The U.S. Appellate Case
for the Second Federal District, Lola v. Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, No. 14-3845 (2d Cir. 2015) interests me for
reasons other than its stance on labor laws. I'm interested in the
part about, if a machine can do it, then its not UPL.
David Lola who brought
the case along with others who were in the same position, while
working for a legal temporary employment agency reviewing documents.
For this he was paid $25. per hour. His job was to go through the
documents and search for certain words and phrases; categorize the
documents; and mark other words and phrases to be redacted. (It
sounds mind numbing). His place of employment was at a law firm in
North Carolina [Skadden, et al].
Lola worked more than
forty hours per week, but wasn't paid time and half for hours over
forty. His employers' position was that he was not entitled to
overtime pay because he was a professional and an attorney. They
cited exemptions in the labor laws for overtime pay for professionals
and attorneys. Lola argued that the work he was doing was not
practicing law, because the work required absolutely no legal
judgment.
He eventually won his
case. The opinion included some interesting language.
“The gravamen of Lola’s
complaint is that he performed document review under such tight
constraints that he exercised no legal judgment whatsoever—he
alleges that he used criteria developed by others to simply sort
documents into different categories. Accepting those allegations as
true, as we must on a motion to dismiss, we find that Lola adequately
alleged in his complaint that he failed to exercise any legal
judgment in performing his duties for Defendants. A
fair reading of the complaint in the light most favorable to Lola is
that he provided services that a machine could have provided. The
parties themselves agreed at oral argument that an individual who, in
the course of reviewing discovery documents, undertakes tasks that
could otherwise be performed entirely by a machine cannot be said to
engage in the practice of law.”
The reason I find this so
interesting is that document preparers are frequently investigated
for the unauthorized practice of law (UPL). And if the law of the
land is that if it could be automated then its not practicing law, we
could use that argument in almost every investigation against one of
us. Its not exactly the law of the land, it is the law in the Second
Federal District, but still persuasive.
Document preparers
prepare documents. We don't provide legal advice or legal judgment.
Certainly a lot of what we do could be done by artificial
intelligence (AI), aka machines, aka computer software. Our
activities may not be commonly done by AI but they could. A computer
could automatically format documents, intake information, ask
questions, and so on. A computer program can certainly know when to
ask additional questions and use if/then logic.
So … since a computer
could certainly do what I do in preparing documents, then that must
mean that nothing I do can be considered the unauthorized practice of
law. Right?
Great article, I can wait to see how this plays out in the Florida Courts!
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