成人抖阴

Advisory Opinion 2016-007

Issue

Do the LSC restrictions apply to legal assistance provided by an LSC grantee鈥檚 staff attorneys at self-help centers funded by a grant from a state court system?

Brief Answer

Yes. Non-LSC funded legal assistance provided by an LSC grantee is subject to the LSC restrictions on non-LSC funded activities.

Background

An LSC grantee (Grantee) receives $2 million a year from a state court system to operate self-help centers for people with legal problems. Grantee pays all costs for the self-help centers, including attorney and support staff salaries, out of the contract funds.

Agreement between Grantee and Center Participants

Each individual assisted at a center signs an Agreement for Self-Help Assistance (Agreement). The Agreement has the following provisions relevant to this issue.

Scope of Legal Services

The Agreement states that Grantee 鈥渨ill provide short-term limited legal services鈥 regarding a variety of civil matters. It states that those services 鈥渕ay include鈥 the following activities. 

  • 鈥渂rief advice about your legal problem鈥
  • 鈥済eneral information about the legal system and law鈥
  • 鈥渃ase status information鈥
  • 鈥渁ssistance with the court forms鈥
  • 鈥渞别蹿别谤谤补濒蝉鈥

Scope of Representation by a Lawyer

 The Agreement states that 鈥渁 client-lawyer relationship is established鈥 although 鈥渢he lawyer鈥檚 representation of you鈥 will not continue 鈥渂eyond your consultation today鈥 and there is no expectation that Grantee 鈥渟hall provide continuing representation to you for any legal matter on which you consult with Center staff.鈥

Waiver of Conflicts Among Clients

The Agreement requires the individual to provide 鈥渋nformed consent for the Center and [Grantee] to provide services to you even though conflicts of interest may exist鈥 in which 鈥渢he Center may provide similar assistance to another person involved in your case whose interests may be opposed to yours.鈥

Website Information

Grantee lists the following services on the section of its website regarding these self-help centers. 

  • 鈥渃omplete court forms鈥
  • 鈥渓earn how to file court documents鈥
  • 鈥減repare for court鈥
  • 鈥減repare for mediation鈥
  • 鈥渦nderstand court documents鈥

 The website also states that 鈥淪elf-Help Center lawyers will not represent you in court鈥 and 鈥淸t]his service is provided to help you represent yourself.鈥

Operation of Self-Help Centers

Grantee staff describe the self-help centers as providing the types of services described in the Agreement and on the website. Grantee does not screen individuals seeking assistance through the self-help centers for eligibility under LSC鈥檚 governing statutes and regulations, although it does do minimal income screening at two centers. Nor does Grantee treat any of the services provided as subject to the LSC restrictions on non-LSC funded activities. Grantee staff state that persons served at the self-help centers are not applicants for legal assistance and are not clients of Grantee. They also point to the lack of continuous representation and to their determination that all self-help participants are automatically eligible for services at the centers.

Authority

The LSC Act and LSC鈥檚 fiscal year 1996 appropriations legislation place several restrictions on grantees鈥 use of both LSC and non-LSC funds. The restrictions prevent recipients from using any funds (other than tribal funds) for assisting some categories of potential clients (e.g., Part 1626鈥攊neligible non-citizens), engaging in some areas of representation (e.g., Part 1637鈥攑risoner litigation), and undertaking some types of legal action (e.g., Part 1617鈥攃lass actions). See 45 C.F.R. Part 1610 regarding most restrictions on non-LSC funds.

The restrictions do not bar grantees from having any contact with those potential clients or from discussing those areas of representation or types of legal action. For example, 45 C.F.R. Part 1626 prohibits recipients from 鈥減rovid[ing] legal assistance,鈥 but allows recipients to conduct intake for and make referrals of non-citizens who are ineligible to receive legal assistance. 45 C.F.R. 搂 1626.3. The rule recognizes that intake screening and referring individuals to another provider for whatever reason, eligibility-related or not, do not involve the types of legal analysis or legal work covered by the statutory restriction on 鈥減rovid[ing] legal assistance for or on behalf of鈥 some non-citizens. Pub. L. 104-134, tit. V, 搂 504(a)(11), 122 Stat. 1321-50, 1321-53 (1996), as incorporated by reference thereafter through Pub. L. 105-119, tit. V, 搂 502(a)(2), 111 Stat. 2440, 2510 (1998).

In the main definitions section of the regulations, LSC adopted the LSC Act鈥檚 definition of legal assistance as 鈥渢he provision of any legal services consistent with the purposes and provisions of鈥 the LSC Act or other applicable law. 45 C.F.R. 搂 1600.1; see also 42 U.S.C. 搂 2996a(2). Through guidance documents, LSC has refined the statutory definition into two types of legal services: 鈥渓egal assistance鈥 and 鈥渓egal information.鈥 See LSC  at 3-4. These definitions are based on the  regarding full legal representation, limited representation鈥攍egal advice or brief services, assistance to pro se litigants, and provision of legal information. SeeABA Standards 3.1, 3.4, 3.5 and 3.6.

