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Comments Regarding Proposed Amendments
to the Regulations
Governing Practice Before the Internal Revenue Service
(Title 31, Code of Federal Regulations, Subtitle A, Part 10)
April 23, 2001
Section 10.29 Conflicting Interests.
With two exceptions, the Section applauds the substance of section 10.29, as proposed.
Our first substantive concern is with the requirement that waivers of potential conflicts
of interest under section 10.29(a)(2) must be in writing. This requirement does not appear
in Model Rule 1.7(a) of the A.B.A. Model Rules of Professional Conduct and may lead to a
substantial degree of inadvertent non-compliance. The Section also notes that this written
consent requirement only appears to apply to potential conflicts of interest between
multiple parties who are represented by the practitioner. By its terms, proposed section
10.29(c) does not require a written consent in cases in which the potential conflict is
between the interests of the represented party and the practitioners own interests.
The Section recommends that this provision be amended to permit a written or oral waiver
of a potential conflict of interest.
Our second concern is with the use in the Proposed Amendment of the term
"potential conflict of interest" in section 10.29(a). This term is not defined
and, conceivably, may be substantially more inclusive than the term "conflicting
interests" which appears in the current version of section 10.29 and in the preamble
to the Proposed Amendments. By contrast, Model Rule 1.7(a) of the A.B.A. Model Rules of
Professional Conduct, which proposed section 10.29(a) resembles in some respects, does not
require an attorney to secure informed consent unless the representation of a client will
be "directly adverse" to another client. The Section submits that this is the
appropriate standard for determining whether conflicting interests are significant enough
to require a waiver of the conflict.
Proposed section 10.29(c) implies that a "potential conflict" may exist if
the representation of a party may be "materially limited" by the
practitioners own interest. However, it is unclear whether the term "potential
conflict" in section 10.29(c) is intended to be the equivalent of a "potential
conflict of interest" for purposes of section 10.29(a). Section 10.29(a) of the
Proposed Amendments should be clarified to expressly provide that a "potential
conflict of interest" exists for purposes of section 10.29(a) only where a
practitioners representation of one party may be materially limited by the interests
of another represented party. Even in this case, however, the formulation used in Model
Rule 1.7(a) may be preferable. Certainly, situations may arise in which the competing
economic interests of one represented party may be materially impacted by the outcome of
the practitioners representation before the Internal Revenue Service of another
represented party. Such circumstances do not require the practitioner to secure the
informed consent of both parties under Model Rule 1.7(a). However, even if clarified as
set forth above, the broader term "potential conflict of interest" may not be so
limited. Consequently, the Section recommends that the term "potential conflict of
interest" in section 10.29(a) should either be changed to "conflicting
interests" as defined in Model Rule 1.7(a) or, alternatively, defined or otherwise
limited to refer only to situations in which the objectives of the practitioners
representation of one party before the Internal Revenue Service would be directly adverse
to the interests of the other party. Such a change would obviate the need for any
clarification of the meaning of the phrase "potential conflict" in section
10.29(c).
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