Minnesota case.”

       Pursuant to Rule 9(m), RLPR, appellant appealed the admonition to this court.

Specifically, appellant challenges the Panel’s determinations that he violated Minn. R.

Prof. Conduct 5.5(a) and that his conduct did not fall within one of the exceptions in Minn.

R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c). We address each issue in turn.

                                             5
                                              II.

       We turn first to appellant’s claim regarding Rule 5.5(a). It states, in relevant part,

that “[a] lawyer shall not practice law in a jurisdiction in violation of the regulation of the

legal profession in that jurisdiction . . . .” Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a).

       Appellant contends that he did not violate Rule 5.5(a) because he did not practice

law in Minnesota. According to appellant, a lawyer practices in a jurisdiction in one of

three ways: (1) by being physically present in the jurisdiction; (2) by establishing an office

or other systematic and continuous presence in the jurisdiction; or (3) by entering an

appearance in a matter through the filing of documents with a tribunal. Appellant argues

that e-mail communication directed to a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is not admitted to

practice does not fall within the definition of practicing law in a jurisdiction, and thus the

Panel erred in its determination that he violated Rule 5.5(a).

       We review findings made in lawyer discipline cases under a clearly erroneous

standard. In re Panel Case No. 23236, 728 N.W.2d 254, 257-58 (Minn. 2007). We “will

uphold the panel’s factual findings if they have evidentiary support in the record and are

not clearly erroneous.” In re Mose, 754 N.W.2d 357, 360 (Minn. 2008) (citing In re Singer,

735 N.W.2d 698, 703 (Minn. 2007)).

       Appellant concedes for the purpose of this appeal that he engaged in the practice of

law, albeit in Colorado. Such a concession is consistent with our prior cases holding that

negotiating the resolution of a claim on behalf of a client constitutes the practice of law.

See In re Ray, 610 N.W.2d 342, 343, 346 (Minn. 2000) (upholding the referee’s finding

                                              6
that the attorney engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by negotiating with the county

attorney on behalf of a client while the attorney was subject to a disciplinary suspension);

In re Ray, 452 N.W.2d 689, 693 (Minn. 1990) (holding that “the record support[ed] the

referee’s conclusion” that the attorney engaged in the unauthorized practice of law by

attempting to negotiate settlements for two clients). Appellant maintains, however, that an

attorney does not practice law in another jurisdiction merely by engaging in e-mail

communications with individuals in that jurisdiction. Whether an attorney engages in the

practice of law in Minnesota by sending e-mails from another jurisdiction is a matter of

first impression.

       Rule 5.5(a) of the Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct does not explicitly

define what it means to practice law in a jurisdiction. Certainly, physical presence is one

way to practice law in a jurisdiction. But, as we set forth below, it is not the only way.

       Other courts have addressed the issue of whether an attorney practices law in a

jurisdiction even though the attorney was not physically present in that jurisdiction. In

Birbrower, Montalbano, Condon & Frank, P.C. v. Superior Court, 949 P.2d 1, 5-6 (Cal.

1998), the California Supreme Court analyzed what constituted the practice of law in a

jurisdiction by looking at the nature of the legal representation in the jurisdiction, instead

of focusing solely on physical presence. In determining what it means to practice law in

California, the court considered whether the lawyer had “sufficient contact with the

California client to render the nature of the legal services a clear legal representation” and

whether the lawyers’ contact with California was merely “fortuitous or attenuated.” Id.

                                              7
at 5. The court determined that a lawyer “may practice law in the state . . . although not

physically present here by advising a California client on California law in connection with

a California legal dispute by telephone, fax, computer, or other modern technological

means.” Id. at 5-6; see also In re Babies, 315 B.R. 785, 791-93 (Bankr. N.D. Ga. 2004)

(concluding that attorneys who were physically present in Illinois practiced law in Georgia

by representing Georgia clients with respect to a bankruptcy, preparing documents related

to that bankruptcy, and communicating with these clients via the telephone and mail).

