The Lawyers Business and Property Network ... making connections
A new initiative underway in April is the Lawyers Business and Property Network. The Network is a non-profit association, open to all B.C. lawyers, that helps lawyers assist clients - both buyers and sellers - with business, property and financial interests, including the purchase, sale and financing of commercial properties and businesses.
Now with 36 founding members, the Network is a forum for lawyers to pool their collective client and business contacts, to further client interests. As President and a primary organizer of the Network, Dale Janowsky, QC of Kamloops, says that cooperative efforts in the profession are important.
Mr. Janowsky sees great potential for lawyers, through the Network, to tap into a pool of contacts. "You can pick up the lawyers directory, multiply the number of lawyers by the number of clients they may have," he said. "When we share information among the members in an organized and professional manner, it's just head and shoulders above whatever is being offered out there."
The Network is intended to help lawyers represent clients throughout business and property transactions, and to receive fees commensurate with the value of their services. As noted by Mr. Janowsky, clients regularly pay real estate agents commissions of between 4% and 7%, while lawyers currently receive conveyancing fees worth the one-tenth the value of those commissions.
He sees great potential in a network providing opportunities to lawyers and giving clients greater choice. "The program will support the public interest by providing a one-stop service for clients of lawyers who want market exposure for their business or property in addition to legal advice on the purchase or sale," he says.
A client has several advantages in choosing a lawyer, including the promise of strict confidentiality, which can be critical in commercial transactions. "Some clients don't want it known that their business is for sale because someone may try to take it away from them," notes Mr. Janowsky. "If you have, for example, a client list that is an integral part of the business, you can provide it to the other lawyer on the basis that he does not disclose it to anyone, and the financial records that go along with that. Our rules of conduct and ethics (as lawyers) are so much stronger and onerous than in the real estate world, and that's why we provide a better service."
The Lawyers Business and Property Network will feature several key services:
- A public website (www.thenetwork.ca): This website will provide general information for lawyers and clients.
- A "B.C. lawyers-only" intranet (www.lbpn.intranets.com): Members of the Network can post client properties, businesses or other interests in a central database. They can use this database to negotiate and conclude transactions on behalf of clients. All B.C. lawyers can browse this database by first registering for access.
- Information and template packages: Members of the Network will receive - via email and a web forum - standard forms for listings, templates for retainer agreements and guidelines on how to handle an initial set of transactions.
- Package of support services: On behalf of clients, members of the Network can purchase an optional service from an outside supplier that manages and provides signs, valuations, property descriptions, photos and other related materials.
The Lawyers Business and Property Network offers members fee agreement templates (either a fixed fee or contingency basis) when representing buyers or sellers. Fee negotiations and arrangements are left entirely to the individual lawyer and client.
What professional conduct considerations have been canvassed in relation to the template agreements? The Law Society Ethics Committee reviewed certain aspects of the agreements for the Network last December, specifically in relation to lawyers charging placement fees to buyers and accepting finders' fees for financing. The Committee was satisfied that the agreements would not violate Chapter 6, Rule 8 of the Professional Conduct Handbook (Finders' fees), given that all finders' fees and brokerage fees are disclosed to and approved by a client, and paid to the client's credit. In the Committee's view, a buyer's agreement could properly allow for the buyer to pay a fee to his or her lawyer based on a percentage of the purchase price without violating Chapter 7, Rule 1 of the Handbook (Acting when the lawyer has an interest in the matter) as a lawyer is always under an obligation to minimize costs for a client.
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Mr. Janowsky invites all lawyers to visit the Lawyers Business and Property Network information site (www.thenetwork.ca). To register for access to the private intranet, first register at the Juricert website (www.juricert.ca), click on "Products and Services" and submit a request to apply to the Network. Once your Law Society membership has been confirmed by Juricert, the Law Society's online authentication service, you will be given a password to www.lbpn.intranets.com.
If a lawyer wishes to do more than browse the intranet - to post a listing or conclude a transaction for a client - he or she can do so by joining the Network, paying the annual fee and any applicable posting or transaction fees. The annual membership fee is $250.
For more information, you can also contact Mr. Janowsky by email at dale.janowsky@thenetwork.ca, by telephone at (250) 372-2022 or by fax at (250) 372-0087.