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Top ten points for Outsourcing legal Services

Part – II – Due Diligence

The ABA ethics opinion focuses on the challenge of ensuring that the tasks are delegated to competent individuals and adequately and appropriately overseeing the execution of the outsourced project. The due diligence checklist is fairly rudimentary:

  • Background checks, including educational qualifications of the employees of Outsourcing Firm
  • Interviews with the principal lawyers of the outsourcing firm
  • Inquiry into hiring practices, the quality and criteria for selection of employees
  • Security measures for protection of sensitive client data, including physical security of premises, physical, administrative and logical security of the network, and data destruction.

The New York City Bar Association’s Ethics Opinion that due diligence continues as an ongoing process of supervision, as a duty to communicate with the non-lawyer to ensure understanding of the assignment and review whether the assignment is being carried out according to the lawyer’s expectations.

Cultural and Environmental Gaps

The ABA ethics opinion highlighted the risks of hiring foreign lawyers, whose services might not be competent for U.S. legal support due to any one of many cultural and environmental gaps i,e. Lack of comparability of legal training to American legal system, Lack of cultural inculcation of core American ethical principles, Ineffective policing by foreign disciplinary enforcement system.   The American lawyer may still hire the foreign-trained lawyer, but would need to consider the foreign-trained lawyer is just a paralegal for U.S. clients.

Country Risk

Country risk” identifies those business and legal risks that arise from the constitutional and geo-political environment where the foreign lawyer (or paralegal) delivers the work. Particular concerns are Susceptibility of confidential documents and records to seizure in judicial or administrative proceedings and Susceptibility of client data to “cyber extortion” or inaccessibility if the provider and the attorney have a dispute that local courts cannot promptly resolve.

Avoid Surprises to Client

Clients have a reasonable expectation that their attorneys will inform them of “who or what entity is representing them” because LPO involves client confidences and general lacks a high degree of supervision and control. According to the ABA ethics opinion, it is necessary to disclose the outsourcing to the client. Outsourcing and offshoring require “informed consent” when there are risks that a client should be aware of.  Florida’s Bar leaves the door open to disclose, or not disclose, a foreign LPO provider’s role, depending on materiality. If a client would think it is material to its decision to entrust the legal services to the law firm, the law firm must disclose the outsourcing.  In the context of legal services, the level of information necessary for “informed consent” depends on a client’s sophistication.

Protecting Confidentiality

The ABA opinion strongly advises individual confidentiality agreements. The Florida Bar considers that a law firm hiring an LPO provider should limit the overseas provider’s access to only the information necessary to complete the work for the particular client and bar any access to information about other clients. The Association of the Bar of the City of New York recommends “contractual provisions addressing confidentiality and remedies in the event of breach, and periodic reminders regarding confidentiality.

Avoid Conflicts

Further, the outsourcing service provider should be vetted for possible conflicts of interest in representation of adversaries of the firm’s clients on the same or substantially related matters.

Avoid Overcharges and Fee Disputes

The most controversial element of the ABA opinion lies in its conclusion that the fees charged by a lawyer hiring outsourced LPO services must be reasonable and, if the services are hired by a law firm, the law firm may not mark up the costs of the outsourced service provider. However, some markup would be allowed for overhead expenses (such as office space, support staff, equipment and supplies) and “a reasonable allocation of the cost of supervising these services. The New York City Bar and Florida Bar generally concur in this approach, which is based on a 1993 ABA Formal Opinion 93-379 on the subject of pass-throughs of expenses for non-legal services.

Avoid Ineffective Business Practices

Adopting effective LPO business practices requires an understanding of project management, competitive bidding procedures in complex services, filling gaps in implicit and explicit assumptions about instructions and cost-benefit analysis.

Law firms and corporate counsel may know how to manage paralegals, but legal process outsourcing requires a more holistic approach to client protections. Achieving effective outsourcing may require hiring experienced legal and business consultants to accelerate benefits, reduce risk and provide a clear framework for effective supervision and evolution of the LPO relationship.

Legal Outsourcing and its growth in India

This article analyze the emergence of LPO in India, as well as its future growth. The outsourcing originally denoted the practice of sending work to third party companies in the U.S., it  gradually expanded to include sending work abroad, a practice that eventuallyeclipsed domestic outsourcing. Offshore outsourcing is not a new phenomenon.  Companies have been referring work to foreign third parties for many years. In the 1990s, as organizations began to focus more on cost-saving measures, they started to outsource those functions necessary to run a company but not related specifically to the core business.
The service industry now known as “Business Process Outsourcing” (“BPO in a relatively short period of time, global outsourcing has become a multi-billion dollar industry. Since the turn of the 21st century, growth has snowballed, going from approximately $119 billion in 2000 to approximately $234 billion in 2005. By the end of 2008, revenues are projected to rise to around $310 billion. The United States is one of the biggest consumers of outsourcing services. Approximately 59% of the global trade in outsourced work originates in North America. The next closest consumer is the European Union, which consumes approximately 27% of the market. Love it or hateit, offshoring is here to stay, and the trend appears to be for more offshoring, not less.
Legal Process Offshoring (“LPO”) was developed as a KPO service set for the legal industry. LPO can be traced back as far as 1995, when the law firm Bickel and Brewer first opened a satellite office to processadministrative. The most modern incarnation of LPO dates back to 2001, when GE created a captive center in Gurgaon, India to absorb in-house legal work. The usefulness of captive LPO centers was initially limited because it was difficult to get workflow to and from the captive centers in a timely fashion. Over the last couple of years, technological advancements have enabled service providers to make LPO more responsive—and potentially more useful—to law firms in primary markets such as the United States and United Kingdom.

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Legal Outsourcing India Ethical issues

There is a five major ethical/professional conduct issues raised by LPO that is (1) Unauthorized practice of law by non-lawyers; (2) conflicts of interest; (3) client confidentiality; (4) client disclosure and consent; and (5) billing issues related to outsourcing. The Model Rules of Professional Conduct, the Formal Opinions issued by the ABA Committee on related subjects, and the recent opinion on LPO issued by the NYC Bar.

As is discussed below, the American Bar Association (“ABA”) has addressed the issue of outsourcing in the context of domestic contract attorneys. The ABA recommendations on that subject provide the most useful available starting point for analyzing the ethical implications of LPO.

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