       The reasoning in Birbrower is persuasive. Based on that reasoning, we conclude

that the Panel did not clearly err by finding that appellant practiced law in Minnesota, in

violation of Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a). 1 Appellant contacted D.R., a Minnesota

lawyer, and stated that he represented Minnesota clients in a Minnesota legal dispute. This

legal dispute was not interjurisdictional; instead, it involved only Minnesota residents and

1
       Clients frequently do business in multiple states, and modern technology makes
rapid communication across state borders routine. As a result, many lawyers are involved
in multijurisdictional practices. The rule governing the unauthorized practice of law
accounts for multijurisdictional practices. It has exceptions that allow lawyers who are not
admitted to practice in Minnesota to practice here temporarily in certain circumstances.
See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c); see also Rule 9, Rules for Admission to the Bar
(addressing temporary house counsel license). If there are concerns that these exceptions
do not adequately meet client needs, the better way to address such concerns would be
through filing a petition to amend Rule 5.5(c). The same is true for the dissent’s claim that
Rule 5.5(c) should allow lawyers not licensed to practice law in Minnesota to temporarily
represent family members or friends in minor matters involving only Minnesota and
Minnesota law. At the same time, lawyers must be cognizant of and respect each state’s
obligation to enact regulations that ensure the lawyers who represent its citizens are
competent to do so. See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5 cmt. 2 (“Whatever the definition” of
the practice of law, “limiting the practice of law to members of the bar protects the public
against rendition of legal services by unqualified persons.”).
                                               8
a debt arising from a judgment entered by a Minnesota court. Appellant instructed D.R. to

refer all future correspondence to him, and he continued to engage in correspondence and

negotiations with D.R. over the course of several months. Appellant requested and

received financial documents from his Minnesota clients and advised them on their legal

options. By multiple e-mails sent over several months, appellant advised Minnesota clients

on Minnesota law in connection with a Minnesota legal dispute and attempted to negotiate

a resolution of that dispute with a Minnesota attorney. Appellant had a clear, ongoing

attorney-client relationship with his Minnesota clients, and his contacts with Minnesota

were not fortuitous or attenuated. Thus, there is ample support for the Panel’s finding that

appellant practiced law in Minnesota.

                                                III.

          Next, we turn to appellant’s claim that even if the Panel did not err in determining

    that he was practicing law in Minnesota in violation of Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a), his

    conduct was permitted under one of the exceptions in Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c).

    Appellant argues that Rule 5.5(c)(2) authorized his conduct because he reasonably

    believed that he would be able to associate with local counsel and be admitted pro hac

    vice if necessary. Appellant further claims that Rule 5.5(c)(4) authorized his conduct

    because his in-laws reached out to him for assistance on a matter within his expertise; thus

    the matter “arose out of [Appellant’s] law practice.” 2

2
       At the Panel hearing, appellant argued that Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c)(3)
authorized his conduct. The Panel addressed Rule 5.5(c)(3) in its findings. In his brief to

                                                 9
       Rule 5.5(c) permits an attorney to practice temporarily in a jurisdiction in which the

attorney is not admitted. It states:

       A lawyer admitted in another United States jurisdiction, and not disbarred or
       suspended from practice in any jurisdiction, may provide legal services on a
       temporary basis in this jurisdiction which:
       ....

       (2) are in or reasonably related to a pending or potential proceeding before a
       tribunal in this or another jurisdiction, if the lawyer, or a person the lawyer
       is assisting, is authorized by law or order to appear in the proceeding or
       reasonably expects to be so authorized;

       ...

       or

       (4) are not within paragraphs (c)(2) or (c)(3) and arise out of or are reasonably
       related to the lawyer’s practice in a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is
       admitted to practice.

Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c).

       Under Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct 5.5(c)(2), a lawyer admitted in

another jurisdiction may provide legal services in Minnesota on a temporary basis if the

lawyer’s services are reasonably related to a pending or potential proceeding before a

tribunal and the lawyer reasonably expects to be authorized by law to appear in the

proceeding. Comment 10 explains that a lawyer rendering services in Minnesota on a

this court, appellant does not raise Rule 5.5(c)(3). Instead, he argues that Minn. R. Prof.
Conduct 5.5(c)(2) and (4) authorized his conduct. It is not clear whether appellant properly
preserved his arguments regarding the application of Rule 5.5(c)(2) and (4), because he did
not raise them with the Panel. The Director, however, does not argue that appellant has
forfeited these issues, and the Director expressly stated at oral argument that they were
properly before us. As a result, we will assume these arguments are properly before us and
address them.
                                             10
temporary basis is permitted to engage in conduct in anticipation of a proceeding or hearing

in which the lawyer reasonably expects to be admitted pro hac vice. Minn. R. Prof.

