Client Communication

State Bar Defense Attorneys Client Communication
Client Communication (California) | East Bay Law P.C.
Professional Duties

Client Communication (California)

How the State Bar frames communication allegations—and how to defend them. What Rule 1.4 requires, how Rule 1.4.1 governs settlement authority, and why B&P §6068(m) often appears alongside diligence and competence counts.

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Governing Rules & Statutes

  • Rule 1.4 (Communication): Keep the client reasonably informed; promptly comply with reasonable requests for information; explain matters to permit informed decisions; and communicate significant developments.
  • Rule 1.4.1 (Settlement): The lawyer must not accept a settlement offer without the client’s informed written consent; promptly convey written offers and significant oral offers.
  • B&P §6068(m): Duty to respond promptly to reasonable client inquiries and keep clients reasonably informed of significant developments.
  • Related—Rule 1.2 (Scope): Clarifies allocation of authority: objectives are the client’s; means are the lawyer’s (subject to consultation). Poor communication often morphs into a scope/authority dispute.
  • Related—Rule 1.16(d) (Termination): Requires protective steps on exit, including surrendering papers/property and refunding unearned fees—communication failures commonly aggravate this count.
Key Point: Communication charges are frequently coupled with diligence (Rule 1.3) and competence (Rule 1.1) when silence masks delay or neglect.

What OCTC Must Prove (at a glance)

  • Duty: An attorney–client relationship and an issue requiring communication (status updates, offers, deadlines, decisions).
  • Breach: Failure to inform, failure to convey offers, failure to respond to reasonable inquiries, or failure to explain for informed decision-making.
  • Significant development: Something a reasonable client would want to know (e.g., hearing outcomes, dispositive motions, sanctions, settlement offers).
  • Harm / Risk of harm: Missed opportunities (e.g., lapsed offer), adverse rulings unaddressed, or client actions taken without informed consent.
  • Aggravation/Mitigation: Pattern vs. isolated lapse, client vulnerability, cooperation, candor, restitution (if financial impact), and corrective measures.

Common OCTC Charging Patterns

“Ghosted client” narrative

Weeks/months without replies to reasonable requests; paired with §6068(m) and Rule 1.3 if deadlines slip.

Unconveyed settlement offers

Failure to promptly convey; or accepting without informed written consent (triggers Rule 1.4.1 directly).

No explanation of material risks

Client decisions (e.g., arbitration clause, plea, dismissal) without adequate explanation—framed as failure to enable informed decisions.

Case events not reported

Sanctions, orders, or adverse rulings not shared promptly; OCTC argues erosion of trust and prejudice to client options.

Exit without guidance

Withdrawing or being discharged without file return or status roadmap—adds 1.16(d) and often 1.5/1.15 issues (refunds/ledgers).

Settlement Authority (Rule 1.4.1)

A lawyer may not accept a settlement offer without the client’s informed written consent. Written memorialization protects both client and counsel; it also helps defeat later disputes about authority. Promptly transmit all written offers and material oral offers. When timing is short, confirm conveyance and the client’s instruction in writing (email/text plus a file memo).

Watchouts: “Standing authority” must be clear and current; stale or ambiguous instructions are risky. Changes in terms (scope, non-monetary conditions, releases) require fresh, informed consent.

Evidence That Matters

  • Message trail: Time-stamped emails, portal messages, letters, and documented phone summaries.
  • Offer handling: Copies of offers, prompt transmittal emails, and signed acceptances (or written rejections).
  • Explainer docs: Plain-language risk/benefit summaries, options matrices, and recorded consents where appropriate.
  • Calendaring & ticklers: Proof of systems that surface client inquiries and significant developments for timely response.
  • Exit communications: Closing letters detailing posture, deadlines, file return, and any funds disposition.
Important: One missed call is rarely the case. OCTC pursues patterns. A strong record showing responsiveness and timely updates blunts the narrative.

Defense Framing & Strategy (High Level)

  • Define “reasonable” communication: Context matters (case complexity, court pace, agreed cadence). Anchor to written expectations set at intake.
  • Separate negligence from intent: Resist any drift toward §6106 (moral turpitude) where there is no dishonesty; emphasize transparency once issues were discovered.
  • Materiality of developments: Show that any omitted update was not outcome-determinative, or that the client’s options were not prejudiced.
  • Authority clarity: Produce contemporaneous writings reflecting the client’s instructions, especially around settlement and dispositive decisions.
  • Systems proof: Demonstrate existing protocols for client contact, offer handling, and urgent escalation—then show they were tightened (without revealing privileged strategy here).

No remediation plan included: We provide those privately to retained clients.

Sanctions Context (Overview)

Communication violations commonly result in reproval or short suspensions when harm is limited and mitigation is strong. Patterns, client vulnerability, concealment of significant developments, or unauthorized settlements can elevate ranges—particularly when combined with diligence or court-order violations.

  • Mitigation levers: No prior discipline, strong character evidence, documented responsiveness improvements, early candid cooperation, and client impact minimized.
  • Aggravation factors: Multiple clients, missed settlement opportunities, ignoring repeated inquiries, or misleading statements about case status.

Frequent Scenarios & How They’re Framed

Weeks Without Replies During Critical Motion Practice

OCTC argues §6068(m) + 1.4 + 1.3 (if deadlines slip). Defense shows timely work on the merits, documented outreach, and benign explanation (court backlog, opposing delays) with proof.

Offer Lapses Without Client Seeing It

Core 1.4/1.4.1 issue. Defense requires a clear conveyance record or proof that the client was notified and declined; otherwise, materiality and causation are contested.

Exit Without Status Roadmap

Triggers 1.16(d) and often 1.4. Defense highlights immediate file transfer, deadline list, and any refunds—plus objective evidence the client’s interests were protected.

FAQ

Can I set a communication cadence in my fee agreement?

Yes—set expectations (e.g., monthly status, response windows) and preferred channels. Clear baselines reduce disputes about “reasonable” responsiveness.

Do brief text updates count?

They can, but preserve them to the file and follow with an email/letter for significant developments or decisions to ensure adequate explanation.

What if the client is nonresponsive?

Document outreach attempts across channels; send a letter setting deadlines; escalate to motion/withdrawal if necessary—but continue protective steps.

Facing a communication charge?

We defend Rule 1.4 & 1.4.1 cases with evidence that persuades

We position the record around material developments, client authority, and responsiveness—aimed at narrowing charges and reducing sanctions.

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Understanding Client Communication