Paralegal PCCE CORE Test Prep

Category - Paralegal PCCE Exam Prep

A paralegal works for a senior partner in a mid-sized law firm in Portland, Oregon. The attorney represents a company based in Portland that does business in several western states, including California. One of the company’s suppliers, which is based in Los Angeles, sued the company for breach of contract. Under the contract, the parties had agreed to arbitrate any dispute before the American Arbitration Association, with the arbitration to take place in Los Angeles. If the senior partner is licensed in Oregon, but not in California, can the senior partner represent the company at the arbitration in Los Angeles?

  1. Yes, because the representation involves an that is reasonably related to the senior partner’s representation of the Oregon-based company.
  2. Yes, if the senior partner is admitted pro hac vice before the American Arbitration Association in Los Angeles.
  3. No, unless the senior partner associates with an attorney in California.
  4. No, because the senior partner is not admitted in California and appearing for the arbitration would be unauthorized practice of law in California.
Explanation

Answer: A - Yes, because the representation involves an arbitration that is reasonably related to the senior partner’s representation of the Oregon-based company. This is the best choice because it reflects the Model Rule that permits the senior partner to represent the company at the arbitration (Model Rule 5.5(c)(3): “A lawyer admitted in another United States jurisdiction . . . may provide legal services on a temporary basis in this jurisdiction that . . . are reasonably related to a pending arbitration . . . if the services are reasonably related to the lawyer’s practice in a jurisdiction in which the lawyer is admitted.”) The partner does not need to to be admitted pro hac vice.

Was this helpful? Upvote!
Login to contribute your own answer or details

Top questions

Related questions

Most popular on PracticeQuiz