I am certainly of the view that a party cannot be permitted to argue conflict of interest where the intent is simply to hamper the case by making an opponent change lawyers. As courts in the United States have often put it, conflict issues cannot be used by a party “as both a shield requiring disqualification of [opposing counsel] and a sword to prove [or improve] her claims.” Twin Caliber (MA) LLC v. Furey, 20 LCR 139 (Mass, 2012). One must be wary of that possibility where a party to a dispute, who suffers no conflict himself, tries to disqualify an adversary’s legal counsel in the middle of litigation.
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