Conduct 5.5(c)(2) cmt. 10.

       Appellant suggests that there was a potential proceeding that could be brought on

behalf of his in-laws. Because of this belief, appellant contends Rule 5.5(c)(2) protects

him. The Director persuasively argues that appellant knew further litigation was unlikely

because a court had already decided the underlying case involving his in-laws, and

appellant was simply negotiating a potential debt resolution. In addition, Rule 5.5(c)(2),

by its plain language, requires more than an attorney’s speculation that the attorney can

find local counsel and be admitted to practice pro hac vice.            Appellant’s e-mail

correspondence does not indicate that he took steps to secure local counsel or investigate

the possibility of pro hac vice admission. Thus, we conclude there is no support for

appellant’s claim that his conduct was authorized by Rule 5.5(c)(2).

       Under Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct 5.5(c)(4), a lawyer admitted in

another jurisdiction may provide legal services in Minnesota on a temporary basis if the

lawyer’s services are not covered by paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) and “arise out of or are

reasonably related to the lawyer’s practice in a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is admitted

to practice.” Appellant contends that his services arose out of or were reasonably related

to his practice in Colorado because the clients are his relatives who “reached out to him for

assistance” and appellant’s environmental and personal-injury practice involves debt

collection.

                                             11
       Comment 14 of Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct 5.5 provides guidance on

this issue. Specifically, comment 14 instructs that several factors may demonstrate that an

attorney’s temporary legal services in Minnesota reasonably relate to the lawyer’s practice

in a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is admitted to practice (“lawyer’s home jurisdiction”),

including: whether the client is a resident of or has substantial contacts with the lawyer’s

home jurisdiction; whether the client has previously been represented by the lawyer;

whether a significant aspect of the matter involves the law of the lawyer’s home

jurisdiction; whether the client’s activities or the legal issues involve multiple jurisdictions;

or whether the services “draw on the lawyer’s recognized expertise developed through the

regular practice of law on behalf of clients in matters involving a particular body of federal,

nationally-uniform, foreign, or international law.” Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5 cmt. 14; see

also Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers, § 3 cmt. e (Am. Law Inst. 2000)

(stating that a lawyer may provide legal services outside of a home jurisdiction if the

services reasonably relate to the lawyer’s practice in his or her home jurisdiction and listing

factors similar to those in Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5 cmt. 14 for determining if the services

reasonably relate to the lawyer’s practice in the home jurisdiction, including whether “the

legal issues involved are primarily either multistate or federal in nature”).

       The legal services appellant provided to his in-laws were unrelated to his

environmental and personal-injury practice in Colorado. The record establishes that

appellant was involved in litigation in Colorado state court, including eight trials in the past

                                               12
7 years in which collection issues arose, 3 and that appellant negotiated the resolution of a

debt with an out-of-state creditor on behalf of several Colorado residents. Although Rule

5.5(c) may permit appellant to negotiate with a Colorado client’s out-of-state creditor

because this representation is reasonably related to appellant’s Colorado practice, the facts

of this case are substantially different. Appellant’s in-laws are not Colorado residents, and

appellant had no prior attorney-client relationship with them.

       Moreover, appellant’s representation of his in-laws did not “arise out of” or

“reasonably relate” to his practice in Colorado simply because his in-laws contacted him

in Colorado or appellant has done collections work in Colorado. As the Director notes,

appellant’s in-laws were not long-standing clients; nor was there any connection between

the in-laws’ case and the state or laws of Colorado. And while appellant’s Colorado

practice may involve judgment collections work, nothing in the record establishes that this

work was based on a body of federal or nationally uniform law. 4 To the contrary,

