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Opinion 295
Restriction on Communications by a
Lawyer Acting as Guardian Ad Litem in a Child Abuse and Neglect Proceeding
A
lawyer appointed to act as a guardian ad litem in a child abuse and neglect
proceeding in the District of Columbia represents the child and
the best interests of the child. In the absence of a conflict between
the two interests, the guardian ad litem is the child’s lawyer. Each of
the child’s parents may be represented by separate counsel. Under DC Rule
4.2, the guardian ad litem may not communicate about the subject of the
representation with either of the child’s parents without notification
of and consent from the parent’s lawyer. The guardian ad litem may communicate
directly with a represented parent if the sole purpose of the communication
is to obtain information about how to contact the child or to schedule
a meeting with the child. Such communication would be administrative
in nature and would not be “about the subject of the representation.”
Applicable
Rules
-
Rule 3.5 (Impartiality and Decorum of the Tribunal)
-
Rule 4.2
(Communication Between Lawyer and Opposing Parties)
-
Rule 8.4(a)
(Misconduct)
Inquiry
The inquirer seeks advice about whether a lawyer appointed to act
as guardian ad litem in a child abuse and neglect proceeding may
communicate with a parent of the child she represents, who is represented
by counsel, without permission from the parent’s lawyer.
The inquiry posits that “Because of the nature of the work, it is sometimes
very difficult
to avoid all communications without prior attorney permission.
. . .
The attorneys who are appointed as Guardian Ad Litem are required
to talk to the respondent and, . . . because of the respondents age
or
mental capacity, the GAL may have no alternative but to inquire of the
parent or caretaker about the welfare of the respondent.”
The inquiry
poses
several
hypotheticals for discussion, which are summarized below.
-
The
GAL and the parent who is the alleged abuser have arrived early
for the
initial hearing. Counsel for that parent has not yet arrived. That
parent is
the only person present who knows the whereabouts of the child.
The GAL wants to talk to the child before the initial hearing and
wants to ask
the parent for the child’s address and telephone number. May
the GAL do
so without waiting for parent’s counsel to arrive?
-
The social
worker/probation officer/education advocate and opposing counsel,
including the GAL,
are in a meeting. During the meeting, is it permissible for the
social worker to call the allegedly abusive parent and ask questions
posed
by the
GAL
without the knowledge or permission of the parent’s lawyer?
-
The respondent is a child under the age of
six or is mentally incapacitated.
The GAL
wants to talk to the parent about the child’s progress or
condition. The parent might give information to the GAL that would
be detrimental
to the parent. May the GAL talk to the parent to obtain information
about
the welfare of the child without the permission of the
parent’s counsel?
-
The parent’s counsel wants to talk to the child
with
only the parent
present. May the GAL insist on being present when the
parent’s
lawyer interviews the child?
Discussion
In the District
of Columbia, allegations of child neglect are adjudicated
in the Superior Court.
The D.C. Code provides that
Superior Court shall
in every case involving a neglected child which results in
a judicial proceeding, . . . appoint
a guardian ad litem who is an attorney to represent
the child in the proceedings. The guardian ad litem shall
in general be charged
with
the
representation of the child’s best interest.
D.C. Code
section
16-2304(b)(3) (1999).
The parent(s) or guardian
of the child also may be represented
by counsel. The D.C. Court of Appeals explained
that the child’s
guardian ad litem occupies a dual role, as neutral
fact-finder for the judge and as zealous advocate on behalf of the
child’s
best interests. S.S. v. D.M., 597 A.2d 870, 875
(1991). Both the statute
and the case
law make clear that, additional responsibilities
notwithstanding, the GAL in neglect proceedings is the child’s
lawyer.1 As
such, there is no question but that a lawyer acting as a
guardian
ad litem is
bound to comply with the Rules of Professional
Conduct.2
DC Rule 4.2(a) draws
a relatively bright line on communications between
lawyers and persons who are represented by counsel. The rule states:
During
the course
of representing a client, a lawyer shall not
communicate or
cause another to communicate about the subject
of the representation with a party
known
to be represented by another lawyer in the matter,
unless the lawyer
has the prior consent of the lawyer representing
such other party or is authorized by law to do so.
