Introduction
If I were to make one prophesy about legal services in our country the future, it would be that we will soon have some sort of regulation for those who are currently not regulated to provide legal services (hereafter ‘unregulated providers’, even though they might be regulated in some respects, but not for the provision of legal services).
There have been two important reports that have called for such a move over the last year.
Two reports with recommendations on unregulated providers
First, in the middle of last year, Professor Stephen Mayson of University College London published a report into the future regulation of the legal profession (https://www.lawgazette.co.uk/news/register-every-lawyer-regardless-of-qualification-mayson-review/5104600.article).
Professor Mayson’s report was wide-ranging, and much of its content was beyond the scope of this article (https://www.ucl.ac.uk/ethics-law/sites/ethics-law/files/irlsr_final_report_final.pdf). It was divided into two sets of recommendations, long-term and short-term, and its short-term recommendations were devoted specifically to the problems which are expected to arise post-pandemic.
He wrote first that, post-pandemic, lawtech providers will probably be better funded, financially more resilient, and more entrepreneurial than many law firms. Second, if law firms are going to go out of business, consumers will probably be drawn even more to currently unregulated providers and unregulated technology-based legal services. Therefore, says Professor Mayson, it is even more important that alternative providers are brought in the short-term within the scope of regulation.
Professor Mayson’s preferred short-term solution was for the Legal Services Board (LSB) to establish a public register of unregulated providers. He said the LSB should then decide if any compensation and indemnification arrangements should be attached.
The second report came just before Christmas 2020. It was from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), called ‘Review of the legal services market study in England and Wales’ (https://www.gov.uk/cma-cases/review-of-the-legal-services-market-study-in-england-and-wales) .
The CMA had a slightly different short-term recommendation. Although the favoured solutions of both the CMA and Professor Mayson are for long-term root-and-branch reform of the regulation of the legal profession, they both recognise that – since the government clearly has its hands full with other matters – such change is not going to happen for the time being. The CMA’s short-term solution was for the Ministry of Justice to create, or enable the creation of, a mandatory public register for unregulated providers.
Who are the unregulated providers?
Data before the LSB suggests that unregulated businesses represent just 1% of paid-for advice, although that is thought to be an underestimate. While this seems small, the LSB says that it amounts to a significant number of transactions, especially in segments where unregulated businesses have higher market share.
Professor Mayson mentions will-writers, estate administrators, costs drafters, paralegals, and McKenzie Friends. He points out that many of these choose to join voluntary accreditation and registration schemes and carry professional indemnity insurance, but that those who do not pose a risk to consumers.
But there is a group missing from this list. As Professor Mayson elsewhere mentions, technology is developing rapidly in the legal sphere. UK legaltech is a leader in the field. The provision of legal services via platforms, mainly American, is increasing swiftly, whether that be through lawyer rating sites, document assembly offers, or apps which take citizens through the steps necessary to make claims. The pandemic, with home working and the economic hit on many law firms, will doubtless increase this trend.
How to deal with the problem
There are various ways to deal with the unregulated sector under our system.
Reserved activities
One is to change the list of reserved activities. The reserved activities are defined by section 12 of the Legal Services Act 2007, as follows:
- the exercise of a right of audience;
- the conduct of litigation;
- reserved instrument activities;
- probate activities;
- notarial activities;
- the administration of oaths.
One or more of these activities form the core of many solicitors’ work.
The Legal Services Board (LSB) is now consulting on whether to undertake a review of the reserved activities.
There are arguments for and against. For instance, in favour is the point that they have not been reviewed recently. Against is the point that technology is developing so fast that it may be sensible to wait and see what develops before tinkering with them.
Guidelines for the unregulated
There is disagreement as to whether bars should themselves become involved in actions regarding unregulated providers. Views generally fall into two camps.
Purists (and there is no disrespect intended by the titles, they each have plausible cases) feel that the regulator should focus only on its role of regulating lawyers. To do anything else is to dilute the vital role of lawyers and the regulatory protections that lawyers’ clients enjoy. The distinction between the regulated and unregulated may become blurred, to the detriment not only of lawyers but more importantly of clients.
Accommodationists, on the other hand, argue that it is unrealistic to ignore the growing role of the unregulated, and the good that they can do in easing the crisis in access to justice, particularly with the aid of technology. The least that regulators can do is to protect the public by suggesting guidelines or best practices in the area in which they regulate.
There was an interesting intervention last year in this debate. The American Bar Association’s (ABA) House of Delegates adopted Best Practice Guidelines for Online Legal Document Providers, and urged online legal document providers (OLPs) to adopt them (https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/directories/policy/annual-2019/10a-annual-2019.pdf). This is support for the accommodationist side of the argument.
The facts behind OLPs are rather staggering, and give support to the argument above that technology is creating a vast unregulated market. OLPs are a worldwide multi-billion dollar industry (approximately $4.1 billion in annual revenue), that has created a new market for lower cost law-related services. One provider, LegalZoom, estimates that it has served four million customers, and that its forms may have created one million corporations. Someone uses its forms to write a will every three minutes in the United States.
The OLP guidelines themselves are rather commonsensical: for instance, instructions should be clear and understandable, the forms should be valid for the user’s jurisdiction, the forms should be up-to-date, and an excessive fee should not be charged. They are only guidelines, and not enforceable in any way.
Purists may be comforted by sentences like: ‘Providers should notify Customers that the information Customers provide is not covered by the attorney-client privilege or work product protection’ and ‘Providers should notify their Customers that their forms are not a substitute for the services of a lawyer, and that Customers may benefit from the services of a lawyer in any legal transaction’.
The most interesting aspect of the guidelines, at any rate for the purpose of this debate, lies in the commentary attached, where considerable space is devoted to their justification.
This is not the first time that the ABA has produced guidelines for the unregulated. It has previously produced ‘Best Practice Guidelines for Legal Information Website Providers’.
The commentary addresses head on the arguments put by purists against its approach, as follows:
- the ABA is not just a trade association created to protect its members; it is a professional association that must focus on the needs of the public
- lawyers have substantial and longstanding experience with ensuring that legal and law-related services are delivered in ways that protect the public
- lawyers are the ones who have to solve, or at least address, any problems that result when OLPs create faulty documents or provide for inadequate dispute resolution mechanisms
- the public gains when all those providing legal services to the public – lawyers, OLPs and other legal services providers – work cooperatively rather than antagonistically
You may agree or disagree. But it is difficult to disagree with the point that unregulated provision of legal services is on the rise, and that it can plug the access-to-justice gap. The ABA points out that, at least in the USA, efforts to sue OLPs ‘are almost always settled favourably to the OLPs or have resulted in court rulings in favor of OLPs’.
So regulators have to choose between the advantages and disadvantages of being either purists or accommodationists. Personally, I favour the accommodationist tendency, hoping that the Law Society will tackle head on the question of unregulated providers.
Other ways
There are other ways to encourage standards among the unregulated. For instance, providers could be brought together into industry bodies which set standards, including certification and its removal.
Conclusion
Overall, the decision to address the question of unregulated providers is the beginning of a solution, but not the end. Once the decision is made, questions arise as to who must register, what protections accompany registration, how to distinguish this register from the register of qualified lawyers, and who should run the register, monitor compliance and administer enforcement. Those are huge decisions, which require another explanatory article in themselves.
But for the time being, I stand by my prophecy that some form of registration for the unregulated is approaching very quickly in our jurisdiction.
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