3
        Three exhibits in the Panel proceeding are appellant’s filings in two Colorado state
court matters related to judgments for costs and attorney fees that had been entered against
his clients.
4
        The dissent’s reliance on comment 14 to Rule 5.5 to support its claim that
appellant’s representation of his in-laws was reasonably related to his Colorado practice is
misplaced. According to the dissent, the representation was reasonably related to
appellant’s Colorado practice because “appellant has developed experience and expertise
in the area of judgment collections through his participation in eight trials and multiple
filings.” The dissent acknowledges, however, that the record does not establish that
“appellant’s collection practice is ‘nationally uniform.’ ” See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5
cmt. 14 (stating that one of the factors that may demonstrate that a lawyer’s temporary legal
services in Minnesota reasonably relate to the lawyer’s practice in a home jurisdiction is
whether the services “draw on the lawyer’s recognized expertise developed through the

                                             13
appellant’s clients were Minnesota residents with a debt that arose in Minnesota that they

owed to a Minnesota resident and that was governed by Minnesota law. Accordingly, Rule

5.5(c)(4) does not apply to appellant’s conduct.

                                             IV.

       Finally, we consider the appropriate discipline for appellant’s misconduct. We give

great weight to the recommendations of the Panel, but we have “the final responsibility for

determining appropriate discipline for violations of the rules of professional conduct”.

Panel Case No. 23236, 728 N.W.2d at 258. We do not impose sanctions in attorney-

discipline cases as punishment, but rather we impose sanctions “to protect the public, to

protect the judicial system, and to deter future misconduct by the disciplined attorney [and]

other attorneys.” In re Rebeau, 787 N.W.2d 168, 173 (Minn. 2010). We impose sanctions

according to the unique facts of each case, and “when considering appropriate sanctions

for misconduct, we weigh the following factors: (1) the nature of the misconduct, (2) the

cumulative weight of the disciplinary violations, (3) the harm to the public, and (4) the

regular practice of law on behalf of clients in matters involving a particular body of federal,
nationally-uniform, foreign, or international law”). In fact, the record establishes the
opposite. When appellant asked D.R. whether relevant Minnesota law was the same as
Colorado law, D.R. indicated that it was not.

       Instead, the dissent argues, without citing any legal support for its claim, that the
subject on which an attorney has expertise does not need to be nationally uniform in order
for legal services provided outside the attorney’s home jurisdiction to reasonably relate to
the attorney’s practice in his or her home jurisdiction. We disagree. Rule 5.5(c) is an
exception to the general prohibition on the unauthorized practice of law. By interpreting
the exception to apply to expertise in any subject matter, the dissent allows the exception
to swallow the general rule.
                                             14
harm to the legal profession.” Panel Case No. 23236, 728 N.W.2d at 258 (citation omitted)

(internal quotation marks omitted).

       The nature of the misconduct in this case is non-serious. Appellant wrongly

believed that he could negotiate a settlement in Minnesota without being licensed to

practice law in the state. The cumulative weight of the misconduct is also minimal.

Appellant engaged in a series of e-mail communications with one attorney in a single

matter involving appellant’s family members. In addition, the only harm appellant’s clients

suffered was a delay in the resolution of their debt because of appellant’s actions.

Accordingly, a private admonition is the appropriate discipline for appellant.

       Affirmed.

                                            15
                                       DISSENT

ANDERSON, Justice (dissenting).

       The court affirms the Panel’s determination that appellant violated Rule 5.5(a),

which provides that a “lawyer shall not practice law in a jurisdiction in violation of the

regulation of the legal profession in that jurisdiction.” Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a). But

as an exception to this rule, a lawyer admitted in another jurisdiction may provide

temporary legal services in Minnesota if the services “arise out of or are reasonably related

to the lawyer’s practice in a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is admitted to practice.” Minn.

R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c)(4). The court concludes that Rule 5.5(c)(4) does not apply because

the services that appellant provided here—assisting family members with a judgment-

collection negotiation—are not “reasonably related” to his practice of law in Colorado. I

disagree.

