This rule's Comment 1 also informs that lawyers must charge fees
reasonable under the given circumstances.
Not exact matches
«So I can announce today that we are going to
give the police the discretion to remove face coverings
under any
circumstances where there is
reasonable suspicion that they are related to criminal activity.»
A lawyer may limit the scope of the representation if the limitation is
reasonable under the
circumstances and the client
gives informed consent.
Whether the conditions for the making of a disclosure order
under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 existed or did not exist was essentially a question of fact, the question being whether there were «
reasonable grounds for believing» that the material relied upon by the Serious Organised Crime Agency was likely to be of substantial value and that it was in the public interest that the material should be produced or that access to it should be
given having regard to: (a) the benefit likely to accrue to the civil recovery investigation if the material was obtained; and (b) the
circumstances under which the person concerned had any of the material in his possession, power or control (criteria (a) and (b)-RRB-.
720 ILCS 11 - 20.1 (b)(1) states that an affirmative defense may be asserted if a defendant «reasonably believed,
under all of the
circumstances, that the child was 18 years of age or older... prior to the act or acts
giving rise to [the] prosecution... he or she took some affirmative action or made a bona fide inquiry designed to ascertain whether the child was 18 years of age or older... and his or her reliance upon the information so obtained was clearly
reasonable.»
However, the majority of the Court found that the recording was made
under circumstances that did not
give rise to a
reasonable expectation of privacy and therefore upheld Jarvis» acquittal at trial.
(c) A lawyer may limit the scope and objectives of the representation if the limitation is
reasonable under the
circumstances and the client
gives informed consent.
The «
reasonable expectations» doctrine applies when a consumer is
given an expectation by an agent of the insurance company that coverage would be provided
under certain
circumstances.