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For Members of the Association of Legal Administrators Professional
associations such as the Association of Legal Administrators (ALA),
although well recognized as valuable tools of American business, are
subject to severe scrutiny by both federal and state governments.
The
single most significant law affecting professional associations is the
Sherman Antitrust Act, which makes unlawful "every contract,
combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in
restraint of trade or commerce..."
A
professional association by the very nature of the fact that it is made
up of competitors is a combination, thus satisfying one of the elements
in proving an antitrust violation. Section 5 of the Federal Trade
Commission Act is also applicable to professional associations; it
makes unlawful the same types of conduct that are prohibited by the
Sherman Act. Furthermore, almost all states have enacted antitrust laws
similar to the Sherman Act.
There
is no organization too small or too localized to escape the possibility
of a civil or criminal antitrust suit. The federal government has
brought civil or criminal actions against such small organizations as
Maine Lobstermen, a Virginia audio-visual association, Bakersfield
Plumbing Contractors, the Utah Pharmaceuticals Association, and local
barbers associations.
The
government has brought approximately five civil and ten criminal cases
a year against professional associations. It is thus imperative that
every professional association member, regardless of the size of the
association or the size of those comprising the membership, refrain
from indulging in any activity which may be the basis of a federal or
state antitrust action.
There
are four main areas of antitrust concern for professional associations:
price fixing, membership, standardization and certification, and
industry self-regulation. The area of greatest concern, for it is the
area where individual members are most likely to violate the law and
the area where the government appears most concerned, is price fixing.
The government may infer a violation of the Sherman Act by the mere
fact that all or most of the members of the professional association
are doing the same thing with respect to prices. It is not required
that there be an actual agreement, written or unwritten, to increase
prices. Rather, price fixing is a very broad term which includes any
concerted effort or action which has an effect on prices or on
competition.
Accordingly,
professional association members should refrain from any discussion
which may provide the basis for an inference that the members agreed to
take action relating to prices, production, allocation of markets, or
any other matter having a market effect. The following topics, while
not the only ones, are some of the main ones which should not be
discussed at regular meetings or member gatherings:
- Do
not discuss current or future billing rates, fees, disbursement charges
or other items that could be construed as "price." Further, be very
careful of discussions of past billing rates, fees or prices.
- Do not discuss what is a fair profit, billing rate or wage level.
- Do
not discuss an increase or decrease in price, fees or wages, or
disbursement charges. In this regard, remember that interest charges
are considered an item of price.
- Do not discuss standardizing or stabilizing prices, fees or wages, or disbursement charges.
- Do not discuss current billing or fee procedures.
- Do not discuss the imposition of credit terms or the amount thereof.
- Do
not complain to a competitor that his billing rates, fees or wages
constitute unfair trade practices. In this context, another law firm
(or even a corporate legal department) may be considered a competitor.
- Do not discuss refusing to deal with anyone because of his pricing or fees.
- Do
not conduct surveys (under the auspices of ALA or informally) relating
to fees, wages or other economic matters without prior review by
antitrust legal counsel. Any survey should have the following
characteristics: a) participation is voluntary and open to non-members,
b) data should be of past transactions, c) data should be collected by
an independent third party, such as an accounting firm, d)
confidentiality of each participant's data should be preserved, and e)
data should be presented only in a composite form to conceal data of
any single participant. If these criteria are met, an association can
collect and disseminate data on a wide range of matters, including such
things as past salaries, vacation policies, types of office equipment
used, etc.
However,
care must be taken to ensure that the purpose of any survey is to
permit each firm to assess its own performance. If a survey is used for
the purpose of or has the effect of raising or stabilizing fees, wages,
disbursements, credit policies and the like, it will create serious
antitrust problems.
Within this same legal
framework applicable to surveys, an association can make presentations
or circulate articles regarding such educational matters as
establishing sound office procedures, etc., provided it is clear that
the matters are educational, and not a basis for law firm uniformity or
agreement.
Inasmuch as association antitrust
violations can subject all association members to criminal and civil
liability, members should be aware of the legal risks in regard to
membership policy and industry self-regulation.
Fair and objective membership requirement policies should be established. Membership policies should avoid:
- Restrictions on dealing with non-members.
- Exclusions from membership, especially if there is a business advantage in being a member.
- Limitations on access to association information, unless the limitation is based upon protection of trade secrets.
The
Association of Legal Administrators has a code of ethics, which sets
forth parameters of ethical conduct. However, to ensure that the Code
of Ethics does not create any antitrust problems, ALA must continue to
ensure that its Code does not have arbitrary enforcement procedures or
penalties.
The penalties for violating federal or state antitrust laws are severe.
The
maximum criminal penalty for violating the Sherman Act is $350,000 for
an individual and $10,000,000 for a corporation. Pursuant to the
Sentencing Reform Act, alternative maximum fines could be increased to
twice the pecuniary gain of an offender or twice the loss to another
person.
Individuals and corporate officers who are
found guilty of bid rigging, price fixing or market allocation will
virtually always be sentenced to jail pursuant to the Sentencing
Guidelines; community service cannot be used to avoid imprisonment. The
minimum recommended sentence is four months; the maximum is three
years.
Additionally, there are civil penalties
such as injunctions or cease and desist orders which could result in
government supervision of association members, restricting the
association's activities or disbanding the association.
Civil
suits may be brought by consumers or competitors. Civil antitrust
actions result in treble damage awards and attorneys' fees. Thus, if
association members are held liable to a competitor for antitrust
violations which resulted in $500,000 worth of lost business, the
verdict may exceed $1,500,000.
The government's
attitude toward professional associations requires professional
association members, as well as professional associations themselves,
to at all times conduct their business openly and avoid any semblance
of activity which might lead to the belief that the association members
had agreed, even informally, to something that could have an effect on
prices, fees or competition. Thus, it is important that members contact
the association headquarters or legal counsel for guidance if they have
even the slightest qualms about the propriety of a proposed activity or
discussion.
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