       Appellant argues that Rule 5.5(c)(4) applies because his in-law’s judgment-

collection matter was “reasonably related” to his practice in Colorado, which includes

judgment-collection work. Appellant contends that he has experience with judgment

collections and that collection work is an integral and necessary part of his litigation

practice in Colorado. Upon review of the record, I agree that appellant’s temporary

provision of legal assistance to his parents-in-law regarding the negotiation of a small

collection matter in Minnesota is “reasonably related” to appellant’s practice of law in

Colorado. Therefore, the exception in Rule 5.5(c)(4) applies, and respectfully, I dissent.

                                            D-1
       In concluding that appellant’s work for his parents-in-law was not “reasonably

related” to his practice in Colorado, the court primarily focuses on appellant’s practice in

the areas of environmental and personal-injury law. But, as the court notes, appellant also

has experience with collection work, as reflected in the record. Appellant argues that he

has engaged in and developed experience with collection work in his litigation practice.

More specifically, appellant testified to the Panel that “collection work” is “an integral part

of my litigation practice.” He testified that in the past seven years, he has engaged in

judgment-collection work and has participated in eight trials in this area of practice. In

addition, he demonstrated that, in a single previous month, he had made three filings

dealing with judgment collections, which he submitted to the Panel as exhibits.

       Based on this record, I would conclude that appellant’s assistance with a small

judgment-collection negotiation for his parents-in-law, including the emails to D.R., were

“reasonably related” to appellant’s practice in Colorado, which satisfies Rule 5.5(c)(4).

The “reasonably related” exception in Rule 5.5(c)(4) is a broad, catch-all exception that is

intended to exempt circumstances such as those presented here. Moreover, the familial

connection between appellant and his in-laws, and the fact that they contacted appellant in

Colorado for assistance, should be an additional consideration that supports a finding that

the matter was “reasonably related” to his practice in Colorado under Rule 5.5(c)(4).

       The exception established by ABA Model Rule 5.5(c)(4)—which is identical in

wording to our Rule 5.5(c)(4)—is described as a “broad catch-all” and a “safe harbor” for

out-of-state lawyers to engage in temporary practice that is “reasonably related” to the

lawyer’s home-state practice. Ronald D. Rotunda & John S. Dzienkowski, Legal Ethics:

                                             D-2
The Lawyer’s Deskbook on Professional Responsibility § 5.5-2, at 1112 (2016) (emphasis

added); see also Am. Bar Ass’n & Bureau of Nat’l Affairs, Inc., ABA/BNA Lawyer’s

Manual on Professional Conduct 21:2110 (2009).

       Rule 5.5(c)(4) also closely follows the Restatement, which states: “A lawyer

currently admitted to practice in a jurisdiction may provide legal services to a client: . . . at

a place within a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is not admitted to the extent that the

lawyer's activities arise out of or are otherwise reasonably related to the lawyer's practice

under Subsection (1) or (2).” Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers § 3(3)

(Am. Law Inst. 2000). One of the comments to this section states that it is “clearly

permissible for a lawyer from a home-state office to direct communications to persons and

organizations in other states (in which the lawyer is not separately admitted), by letter,

telephone, telecopier, or other forms of electronic communication.” Id. at § 3 cmt. e

(emphasis added).

       As explained in the Restatement, the prior, more restrictive rules governing

interstate practice by nonlocal lawyers “were formed at a time when lawyers conducted

very little [interstate] practice” and thus “imposed little actual inconvenience.” Id. By

contrast today, “as interstate and international commerce, transportation, and

communications have expanded, clients have increasingly required a truly interstate . . .

practice by their lawyers.” Id. The ABA recognized that rule changes were needed as the

frequency and ease of multistate practice increased, supported by electronic

communication and remote services (e.g., e-mails, phone and video conferencing,

electronic filing). Rotunda & Dzienkowski, supra, at 1100-01. In this modern context,

                                              D-3
lawyers routinely communicate from one jurisdiction with a client located in another

jurisdiction. Id. at 1101. Thus, the ABA Model Rules “encouraged . . . [the removal of]

unnecessary restrictions on interstate practice.” Id. at 1100-01.