This committee
has
interpreted
Rule
4.2 to impose a clear prohibition on communication
by a lawyer with a represented
party absent consent of that party’s counsel. The
committee read the rule to apply to a lawyer representing himself
in
a proceeding
in which
the
other party was represented by counsel, Opinion
No. 258 (1995). We also found the rule to require consent of counsel
before
a lawyer contacted
a represented opposing party about a part of a
proceeding in which the
opposing counsel was not representing his client.
Opinion No. 263 (1996).
- Communication with represented
persons without
notice
and consent
of opposing counsel
Once the role of the GAL
(as lawyer for the child) is clarified, the answer
to the main question posed
in the
first and
third hypotheticals above is relatively straightforward.
The parent who is alleged to have engaged in
abuse or neglect is
a party to
the proceeding
and is represented by counsel. Therefore the
GAL may not communicate with that parent about the
substance of the matter without
the consent of the parent’s lawyer.3
The GAL has
a dual role as advocate
and as fact-finder,
but the authorizing legislation gives no indication
that a GAL is authorized by law to collect information
from the child’s
parent
without the consent
of the parent’s lawyer.
In interpreting Model
Rule 4.2, the ABA Committee on Ethics and Professional
Responsibility said
that
the purpose of
the rule is to provide protection of the represented
person against overreaching
by adverse counsel, safeguard the client-lawyer
relationship from interference by adverse counsel,
and reduce the likelihood
that clients will disclose
privileged or other information that might harm
their interests. ABA Formal Op. 95-396 (1995).
The fact that the
client is a child does
not excuse a GAL from respecting the rights of
other parties as required by the rule. The child’s
parent may be at risk of
termination
of parental
rights because of child abuse and neglect. That
parent is entitled to
the protection afforded by legal representation.
The boundary set by the rule may be inconvenient
or cumbersome, but it is
a boundary
nevertheless.
The parent not charged with abuse
or neglect also may be represented by counsel.
That parent
may
not be a “party” to the proceeding,
but although Rule 4.2(a) is worded to refer to
a party represented by counsel, comment
[4] states: “This Rule also covers any person,
whether or not a
party to a formal proceeding, who is represented
by counsel concerning the
matter in question.” So under Rule 4.2, the GAL
may not communicate with any parent or guardian
who is represented by counsel about
anything relating
to the child abuse and neglect proceeding without
the consent of that person’s lawyer.
- Communication
about scheduling or administrative
matters
The first hypothetical posed in the
inquiry posits a situation in which
the GAL wishes to speak to the child’s parent
merely to obtain information about how to contact
the
child. While Rule 4.2
states no exception
for contact limited to purely administrative
or ministerial questions, such
contact would not thwart the purpose of the rule,
because the parent is not being asked for information
about which advice
of counsel
might
be sought. As counsel for the child, the GAL
must be entitled to information about the whereabouts
of the child.
The comments
to
Rule 4.2 do not
address this ministerial information question
directly,
but they do interpret
the rule to allow direct contact to obtain non-substantive
information from an organization. Comment [5]
states: This Rule does not apply
to the situation in which a lawyer contacts employees
of an organization for the purpose of obtaining
information generally
available to
the public,
or obtainable under the Freedom of Information
Act, even if the information in question is related
to the representation.
For example,
a lawyer
for a plaintiff who has filed suit against an
organization represented by
a lawyer may telephone the organization to request
a copy of a press release regarding the representation,
without disclosing
the lawyers
identity, obtaining the consent of the organization’s
lawyer, or
otherwise acting as paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this Rule require.
The comments
to Rule 4.2 also provide that a lawyer may communicate
with another party
about matters outside the representation. While
a request for information about the location
of the child is not unrelated
to the representation,
neither is it a request for information relating
to the substance of the representation.
The rules
prohibiting ex parte communication
with
judges offer useful guidance here. The 1990 Model
Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 3B(7)(a) permits
ex parte communications for
“scheduling, administrative
purposes or emergencies that do not deal with
substantive matters or issues on the merits. . . .”4 DC Rule 3.5(b), like the Model Rule, says “A
lawyer shall not . . . communicate ex parte
with a [judge] except as permitted by law.” This
rule does not articulate the “administrative
matters exception explicitly, but is widely understood
not to prohibit communication relating to administrative
or “scheduling
matters.”
The rule against ex parte communications, like
Rule 4.2, is intended to
ensure
that both lawyers in a case have the opportunity
to participate in discussion of matters of substance
relating to the case.
But a lawyer
who contacts
a judge’s chambers to get an address or to find
out a filing deadline does not violate the rule.
