Recently, the Bar Council of India (BCI) introduced the Rules for Registration and Regulation of Foreign Lawyers and Foreign Law Firms in India.
Criticisms Raised by U.S. Law Firms
- Non-Tariff Barrier Claim: Rules impose procedural restrictions, limiting entry of U.S. firms.
- Exclusion from Global Consultations: Alleged lack of U.S. input in the consultation process.
- Client Confidentiality Concerns: Disclosure requirements (e.g., type of legal work, client identity) conflict with ABA Model Rules.
- Fly-in Fly-out Restrictions: Seen as non-reciprocal and discriminatory, compared to Indian lawyers in the U.S.
- No Transition Period: Sudden implementation left no time for adjustment by U.S. firms.
- Impact on Bilateral Trade: Fear that Indian companies may avoid U.S.-related transactions due to lack of expertise in U.S. law.
Legal Position of Bar Council of India
- Body: The Bar Council of India (BCI) is a statutory body, mandated to maintain professional conduct and protect the legal fraternity, not a trade promotion entity.
- Legal aspect: The practice of law is governed under Entries 77 and 78 of the Union List. It is distinct from trade and commerce (covered separately in the Seventh Schedule).
- In Bar of Indian Lawyers v. D.K. Gandhi (2024), the legal profession was termed a contract of personal service, separating it from trade/business domains.
- Consistency in Policy: India refused to include legal services in the UK-India FTA, showing a clear and consistent regulatory approach despite external pressure.
- Structured LiberalisationRules 3 & 4 allow foreign law firms in India with registration and adherence to standards. Fly-in Fly-out visits are allowed under Rule 3(1) proviso, capped at 60 days/year.
- Fair Reciprocity: U.S. legal system requires state-specific bar exams; no universal access for Indians. BCI’s reciprocity clause creates regulatory parity, not discrimination.
- Flexibility: Rule 4(h) requires a certificate of ‘good standing’, which U.S. lawyers find difficult due to their decentralised system.
- Rule 6 of Chapter III allows case-by-case flexibility, accommodating genuine cases without compromising on professional ethics.
- Confidentiality and Compliance: Disclosure norms under the rules do not breach client confidentiality. The requirement is to indicate the general nature of work,
ensuring that foreign practitioners stay within legal boundaries.
- Long-standing Consultations: The claim that the rules were suddenly implemented is factually incorrect.
- Discussions on foreign legal practice in India have been ongoing for over two decades, backed by expert committee reports, global consultations, and landmark judicial pronouncements such as Lawyers Collective vs. Bar Council of India (2009) and Bar Council of India vs. A.K. Balaji (2018), which collectively form the legal and consultative foundation for the new regulatory framework.
- Cooperative Bridge: Far from being obstructive, the new rules liberalise foreign legal participation through a balanced, structured, and ethical framework that upholds professional integrity, safeguards client confidentiality, promotes reciprocity with global systems, and reinforces ethical accountability.
Conclusion
The Bar Council of India’s rules are a step towards measured liberalisation,where foreign participation is welcomed under ethical and professional safeguards. They represent India’s maturity in balancing domestic legal sovereignty with the growing need for international engagement
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