IN SUPPORTING A CLIENT'S CAUSE Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge... Annual Report of the Illinois State Bar Association - Page 425by Illinois State Bar Association - 1914Full view - About this book
| Ohio State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1909 - 254 pages
...services ; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. 15. How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudices against lawyers as a class,... | |
| Commercial law - 1912 - 260 pages
...services; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. 15. How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class,... | |
| Law - 1906 - 688 pages
...services; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition, or fraud. 15. How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class,... | |
| American Bar Association - Bar associations - 1908 - 1134 pages
...services; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. 15. How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class,... | |
| Albert H. Putney - Law - 1908 - 386 pages
...lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. SECTION 15. How FAR A LAWYER MAY GO IN SUPPORTING A CLIENT'S CAUSE. Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class,... | |
| Albert Hutchinson Putney - Law - 1908 - 396 pages
...265 12 Fixing the Amount of the Fee 266 " 13 Contingent Fees 287 " 14 Suing a Client for a Fee 267 " 15 How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. . 267 " 16 Restraining Clients from Improprieties 268 f. 17 1ll Feeling and Personalities Between Advocates... | |
| Thomas Hughes - Legal ethics - 1909 - 102 pages
...services ; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. 15. How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. Nothing operates more certainly to •create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class... | |
| Gleason Leonard Archer - Legal ethics - 1910 - 382 pages
...services; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition, or fraud.2 15. How far a Lawyer may go in Supporting a Client's Cause. — Nothing operates more certainly to create or to foster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class,... | |
| Georgia Bar Association - Bar associations - 1910 - 404 pages
...services ; and lawsuits with clients should be resorted to only to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. 15. How Far a Lawyer May Go in Supporting a Client's Cause. Nothing operates more certainly to create or tofoster popular prejudice against lawyers as a class,... | |
| James Parker Hall, James De Witt Andrews - Law - 1910 - 450 pages
...Fixing the amount of the fee 383 § 13. Contingent fees 389 § 14. Suing a client for a fee 389 '§ 15. How far a lawyer may go in supporting a client's cause. .389 §16. Restraining clients from improprieties 390 § 17. Ill feeling and personalities between... | |
| |