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ASSOCIATION'S LEGAL COUNSEL

Corporate Counsel. An association's legal counsel serves as corporate counsel to the the association. The association/corporation is the client, which acts through its board of directors. (Corp. Code § 300(a).) 

Corporations have a separate legal identity and enjoy the benefit of the attorney-client privilege. Evidence Code section 951 defines a "client" as the "person" who "directly or through an authorized representative, consults a lawyer for the purpose of retaining the lawyer ...." The term "person" includes a corporation; indeed, it may  extend to an unincorporated organization "when the organization (rather than its individual members) is the client."  (Smith v. Laguna Sur.)

This is also the position taken by the California State Bar in Rule 3-600(A) of the Rules of Professional Conduct:

In representing an organization, a member shall conform his or her representation to the concept that the client is the organization itself, acting through its highest authorized officer, employee, body, or constituent overseeing the particular engagement.

As a result, even though members pay the attorney's legal fees through their assessments, members do not have the right to call or email the association's attorney with questions. Nor can directors presume the attorney represents them individually:

In representing a corporation, an attorney's client is the corporate entity, not the individual shareholders or directors, and the individual shareholders or directors cannot presume that corporate counsel is protecting their interests. (La Jolla Cove v. Superior Court (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 773.)

Communication With Board. For most associations, making the president and the manager the contact points for the attorney is a common sense way of keeping legal expenses under control. Otherwise, allowing five directors to call and talk the ear off the attorney will significantly run up legal fees. Moreover, the attorney may receive conflicting instructions from five directors. Accordingly, most boards designate the president to act as liaison with the attorney so as to avoid conflicting instructions and unnecessary legal fees.

Request for Legal Opinion. The president, however, cannot block requests for legal guidance on issues. If, during a board meeting, a director asks for a legal opinion on an issue and a majority of the directors support that request, the president cannot overrule the request. The director requesting the legal opinion can also vote on his own request.

No Director Confidences. Because the attorney acts as legal counsel for the corporation rather than individual directors, he/she cannot agree to keep communications with one director secret from other directors. There are exceptions, such as when one director is in litigation with the association or an executive committee has been formed to deal with a particular issue involving another director.

No Right to Inspect. Because communications, i.e., letters, emails, etc., between the board and legal counsel are privileged, members do not have the right to inspect those communications.

Conflicts of Interest. To avoid conflicts of interest, the association's lawyer does not represent individual directors or homeowners or the management company. If a dispute erupted between the association and the management company, the attorney would have to recuse him/herself from representing either client. As legal counsel to an association, a lawyer should never represent other persons or entities that could have conflicting interests with the association. When hiring legal counsel to represent the association, boards should ask if they represent management companies. If the attorney does, he/she will likely put the management company's interests ahead of the association's. Boards should drop that attorney from consideration.

Director's Attorney. If a director wants the board to hire his personal attorney to serve as the association's corporate counsel, the board should decline. The association's legal counsel must be free of any conflicts of interest so he/she can provide sound advice to the board.

See "Following Legal Advice."

ASSISTANCE: Associations needing legal assistance can contact us. To stay current with issues affecting community associations, subscribe to the Davis-Stirling Newsletter.

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