PREAMBLE: A LAWYER'S RESPONSIBILITIES
SCOPE
The Preamble and Scope sections of the Vermont Rules of Professional Conduct are amended to conform to the changes in the Model Rules, which combined preliminary sections I, Preamble, and II, Scope, as two parts of a single preliminary section and moved preliminary section III, Terminology, to a new Rule 1.0. See Reporter's Notes to V.R.P.C. 1.0.
In paragraph [18], a sentence found in former paragraph [16] stating that government lawyers may represent the public interest, though deleted as inaccurate in the ABA amendments, has been retained as accurately reflecting Vermont practice. Paragraph [20] (formerly the final paragraph of V.R.P.C., II, Scope) and the final sentence of paragraph [21] are unique to the Vermont Rules. See Reporter's Notes to V.R.P.C., II, Scope (1999). In Northern Security Insurance Co. Mitrec Electronics, Ltd., 2008 VT 96, ¶ 16 n.3, 184 Vt. ____, 965 A.2d 447, the Court, in criticizing a lawyer's briefs for lack of "professional tone" and not advancing "the quality of justice in Vermont," pointedly quoted language of V.R.P.C. Preamble (continued in amended paragraphs [1], [5], declaring the lawyer's responsibilities "to demonstrate respect for the legal system and for those who serve in it."
The ABA Reporter's Explanation of the amended Preamble and Scope sections provides in pertinent part as follows:
PREAMBLE:
[1] This addition reflects the resolution that was adopted by the ABA House of Delegates at its Annual Meeting in New York in August 2000. [2] The reference to the lawyer as intermediary was deleted in accordance with the Commission's decision to delete [former] Rule 2.2. The change in the last sentence is stylistic only and conforms the style of this sentence to that of the preceding sentences.
[3] This is an entirely new paragraph. It addresses the lawyer's role as third-party neutral, a role that is now addressed in Rules 1.12 and 2.4. In addition, it reminds lawyers that there are other rules that apply to lawyers when they are not active in the practice of law or to practicing lawyers when they are acting in a nonprofessional capacity.
[6] The additions regarding the lawyer's duty to promote improved access to justice reflect the resolution that was adopted by the ABA House of Delegates at its Annual Meeting in New York in August 2000. The addition regarding the lawyer's duty to further the public's understanding of and confidence in law reflects the resolution that was adopted by the ABA House of Delegates at the Midyear Meeting in Dallas in February 2000.
[9] The change from "upright" to "ethical" is stylistic. The remainder of the changes reflect the Commission's belief that the Rules do not always prescribe terms for resolving conflicts between a lawyer's competing responsibilities and interests, although they often do. The last sentence is an attempt to give lawyers further guidance in how the basic principles underlying the Rules may help resolve such conflicts.
SCOPE:
[14] The change in the third sentence is designed to clarify what is meant by "professional discretion."
[15] The addition describes material that was added to a number of Comments throughout the Rules. Given the growth in the law governing lawyers, the Commission believes that these references are helpful to practicing lawyers, particularly where the obligations under such law are more onerous than the obligations reflected in the Rules.
[16] The prior paragraph [i.e., [15]] was split to better reflect the two separate thoughts in each paragraph.
[17] Under Rule 1.18 it is now clear that there are duties under these Rules that attach prior to the formation of the client-lawyer relationship. [The two paragraphs following what is now paragraph [19]] were deleted because they merely repeat what is stated elsewhere in the Rules, primarily in the Comment to Rule 1.6.