We
conclude that a GAL may contact a
child’s
parent to get contact information, to schedule
a meeting with the child, or for other administrative
purposes. To read the
rule otherwise
would
add needless burdens to the already difficult
task of representing a child in an abuse and
neglect
proceeding.
- Communication
through a
third party
If the GAL may not talk to the
parents on any matters of substance without permission
from their lawyers, may the
GAL relay
questions to a parent through a social worker
without permission? Again, the answer
is clearly “no.” Rule 4.2 states: “During the course
of representation of a client, a lawyer shall
not communicate or cause another
to communicate about the subject of the representation
with a party
known to be represented
by counsel” absent consent of the lawyer for the
other party or other legal authority. Rule 8.4
states: "It is professional
misconduct
for
a
lawyer to: (a) violate or attempt to violate
the Rules of Professional Conduct, knowingly
assist
or induce another to do so, or do so through
the acts of another.” A GAL may not use a social
worker
or any other
third party as a go-between to circumvent Rule
4.2.
If a social worker called
a parent during a meeting to ask questions that
the social worker needed to get answered, Rule
4.2(a) would not apply.
In such circumstances,
the lawyer might learn information that she would
not be entitled to
seek directly from the parent without the consent
of the parent’s
counsel. Child neglect proceedings are intended
to be less adversarial and to involve more sharing
of information than
most proceedings
that involve only adults. Rule 4.2 does not prohibit
a lawyer from learning
information through that process, only from “communicat[ing]
or caus[ing] another to communicate about the
subject of the representation with a party known
to be
represented by another
lawyer” without
the consent of the other lawyer. A GAL must not
initiate such an inquiry or direct another person
to do so.
If during a meeting
between a GAL
and a social worker, the GAL poses questions
and the social worker
calls one of the child’s parents to ask the questions,
the GAL has violated Rule 4.2 by doing through
the acts of another
something
that the GAL
is prohibited from doing. It is no solution to
this problem for the lawyer
and the social worker to agree that the lawyer’s
questions are really the social worker’s questions.
In fact if the social
worker calls
a parent during the meeting to ask a question
raised by the lawyer at
the meeting
and reports the conversation to the GAL, Rule
4.2 has been evaded. See ABA Comm. on Ethics
and Professional
Responsibility,
Formal
Op. 95-396
(1995) (stating that a lawyer would be responsible
for ex parte contacts made by an investigator
under her supervision if she
had not made reasonable
efforts to prevent the contacts, if she had directed
the investigator to make them, or if she knew
that the investigator was going
to make the contacts and failed to instruct him
not to do so).
- Communication
with parents about very young or mentally disabled
children
The inquiry asks whether the barrier
to direct contact with
a parent
is lower if
the client is very young or is mentally incapacitated.
Again the answer is no, except for contact for
administrative or
scheduling
purposes.
The GAL may not be able to communicate directly
with a young or mentally disabled child, and
might need to get information
through
the parent.
It may be frustrating that another barrier is
added to this onethat the GAL may not contact
the parent
but must first
contact the parent’s
lawyer. Still, the parent is represented by counsel
and is entitled to have the GAL contact the parent’s
lawyer before
contacting the
parent.
- Communication with the child by opposing
counsel
Another question
is whether the parent’s lawyer may interview the
child without the GAL being present. The answer
is still no, unless the parent’s lawyer
contacts
the GAL to ask permission to interview the child
without the GAL being present, and the GAL decides
to allow this interview
to take
place.
If
the GAL says no, the parent’s lawyer must not
communicate with the child except in the presence
of or through the GAL. Rule 4.2 applies
equally
to protect child clients and adult clients. See
South Carolina Advisory Opinion 97-15 (December
1997) (concluding that under
Rule 4.2, parent’s
lawyer must notify the guardian ad litem and
her or his counsel and gain consent prior to
communicating
with a child in a child
abuse proceeding);
North Carolina Ethics Opinion RPC 249 (April
3, 1997) (concluding that a lawyer representing
a
parent in a child abuse proceeding
may not
communicate
with a child who is represented by a GAL and
an attorney advocate unless the lawyer obtains
the
consent of the attorney advocate);
New York
Ethics Opinion 656 (1993) (concluding that a
parent’s attorney in a child custody
proceeding may not communicate with a child for
whom the court has appointed a law guardian without
the law guardian’s consent).
Child
abuse and neglect
proceedings involve multiple parties, often multiple
lawyers, and some non-lawyer participants. Each
parent may have a separate
lawyer.
