Pennsylvania Code
Title 204 - JUDICIAL SYSTEM GENERAL PROVISIONS
Part V - PROFESSIONAL ETHICS AND CONDUCT
Subpart A - PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY
Chapter 81 - RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
Subchapter A - RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT
TRANSACTIONS WITH PERSONS OTHER THAN CLIENTS
Rule 4.1 - Truthfulness in Statements to Others
Universal Citation: 204 PA Code ยง 4.1
Current through Register Vol. 54, No. 44, November 2, 2024
In the course of representing a client a lawyer shall not knowingly:
(a) make a false statement of material fact or law to a third person; or
(b) fail to disclose a material fact to a third person when disclosure is necessary to avoid aiding and abetting a criminal or fraudulent act by a client, unless disclosure is prohibited by Rule 1.6.
Comment:
Misrepresentation
(1) A lawyer is required to be truthful when
dealing with others on a client's behalf, but generally has no affirmative duty
to inform an opposing party of relevant facts. A misrepresentation can occur if
the lawyer incorporates or affirms a statement of another person that the
lawyer knows is false. Misrepresentations can also occur by partially true but
misleading statements or omissions that are the equivalent of affirmative false
statements. For dishonest conduct that does not amount to a false statement or
for misrepresentations by a lawyer other than in the course of representing a
client, see Rule 8.4.
Statements of Fact
(2) This Rule refers to statements of fact.
Whether a particular statement should be regarded as one of fact can depend on
the circumstances. Under generally accepted conventions in negotiation, certain
types of statements ordinarily are not taken as statements of material fact.
Estimates of price or value placed on the subject of a transaction and a
party's intentions as to an acceptable settlement of a claim are ordinarily in
this category, and so is the existence of an undisclosed principal except where
nondisclosure of the principal would constitute fraud.
Crime or Fraud by Client
(3) Under Rule
1.2(d), a lawyer
is prohibited from counseling or assisting a client in conduct that the lawyer
knows is criminal or fraudulent. Paragraph (b) states a specific application of
the principle set forth in Rule
1.2(d) and
addresses the situation where a client's crime or fraud takes the form of a lie
or misrepresentation. Ordinarily, a lawyer can avoid assisting a client's crime
or fraud by withdrawing from the representation. Sometimes it may be necessary
for the lawyer to give notice of the fact of withdrawal and to disaffirm an
opinion, document, affirmation or the like. In extreme cases, substantive law
may require a lawyer to disclose information relating to the representation to
avoid being deemed to have assisted the client's crime or fraud. If the lawyer
can avoid assisting a client's crime or fraud only by disclosing this
information, then under paragraph (b) the lawyer is required to do so, unless
the disclosure is prohibited by Rule
1.6. Rule
1.6 permits a lawyer to disclose
information when necessary to prevent or rectify certain crimes or frauds. See
Rule 1.6(c). If
disclosure is permitted by Rule
1.6, then such disclosure is
required under this Rule, but only to the extent necessary to avoid assisting a
client crime or fraud.
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