Rules of Professional Conduct
The North Carolina Rules of Professional Conduct are the ethical rules that lawyers licensed in the state must follow.
The North Carolina Rules of Professional Conduct are the ethical rules that lawyers licensed in the state must follow.
The North Carolina Rules of Professional Conduct are adopted by the North Carolina State Bar Council and approved by the North Carolina Supreme Court. They govern how attorneys interact with clients, courts, other lawyers, and the public.
The complete text of the Rules of Professional Conduct as currently amended, and all of the comments thereto, as approved by the North Carolina Supreme Court and codified in the North Carolina Administrative Code, can be found using the search box below.
Correlation tables appear on this page. These tables cross-reference the 1997 and 2003 versions of the Rules with the comparable provisions of the superseded 1985 Rules of Professional Conduct (in effect from January 1, 1986, to July 23, 1997) and 1973 Code of Professional Conduct (in effect from April 30, 1974, to December 31, 1985).
A “History Note” after each Rule sets forth the statutory authority for the Rule. The date of original approval of the Rule by the North Carolina Supreme Court is identified as the “Adopted” date. Note that the Rules of Professional Conduct were comprehensively reorganized and renumbered in 1997; therefore, most of the Rules show July 24, 1997, as the date of adoption by the Supreme Court. The dates upon which amendments to a Rule were approved by the Supreme Court are listed after “Amendments Approved by the Supreme Court.”
The History Note for each Rule is followed by annotations of ethics opinions of the State Bar that apply or interpret the Rule. In the annotations, the terms "CPR" and "RPC" designate formal ethics opinions adopted under the superseded 1973 Code of Professional Responsibility and 1985 Rules of Professional Conduct, respectively. These opinions still provide guidance on issues of professional conduct except to the extent that a particular opinion is overruled by a subsequent opinion or by a provision of the current Rules of Professional Conduct. Ethics opinions rendered invalid by subsequent opinion or by the current Rules are generally not annotated. (A copy of a CPR opinion may be obtained by calling the ethics department at the State Bar.) An ethics opinion promulgated under the 1997 Rules and thereafter is designated as a "Formal Ethics Opinion."
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