
| Why Client Literacy is Important to Lawyers
By carrying out the changes suggested in this booklet, lawyers will both improve communications with their clients and help them to better use the justice system. Some benefits to lawyers of making changes include:
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. . The legal system can be intimidating to adults who cannot use written legal materials. As a result, they avoid initiating legal actions. |

. . Are you certain the messages you send clients are understood by them?
It can be uncomfortable asking a client, "Can you read?" Instead, look for clues that a client is unable to read legal documents.
Ask yourself:

How to Recognize Your Client Has a Literacy Problem
Many people with limited literacy skills have developed coping strategies to compensate. The following behaviours may suggest a literacy problem:

| Don't Be Misled Sometimes clients appear to be uninterested in their case or unwilling to participate in providing instructions or finding solutions. They may fear that, by doing so, they will be required to read. They may:
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A CASE STUDY
A 1990 B.C. Supreme Court Charter ruling excluding an illiterate man's murder confession put the onus on police to ensure suspects understand their Charter rights.
Section 10(b) requires police officers to inform a detainee of the right to "retain and instruct counsel without delay."
The police gave the accused the standard Charter warning. He then confessed to the murder of a Terrace woman and was eventually charged with second degree murder.
At trial, it was evident the accused had limited communication skills. He thought the right to "counsel" meant the right to call a drug or alcohol counsellor.
The case is a poignant example of how most people don't understand even the simplest legal expressions.
The judge ruled the accused had been deprived of his rights by his failure to understand them and by the failure to have them explained in terms he could understand.
The confession was ruled excluded from evidence and the accused pleaded guilty to manslaughter.
R v Bruneau [1990] B.C.S.C. (unreported) |

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. . Your challenge is to inform and support clients so they can make better use of necessary written legal material. |
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Lawyers Can Help
To help clients who have difficulty with literacy, lawyers need to be observant and aware. You can improve client communications if you are alert to your clients' needs. Adapting to Meet Client Needs
You don't have to teach your clients to read. Your challenge is to inform and support clients so they can make better use of necessary written legal material.Improving Client Communications You can:
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Establishing the Client Record You can:
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| Modifying Office Processes Your firm can:
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If All Else Fails
You Can:
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