Skip to content

Opinion 616

Question Presented

Under the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct, may a law firm agree with a for-profit legal service contract company to provide legal services at discounted rates to persons who have contracted with the legal service contract company? May a law firm having such an agreement with a for-profit legal service contract company accept referral fees from lawyers to whom the law firm refers matters that initially come to the firm under the agreement with the company?

A company owned by non-lawyers (“the Company”) is validly licensed as a for-profit legal service contract company by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation under chapter 953 of the Texas Occupations Code. The Company enters into contracts with individuals (“Contract Holders”) under which the Contract Holders will pay a monthly amount and in exchange the Contract Holders will be entitled to specified legal services to be provided by licensed Texas lawyers. These contracts frequently include provisions that, if a Contract Holder needs legal services with respect to certain types of matters beyond those specifically provided under the contract, the Contract Holder is entitled to receive additional legal services on these specified matters at a discount. Such contracts are frequently included in benefit packages made available to employees by employers under which the monthly payments for the employee Contract Holders are paid in whole or in part by the employer.
 
The Company enters into an agreement with a Texas law firm (the “Law Firm”) under which the Company will pay the Law Firm a set amount per month per Contract Holder and the Law Firm agrees to provide specified legal services to the Contract Holders with no additional payment. An essential feature of the Company’s business plan is that for each period the total of amounts received by the Company from the Contract Holders is expected to exceed the total of payments by the Company to the Law Firm and other law firms contracting with the Company. An additional feature of the agreement between the Company and the Law Firm is that the Law Firm will provide legal services beyond the specified services for fees to be paid by Contract Holders that are discounted 25% from the Law Firm’s standard rates for hourly and flat-fee cases.
 
The agreement between the Law Firm and the Company authorizes the Law Firm to refer some matters to lawyers outside the Law Firm (“Referral Lawyers”) who have agreed with the Company to take these matters as referrals from the Law Firm at the agreed discount from the normal fees charged by the Referral Lawyers for these matters. The Company’s contract with Contract Holders and the Company’s agreement with the Law Firm further provides that some matters, including some contingent fee matters, may be referred to one of the Referral Lawyers without discount on fees normally charged by the Referral Lawyers.  With respect to some or all matters referred to Referral Lawyers, the Law Firm proposes to charge Referral Lawyers a referral fee.

Bluebook Citation

Tex. Comm. On Professional Ethics, Op. 616 (2012)