Saturday, December 12, 2009

Business And Professions Code A Liquor License Lawyers: Do You Think A Layperson's Giving Legal Advice On YA Constitutes The Unauthorized Practice Of Law

Lawyers: do you think a layperson's giving legal advice on YA constitutes the unauthorized practice of law - business and professions code a liquor license

And the bonus round: A lawyer weighs on legal advice and is formed, a lawyer-client relationship? And it is the duty of lawyers and their client privilege?

Does anyone else think it's a little disturbing? In California, the illegal activity is unlawful as a lawyer (Cal. Business and Professions Code, Sec. 6125, and 6126). I think it's the same in 49 other states.

2 comments:

Goyo said...

My understanding of a legal agreement that is necessary to consult legal certainty is that the advice is exchanged is still only a dollar adjustment, and everything that follows this notice is legal. Since no one is here to ask for money / goods / services for your advice, then they are not as a lawyer participating in an open forum.

Because the attorney-client privilege is, if there is something that you and the attorney who can hear (or so), then there is not a privilege. In some cases, this also applies to your legal staff, so the support staff in general, they only the information they need to study or create, they receive instructions from the client.

sas said...

It is not possible if not for money or goods exchanged. Why must all the "illegal" Medical / Legal / plain misinfo the Internet in general ....

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