       The comments to Rule 5.5(c)(4) provide guidance on whether a “reasonable

relationship” exists between the lawyer’s temporary services in Minnesota and the lawyer’s

practice in another jurisdiction. See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5 cmt. 13-14. Comment 14

explains that “[a] variety of factors” may evidence such a reasonable relationship. Id. at

cmt. 14. The examples and factors to consider in comment 14 are not exhaustive, nor are

they mandatory. See id. (providing examples and factors that “may” or “might” support a

reasonable relationship); see also Minn. R. Prof. Conduct, Scope cmt. 14 (“Comments do

not add obligations to the rules but provide guidance . . . .”). One factor provided in Rule

5.5, comment 14, relates to whether the lawyer’s temporary services draw on the lawyer’s

“expertise developed through the regular practice of law” in a particular body of law.

Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5 cmt. 14. Here, the record reflects that appellant has developed

experience and expertise in the area of judgment collections through his participation in

eight trials and multiple filings.

       The Director argues that the guidance in comment 14 weighs against applying the

Rule 5.5(c)(4) exception because the record does not establish that appellant’s parents-in-

law specifically sought appellant for his “recognized expertise . . . involving a particular

body of federal, nationally-uniform, foreign, or international law.” See Minn. R. Prof.

Conduct 5.5 cmt. 14. I agree that the record does not meticulously detail the extent to

which the law applicable to appellant’s collection practice is “nationally uniform” or the

                                            D-4
extent to which his experience with collection work is “recognized.” But as discussed

above, the explanatory language in the comments is not mandatory or exhaustive—it

merely provides examples of the types of temporary legal services that may satisfy the

broad, “reasonably related” catch-all exception under Rule 5.5(c)(4).             The broad,

“reasonably related” requirement and the principles underlying the guidance in comment

14 surely apply here. 1 The record reflects that appellant developed experience and

“expertise” with a particular body of law—collections—in at least eight trials over seven

years, including three judgment-collection filings within a single month.

       In addition, the clients’ relationship to appellant, including their familial connection

and the clients’ contacts with appellant in his home state, should be considered in the

“reasonable relationship” analysis. The comments to the Restatement advise that, in

determining whether an out-of-state lawyer’s activities “reasonably relate” to the lawyer’s

practice in a state of admission, “several factors are relevant, including the following: . . .

[whether the client] is from the lawyer’s home state, has extensive contacts with that state,

or contacted the lawyer there.” Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers § 3

cmt. e (emphasis added). Here, the clients contacted their son-in-law, appellant, in his

home state of Colorado.

1
        The court argues that I reach this conclusion “without citing any legal support.” But
comments to the Rules of Professional Conduct “explain[] and illustrate[] the meaning and
purpose of the rule[s].” Minn. R. Prof. Conduct Scope cmt. 21. They are “intended as
guides to interpretation” and therefore are persuasive when applying the Rules of
Professional Conduct to the case at hand. Id.
        The court is also incorrect that my interpretation “allows the exception to swallow
the general rule.” This is not so. The lawyer’s services must still be “reasonably related”
to the lawyer’s practice in the state of admission. Although this exception is broad, it does
not encompass subject matters unrelated to the lawyer’s practice.

                                             D-5
       Additional analogous support is provided in comment 14 to Rule 5.5(c)(4), which

states that one factor to consider is whether the “lawyer’s client may have been previously

represented by the lawyer.” Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(c)(4) cmt. 14. Although the record

does not indicate whether appellant ever previously represented his parents-in-law, the

principle underlying this comment—a relationship of trust and familiarity with the lawyer’s

capabilities—is applicable here. The recognition that a sustained lawyer-client relationship

would allow an attorney to perform legal work for the client in other jurisdictions, based

on confidence and trust, is reflected in the ABA’s recommendation for the proposed Model

Rule 5.5. Regarding the exception under Rule 5.5(c)(4), the ABA stated:

       [Model Rule 5.5(c)(4)] would respect . . . client-lawyer relationships by
       permitting a client to retain a lawyer to work on multiple related matters,
       including some having no connection to the jurisdiction in which the lawyer
       is licensed. . . . [C]lients are better served by having a sustained relationship
       with a lawyer or law firm in whom the client has confidence.

