| American Bar Association - Bar associations - 1908 - 1138 pages
...lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
| Albert Hutchinson Putney - Law - 1908 - 396 pages
...lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
| American Bar Association. Committee to Draft Canons of Professional Ethics - 1908 - 140 pages
...full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties, than the false claim, often set up by the unscrupulous...in defense of questionable transactions, that it is an attorney's duty to do everything that may enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause."... | |
| William Lawrence Clark - Electronic books - 1909 - 524 pages
...of action for fees, dement for contingent fee aee 4 Cyc. fenses, and practice see 4 Cyc. 997. 089. to the proper discharge of its duties than does the...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
| Thomas Hughes - Legal ethics - 1909 - 102 pages
...lawyers as a class and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and coniidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties...whatever may enable him to succeed in winning his client 's cause. A lawyer "owes entire devotion to the interest of his client, warm zeal in the maintenance... | |
| Illinois State Bar Association - Bar associations - 1909 - 510 pages
...lawyers as a class and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties than does the false claim, often set up bj the unscrupulous in defense of questionable transactions, that it is the duty of the lawyer to do... | |
| Gleason Leonard Archer - Legal ethics - 1910 - 380 pages
...lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties,...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
| Gleason Leonard Archer - Legal ethics - 1910 - 382 pages
...lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties,...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
| James Parker Hall, James De Witt Andrews - Law - 1910 - 450 pages
...lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
| Georgia Bar Association - Bar associations - 1910 - 404 pages
...lawyers as a class, and to deprive the profession of that full measure of public esteem and confidence which belongs to the proper discharge of its duties...enable him to succeed in winning his client's cause. It is improper for a lawyer to assert in argument his personal belief in his client's innocence or... | |
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