North Carolina Administrative Code
Title 27 - STATE BAR
Chapter 02 - RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT OF THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE BAR
Section .0400 - TRANSACTIONS WITH PERSON OTHER THAN CLIENTS
Section 02 RULE 4.04 - RESPECT FOR RIGHTS OF THIRD PERSONS
Universal Citation: 27 NC Admin Code 02 RULE 4.04
Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
(a) In representing a client, a lawyer shall not use means that have no substantial purpose other than to embarrass, delay, or burden a third person, or use methods of obtaining evidence that violate the legal rights of such a person.
(b) A lawyer who receives a writing relating to the representation of the lawyer's client and knows or reasonably should know that the writing was inadvertently sent shall promptly notify the sender.
Comment
[1]
Responsibility to a client requires a lawyer to subordinate the interests of
others to those of the client, but that responsibility does not imply that a
lawyer may disregard the rights of third persons. It is impractical to
catalogue all such rights, but they include legal restrictions on methods of
obtaining evidence from third persons and unwarranted intrusions into
privileged relationships, such as the client-lawyer relationship.
[2] Threats, bullying, harassment, insults,
slurs, personal attacks, unfounded personal accusations generally serve no
substantial purpose other than to embarrass, delay, or burden others and
violate this rule. Conduct that serves no substantial purpose other than to
intimidate, humiliate, or embarrass lawyers, litigants, witnesses, or other
persons with whom a lawyer interacts while representing a client also violates
this rule. See also Rule 3.5(a) (prohibiting conduct intended to disrupt a
tribunal) and Rule 8.4(d) (prohibiting conduct prejudicial to the
administration of justice).
[3]
Paragraph (b) recognizes that lawyers sometimes receive writings that were
mistakenly sent or produced by opposing parties or their lawyers. See Rule
1.0(o) for the definition of "writing," which includes electronic
communications and metadata. A writing is inadvertently sent when it is
accidentally transmitted, such as when an electronic communication or letter is
misaddressed or a document or electronically stored information is accidentally
included with information that was intentionally transmitted. If a lawyer knows
or reasonably should know that such a writing was sent inadvertently, then this
rule requires the lawyer promptly to notify the sender in order to permit that
person to take protective measures. This duty is imputed to all lawyers in a
firm. Whether the lawyer who receives the writing is required to take
additional steps, such as returning the writing, is a matter of law beyond the
scope of these rules, as is the question of whether the privileged status of a
writing has been waived. Similarly, this Rule does not address the legal duties
of a lawyer who receives a writing that the lawyer knows or reasonably should
know may have been inappropriately obtained by the sending person. Metadata in
electronic documents creates an obligation under this Rule only if the
receiving lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the metadata was
inadvertently sent to the receiving lawyer. A lawyer who receives an electronic
communication from the opposing party or the opposing party's lawyer must
refrain from searching for or using confidential information found in the
metadata embedded in the communication. See 2009 FEO 1.
[4] Some lawyers may choose to return a
writing or delete electronically stored information unread, for example, when
the lawyer learns before receiving the writing that it was inadvertently sent.
Whether the lawyer is required to do so is a matter of law. When return of the
writing is not required by law, the decision voluntarily to return such a
writing or delete electronically stored information is a matter of professional
judgment ordinarily reserved to the lawyer. See Rules 1.2 and 1.4.
Authority
G.S.
84-23;
Eff. July 24,
1997;
Amended Eff. March 5, 2015; October 2, 2014; August 18, 2005;
March 1, 2003.
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