Another
lawyer represents the government. There may be
a social worker, a probation officer, or an education
advocate. In addition
to the multiplicity
of parties, child abuse and neglect matters involve
both formal hearings and informal meetings. The
barrier imposed by Rule
4.2 may produce
a
cost in terms of loss of informality and sometimes
loss of access to direct communication.
A more
worrisome problem is
that a GAL
might
ask a parent’s lawyer for permission to talk to
the parent, and consent might
be denied, or the parent’s lawyer might not respond
to the request. This committee addressed this
problem as it relates to a lawyer
representing a client in a civil protection order
proceeding in Opinion No. 263
(1996).
The committee stated that a lawyer may not
use
4.2(a) . . . to prevent any . . . communications
between the petitioners lawyer
and the respondent.
The petitioners lawyer needs to be able to communicate
in some way with the respondent . . . be it
directly or through counsel. . . . If
the respondent’s lawyer refuses to allow such
communication
with the respondent directly, then the lawyer
must accept communication
from the petitioner’s
lawyer and take appropriate steps in response,
such as transmitting the information to his client
and acting on his clients wishes. . . . To
fail to do so would, in our opinion, constitute
a violation
of
Rule 1.4 (requiring a lawyer to keep his client
informed about the status
of a
matter).
The same point might be made here; that
while Rule 4.2 imposes a barrier on one lawyer,
Rule 1.4 imposes a duty
on the
other lawyer
to communicate promptly with his client a request
for contact by the child’s lawyer. Also
Rule 4.4 says that “a
lawyer shall not use means that have no substantial
purpose other than
to embarrass,
delay,
or burden a third person…” The comment
to rule 4.4 states that although the interests
of others are subordinate
to those
of the client, the responsibility to a client “does
not imply that a lawyer may disregard the rights
of third persons.” This
point is particularly critical in neglect proceedings,
where in some cases
(e.g., if the client
is very young) the GAL cannot get any information
about her client except from a represented party.
In every case, the
GAL has an
affirmative duty
to talk to all of those who have information
relevant to the determination of the child’s
best interests. The parents’ lawyer’s diligence
in responding
to requests for consent is
essential to the functioning
of
the process. Lawyers for parents in neglect
proceedings should be conscientious in responding
to requests
from GAL’s
to communicate with the parents of the children
they represent.
Inquiry No. 99-1-4
Adopted: February
15, 2000
- The one exception to the assertion that
the GAL is the child’s
lawyer is if there is a conflict between the
child’s
preferences and the child’s best interests.
In the absence of a conflict, the GAL can represent
both the child
and her best interests. If
there is a conflict, then the GAL should represent
the child’s
best interests and should ask the court to
appoint another lawyer for the
child. In
re L.H., 634 A.2d 1230 (1993). In this opinion,
we address the obligations of a GAL whose responsibilities
include acting
as a
child’s lawyer.
- See S.S. v. D.M., 597
A.2d 870, 877 (1991) (discussing the application
of Rule 3.7 to a GAL); Opinion
No. 252 (1995)
(addressing the
obligations of a lawyer appointed as a guardian
ad litem in a child abuse and neglect
proceeding with respect to potential tort claims
of the child).
- The appointment of lawyer GAL’s
for children in neglect proceedings is authorized
by D.C. Code section 16-2304(a) (1999) and by D.C.
SCR-Neglect Rule
27 (1999). Neither lays out specific powers
or duties of the guardian at litem. The duties
are
spelled out in a set of informal
guidelines
issued by the Superior Court called “Practice
Standards for Attorneys in Neglect Cases in
the District of Columbia
Superior
Court”.
These standards describe the GAL’s duties
as counsel for the child, explain what the
GAL should do in the case of
a conflict
between
the child’s
wishes and the GAL’s view of the child’s
best interests, and describes the GAL’s
fact-finding duties. These include obligations
to interview
the client and “all significant
persons who have information about the family” including
the child’s parents.
In the absence of an explicit statement that
the GAL may conduct these interviews without
the consent of the other parties’ counsel,
the guidelines cannot be found to exempt GAL’s
from compliance with Rule. 4.2.
- The ABA Model
Code of Judicial
Conduct has not been
adopted
by the District
of
Columbia Court of Appeals, but is referred to as guidance in the D.C. Rules of Professional
Conduct,
Rule 3.5, comment
[1].
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