


The considerable outlay involved in setting up, and the overheads and time involved in managing a practice, fall squarely on your shoulders, often with no one but your trusty copies of Jutas or Butterworths to keep you company.
Sharing an office is analogous to getting a roommate – you gain someone to pay half the rent and utilities, as well as a new acquaintance to bounce ideas off.
Unfortunately, what could be a potential boon to lawyers in difficult economic times turns out to be an ethical quagmire. Rule 7 of the Code of Conduct for legal practitioners, which replaced Rule 44 of the Uniform Rule of the Attorneys Act and is issued in terms of Section 97(1) (b) of the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (LPA), stipulates:
“An attorney may not . . . without the prior written consent of the Council, share offices with a person who is not an attorney or an employee of an attorney.”
A member who fails to comply with Rule 7 is guilty of unprofessional and/or dishonourable and/or unworthy conduct, as stated in Rule 13.
The above Rule is premised on four principles:
1 Lewis, E. A. L. (1982). ‘Legal Ethics a Guide to Professional Conduct for South African Attorneys’.
The LPA’s Code of Conduct does allow attorneys to share office space with one another. In today’s competitive market, this is a smart option.
Sharing office space, along with overheads, resources, ideas and expertise, with like-minded attorneys can maximise your chances of success. It enables: