Breach of Professional Ethics: Most legal systems and bar associations have strict rules about maintaining professional boundaries. Engaging in a sexual relationship with a client can lead to disciplinary action against the lawyer, including disbarment.
It is not enough to say “well, we didn't have sexual intercourse” or “we didn't get to know one another in the Biblical sense.” Kissing a client, even if the attorney exercises self-restraint with respect to any further sexual activity, runs afoul of California Rule of Professional Conduct 1.8.
The American Bar Association's Model Rules of Professional Responsibility prohibit such affairs between a lawyer and his clients. There's always an exception under the law, however. That's if the client was the lawyer's sexual partner before the client became a client.
In the United States, lawyers are most likely to marry other lawyers. A few years ago, the folks at Bloomberg reported the results of an empirical study that showed: Male lawyers are more likely to marry other lawyers than members of any other profession.
She cites ABA statistics that show a third of all women lawyers have never married, compared to 8 percent of male lawyers, and nearly half of women lawyers are currently unmarried, compared to 15 percent of the men.
Unsurprisingly, it turns out that most lawyers marry other lawyers. But male lawyers also marry schoolteachers, secretaries, and miscellaneous managers. And lawyers marry people in other computer occupations. For some reason, judicial law clerks are listed separately.
Of course, the first profession I looked at was lawyers. Unsurprisingly, it turns out that most lawyers marry other lawyers. But male lawyers also marry schoolteachers, secretaries, and miscellaneous managers. And lawyers marry people in other computer occupations.
There's no minimum age but generally a partnership can be offered 7–10 years out of law school. Varies by firm. So early to mid-thirties isn't unusual.
Professional Ethics: Most legal ethical codes strongly discourage or outright prohibit lawyers from engaging in romantic relationships with clients during representation. This is to maintain professional boundaries and ensure that the lawyer-client relationship is based solely on the client's legal needs.