Texas Professional Ethics Committee Ethics Opinions
Free plain-English summaries of legal ethics opinions issued by the Texas Professional Ethics Committee, with full citations and source links on every page.
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May a Texas school's lawyer speak directly with parents at an ARD special-education meeting when the parents are represented by a lawyer but bring only a nonlawyer advocate to the meeting?
The opinion concludes the school's lawyer may not. Rule 4.02(a) prohibits the school's lawyer from communicating, or causing or encouraging another to communicate, with the parents about the subject o…
Can a Texas lawyer hire an unaffiliated 'appearance lawyer' to cover a single hearing or deposition, and what duties does each lawyer take on?
The opinion concludes that a Texas lawyer may hire an appearance lawyer for a discrete task, but the appearance lawyer represents the client (not the hiring lawyer) and owes the full duties of compete…
May a Texas lawyer agree to be personally bound by a non-disparagement clause or a marketing-use non-disclosure clause in a client's settlement agreement?
The Committee concludes that under Texas Disciplinary Rule 5.06(b) a lawyer may not be a party to a non-disparagement clause that restricts statements the lawyer might make in the practice of law, and…
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Legal ethics opinions from the Texas Professional Ethics Committee interpret the rules of professional conduct for working lawyers, in response to inquiries from members and committees. They are not binding like court discipline decisions, but courts and discipline boards treat formal opinions as substantial guidance on how the rules apply. Every opinion above has a plain-English question and short answer, plus a link to the original source on the bar's site.