Legal Assistance鈥

Legal assistance is [limited or extended service] specific to the client鈥檚 unique circumstances and involves a legal analysis that is tailored to the client鈥檚 factual situation. Legal assistance involves applying legal judgment in interpreting the particular facts and in applying relevant law to the facts presented. The provision of legal assistance creates an attorney-client relationship.

Legal Information 

[Legal information is] the provision of substantive information not tailored to address a person鈥檚 specific legal problem. As such, it is general and does not involve applying legal judgment and does not recommend a specific course of action. For example, providing only a pamphlet or brochure is legal information and not legal assistance. The provision of legal information does not create an attorney-client relationship.

The CSR definition of legal assistance 鈥渋s synonymous with 鈥榣egal services鈥欌 in the Part 1635 definition of a case as a grantee 鈥減rovid[ing] legal services to one or more specific clients, including . . . advice [and] providing brief services . . . .鈥 ; see also (timekeeping). LSC also adopted the CSR definition of legal assistance in the private attorney involvement rule at 45 C.F.R. 搂 1614.3(e) 鈥渇or consistency in the treatment of legal assistance and compliance with eligibility screening requirements by both recipients and private attorneys.鈥 

Analysis

Grantee states in the Agreement that its lawyers are providing representation and forming attorney-client relationships with the individuals assisted at these self-help centers. Furthermore, the Agreement requires that those individuals consent to potential conflicts that could arise based on Grantee鈥檚 representing two people with opposing interests in the same case at these clinics. Lastly, the clinic activities could involve an application of legal judgment that would constitute legal assistance. None of the information Grantee has provided to date suggests that the self-help centers are limited to providing legal information. In the absence of any such limitation, Grantee appears to be providing legal assistance subject to the LSC restrictions on non-LSC funded activities.

Whether or not the grantee provides continuous representation is not relevant to determining whether Grantee鈥檚 service constitutes legal assistance instead of legal information, because legal assistance includes limited services such as advice and counsel or brief services, which are within the scope of the activities of these clinics. Grantee鈥檚 blanket statement that these individuals are not applicants or clients and are automatically eligible is not persuasive, because Grantee does not provide any factual basis for those assertions and the statement directly contradicts the language of the Agreement.

We note that the activities of the self-help centers are not necessarily legal assistance in all situations. For example, grantees can provide 鈥渞eferrals,鈥 鈥済eneral information about the legal system and law,鈥 and 鈥渃ase status information鈥 to non-clients as legal information without legal representation. Thus, if Grantee limited its clinic activities solely to these services, it could do so without implicating the restrictions. Instead, Grantee has created attorney-client relationships with these participants to provide them with limited representation. That may make management of the clinics easier and reflect Grantee鈥檚 intent to provide a range of services including both legal information and legal assistance. But by providing legal assistance, as distinguished from legal information, in at least some cases, Grantee has subjected its activities in those cases to the LSC restrictions on non-LSC funds. As such, Grantee must screen each such case for compliance with those restrictions.

Alternately, Grantee could establish a separate non-LSC funded legal entity to operate these clinics with objective integrity and independence from Grantee, as permitted by 45 C.F.R. 搂 1610.8. Some LSC grantees have created non-LSC funded sibling entities or subsidiary entities that conduct restricted activities with all of the required separation from the LSC grantee and from the grantee鈥檚 LSC-funded and restricted work. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit determined that the restrictions on non-LSC funds do not facially violate the First Amendment because 鈥淸i]t appears likely that LSC grantees with substantial non-federal funding can provide the full range of restricted activity through separately incorporated affiliates without serious difficulty.鈥 ., 164 F.3d 757, 767 (2d Cir. 1999).

This opinion supersedes the April 9, 1998 opinion regarding court pro se clinics. In that opinion, we concluded that the eligibility requirements of 45 C.F.R. Parts 1611 and 1626 did not apply to proposed pro se clinics because individuals attending a clinic (1) did not form an attorney-client relationship with the assisting attorney, (2) did not receive representation, and (3) did not receive 鈥渓egal assistance鈥 or 鈥渓egal services鈥 as LSC defines those terms. We understand that court pro se clinics, much like the one analyzed in this Opinion, often involve the formation of attorney-client relationships, the provision of representation, and the provision of individualized legal assistance. Thus, the 1998 opinion would apply only to those limited situations in which a pro se clinic met the very narrow circumstances that opinion addressed. Leaving the opinion operative could potentially lead to confusion about when LSC鈥檚 restrictions apply to a court self-help clinic for pro se individuals. For these reasons, the April 9, 1998 opinion is hereby withdrawn as superseded.

Conclusion

The LSC restrictions apply to non-LSC funded legal assistance provided by Grantee staff attorneys at self-help centers where Grantee describes the work as involving the representation of clients and the creation of attorney-client relationships. Grantee must screen these cases and not provide prohibited legal assistance. Alternately, Grantee could operate the centers without LSC restrictions through a non-LSC funded entity with sufficient legal and other separation to maintain objective integrity and independence from Grantee.

RONALD S. FLAGG
General Counsel and Vice President for Legal Affairs

MARK FREEDMAN
Senior Associate General Counsel

STEFANIE K. DAVIS
Assistant General Counsel