The State Bar Association of North Dakota Spring 2014 Gavel Magazine | Page 14

DEPARTING CLIENT FILES: PAPER OR ELECTRONIC? if the electronic format provides a means of recovery now and in the foreseeable future.2 JUSTICE DANIEL CROTHERS North Dakota Supreme Court Can a departing client demand an electronic copy of his or her file? Can they demand a paper file? If so, what ethical obligation does a lawyer have to provide client files in the requested format? While North Dakota has not answered these questions, a recent ethics opinion from North Carolina furthered the discussion. 1 The Background No citation is required for the proposition that law firms use desktop and other electronic devices to assist in delivery of legal services. Utilization of these devices leads to the inescapable conclusion that some or even most client files will be stored electronically. The North Dakota State Bar Ethics Committee has not directly spoken on the question whether and to what extent client files can be maintained only in electronic format. Other jurisdictions generally conclude that files can be stored electronically and that the corresponding paper files can be destroyed if documents of independent legal significance (wills and deeds, for example) are retained and 14 THE GAVEL North Dakota has answered a related question. In 1999 the State Bar Association of North Dakota said lawyers can ethically store law firm records on servers accessible over the internet (in the cloud—although that term was not yet in use). 3 The 1999 opinion favorably cited a 1997 SBAND Opinion stating lawyers could ethically transmit routine attorney-client information by email. Together, those opinions reasonable should be read to implicitly approve creation and storage of client information in electronic format. The Duty to Deliver Papers The North Carolina opinion first considers information that must be provided to a departing client.5 The opinion cited the lawyer’s duty under Rule 1.16(d) upon termination “to ‘take steps to the extent reasonably practicable to protect a client’s interests, such as...surrendering papers and property to which the client is entitled...’” 6 North Dakota has the same rule and same requirement as part of Rule 1.16(e). 7 Comment 10 to our Rule 1.16(e) reminds us, “With regard to the disposition of the client’s files, papers or property, the lawyer should follow Rule 1.19.”8 While an in depth discussion of Rule 1.19 is beyond the scope of this short article, it is noteworthy that “Rule [1.19] provides guidance regarding the items to which the client’s entitlement extends, and speaks also to other questions associated with common lawyer/client issues regarding files and papers.” 9 Delivery in the Requested Format On the ultimate question of complying with a client’s request for files in a paper or a particular electronic format, North Carolina anticipated two groups might exist. One group of clients or successor counsel would have the technical competence and financial ability to receive electronic files without difficulty or undue financial burden.10 The other group would have limited technical or financial means so that delivery of electronic files would be burdensome. 11 Given the two groups, the North Carolina Ethics Committee concluded, “There must