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Professional Responsibility Keyed to Hazard
Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee v. Parsons Technology, Inc.
Facts
The Texas Supreme Court appointed the Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee (UPLC) (Plaintiff) to enforce the unauthorized practice of law statute in Texas. The Plaintiff alleged that the sale of a Parsons (Defendant) computer software program entitled Quicken Family Lawyer ’99 (QFL) violated Texas’s unauthorized practice of law statute and sought to enjoin further sales. Defendant removed the case to federal court and both parties moved for summary judgment. Defendant alleged that just selling books or software could not violate the statute because a plain reading of the statute requires some form of personal contact beyond the contact between a publisher and a consumer. Alternatively, Defendant claimed that the application of the statute to the mere sale and distribution of the software would infringe the speech rights of Defendant under the Texas and United States Constitutions.
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