Skip to main content

Ethics, Disqualification and Sanctions in Litigation


Disqualification standards have their roots in conflicts of interests. When an attorney has a conflict that rises to a certain level, he or she is disqualified from representing a certain party in litigation.

Though ethics rules substantially overlap with disqualification standards, those standards do not follow traditional conflicts analysis in every detail. Indeed, the relationship between conflicts of interest (and related confidentiality concerns) and disqualification is highly nuanced, varying depending on facts of each case.

There are also substantial issues in the context of joint representations, including whether the disqualification of one attorney necessarily disqualifies co-counsel.

This program provides a practical guide to attorney ethics rules and their relationship to disqualification in litigation.

  • Attorney ethics, conflicts of interest, and disqualification standards
  • How ethics rules and disqualification standards overlap and vary from each other
  • Ethics standards and tests for obtaining – or defending against disqualification
  • Joint representations and disqualification – if co-counsel is disqualified, are you?
  • Screening for conflicts of interest and the risk of imputation of conflicts/disqualification to other attorneys
  • Ethical sanctions and their relationship to disqualification

DETAILS
Phone/Audio
Thursday, September 30, 2021
1:00–2:00 PM

SPEAKERS

  • Thomas E. Spahn, McGuireWoods LLP, McLean, VA

PRODUCED
September 30, 2021

APPROVED CREDIT
North Carolina: 1.00 MCLE Hour

Includes
1.00 Ethics/Professional Responsibility


PROGRAM PRICING

See pricing below.