Am. Bar Ass’n, Client Representation in the 21st Century: Report of the Commission on

Multijurisdictional Practice 30-31 (2002) (emphasis added). The ABA recommendation

further explains that in such cases of reasonably related, temporary services under Rule

5.5(c)(4), it is “sufficient to rely on the lawyer’s home state as the jurisdiction with the

primary responsibility to ensure that the lawyer has the requisite character and fitness to

practice law” because the home state “has a substantial interest in ensuring that all aspects

of the lawyer’s provision of legal services, wherever they occur, are conducted competently

and professionally.” Id. at 30.

                                             D-6
          Finally, as a policy matter, the implications of the court’s decision are troubling and

counterproductive. The ABA Model Rule 5.5(c), as adopted by our state, was intended as

a broad catch-all that “represent[s] a bold step towards new latitude in [a]

multijurisdictional practice of law,” which accommodates the increasingly mobile and

electronic nature of modern, national legal practice. See Rotunda & Dzienkowski, supra,

at 1100-01, 1112. Today’s decision represents a step backwards. By the court’s reasoning,

when family members or friends—an abundant source of clients—email or call a

practitioner admitted in another state, seeking assistance in areas in which the practitioner

is experienced and competent, relying on a relationship of trust and confidence, they must

be turned away. Those potential clients must then expend unnecessary time and resources

to research and hire local counsel—even for minor, temporary services in which the out-

of-state lawyer could have provided efficient, inexpensive, and competent service. Simply

put, the court’s decision is contrary to the principles and policy goals intended by Rule

5.5(c).

          In sum, this case involves clients contacting an attorney, their son-in-law, in his

home state of Colorado, to request his assistance regarding a small collection matter—an

area that reasonably relates to appellant’s expertise and experience in his Colorado

litigation practice. Based on the relationship and contacts between the clients, appellant,

and appellant’s practice of law in Colorado, there is a sufficient “reasonable relationship”

here to satisfy the broad, catch-all exception under Rule 5.5(c)(4). For the above reasons,

I conclude that appellant did not engage in professional misconduct because the exception

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in Rule 5.5(c)(4) applies. 2 Therefore, I would reverse the Panel’s decision to admonish

appellant. I respectfully dissent.

LILLEHAUG, Justice (dissenting).

       I join in the dissent of Justice Anderson.

CHUTICH, Justice (dissenting).

       I join in the dissent of Justice Anderson.

2
        In addition, I observe that any violation of Rule 5.5(a) requires reference to other
Minnesota laws or rules to determine whether a lawyer practiced “in violation of the
regulation of the legal profession.” Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 5.5(a). The court’s opinion
does not cite the substantive “regulation” that appellant violated. The Director cited a
statute that prohibits certain types of conduct except by persons admitted and licensed to
practice as attorneys in Minnesota. See Minn. Stat. § 481.02, subd. 1 (2014). This statute
prohibits several types of conduct, including “by word, sign, letter, or advertisement, []
hold[ing] out . . . as being engaged in advising or counseling . . . or in furnishing to others
the services of a lawyer[,]” and “giv[ing] legal advice or counsel [or] perform[ing] for or
furnish[ing] to another legal services” for a “fee or any consideration” Id. The second type
of conduct is inapplicable because appellant did not charge any fee. The first type of
conduct, a “holding out” violation, may or may not be applicable based on appellant’s
email exchanges with D.R., including his statement that he “represent[ed] [his parents-in-
law] in all matters related to [the] delinquent account.” The panel found that appellant
“was—although maybe not paid, he certainly has held out the fact that he represented
clients.” But there are also persuasive arguments that appellant’s conduct was not a
“holding out” violation, including, but not limited to, the absence of any communication
to the general public.
        Although the issue of whether there was an underlying “holding out” violation was
not argued by either party and therefore need not be resolved here, there are at least a couple
of concerns worthy of comment. First, it is unclear to me whether, ultimately, appellant’s
emails were actually a violation of the “hold[ing] out” clause according to the meaning and
intent of section 481.02, subdivision 1. Second, the Director’s charges of unprofessional
conduct did not clearly specify that appellant was charged with a violation of the “hold[ing]
out” clause of this statute. Instead, the Director summarily referred to the entire statutory
provision and described it as prohibiting nonlicensed attorneys from “providing legal
services.” This lack of specificity may raise due process concerns.

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