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How to Stay Safe as a Litigant in Person After Mazur (Step-by-Step Guide) | JSH Law

If you are a litigant in person, the way your case is structured now matters more than ever. Following the High Court decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP, the court has made it clear that only authorised or exempt individuals can conduct litigation—and that line is being looked at more closely in practice. The result is that many people, often without realising it, may be exposing their case to unnecessary risk simply through how it is being handled. The good news is that this is entirely manageable. With the right structure in place, you can stay fully compliant, protect your position, and strengthen your case at the same time.

How to Stay Safe as a Litigant in Person After Mazur (Step-by-Step Guide) | JSH Law
Key Takeaways for Litigants in Person
  • You must remain in control of your case at all times.
  • Support is allowed — but it must not become “conduct of litigation”.
  • The court is increasingly alert to who is actually running the case.
  • Clear structure protects your credibility and your position.
  • Simple procedural discipline can eliminate most risks.

How to Stay Safe as a Litigant in Person After Mazur (Step-by-Step Guide)

If you are a litigant in person, you are already carrying a significant responsibility.

You are managing your own case, navigating court procedure, and making decisions that may have long-term consequences for you and your family.

Following the High Court decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB), there is now an additional layer to that responsibility:

You must not only run your case — you must be seen to be running it.

This is where many people unintentionally expose themselves to risk.

This guide sets out, in practical terms, how to stay safe, compliant, and in control — while still getting the support you need.

Step 1: Understand the One Rule That Matters

Everything in this area comes back to a single principle:

You are the one conducting your case.

That means:

  • You make the decisions
  • You give the instructions
  • You take responsibility for what is filed and said

This is not about doing everything alone.

It is about ensuring that, at every stage, it is clear that the case is yours.

If that is maintained, you are on solid ground.

Step 2: Separate “Support” from “Control”

The most common mistake litigants make is confusing support with control.

Support is allowed — and often essential.

Control must remain with you.

To make this clear, apply this simple test:

“Am I the one making the decision and taking the step?”

If the answer is yes, you are within the correct structure.

If the answer is unclear, that is where risk begins.

For example:

  • If someone drafts a document for you → that is support
  • If someone decides what goes in that document → that may be control
  • If someone sends the document on your behalf → that may cross the line

The difference is subtle, but important.

Step 3: Take Ownership of Every Document

Every document in your case should be something you can stand behind.

That means:

  • You have read it
  • You understand it
  • You agree with it

In practical terms:

  • Do not submit anything you have not reviewed carefully
  • Do not rely on “it’s been handled”
  • Do not allow documents to be sent without your approval

Your name is on the case. The responsibility follows it.

Step 4: You Send the Emails

This is one of the simplest and most important safeguards.

All communications with:

  • The court
  • The other party
  • Solicitors

should be sent by you.

Support can help you draft those emails.

But you should be the one pressing send.

This ensures that:

  • Your role is clear
  • Your control is visible
  • Your position cannot be easily challenged

It also reinforces your credibility as a litigant in person.

Step 5: You Sign and File Everything

This is non-negotiable.

All documents:

  • Statements
  • Position statements
  • Applications

must be:

  • Signed by you
  • Filed by you

This is not just procedural.

It is a clear marker of who is conducting the case.

Where that marker is missing, questions can arise.

Step 6: Maintain a Clear Audit Trail

If your case were examined closely, you should be able to show:

  • That you made decisions
  • That you approved documents
  • That you gave instructions

This does not require complex systems.

It can be as simple as:

  • Email confirmations
  • Document versions showing your approval
  • Clear communication records

The aim is clarity.

If it is clear that you are in control, your position is protected.

Step 7: Be Careful Who You Rely On

Not all support is structured in the same way.

Some models are careful to remain within the boundaries of support.

Others may move closer to running the case, sometimes without clearly recognising the distinction.

This is not always obvious at the outset.

But you should be alert to signs such as:

  • Someone taking over communications
  • Decisions being made without your input
  • A sense that the case is being “handled” for you

These are indicators that the structure may need to be corrected.

Step 8: Understand How the Court Sees It

The court is not concerned with internal arrangements.

It looks at what is visible.

From the court’s perspective, the key question is simple:

Who appears to be running this case?

If the answer is clearly you, there is no issue.

If the answer is unclear, the court may take a closer look.

Clarity removes that risk entirely.

Step 9: Do Not Lose Your Voice in Your Own Case

One of the unintended consequences of over-reliance on support is that litigants can lose confidence in their own voice.

This can show in:

  • Hesitation in court
  • Uncertainty about their own position
  • Difficulty responding to questions

Staying in control of your case avoids this.

It ensures that:

  • You understand your arguments
  • You can explain your position
  • You remain engaged with the process

This is not just legally important.

It is strategically important.

Step 10: Use Support Properly — and Powerfully

The answer to all of this is not to avoid support.

It is to use it properly.

When structured correctly, support can:

  • Strengthen your case
  • Improve your preparation
  • Increase your confidence
  • Enhance how your case is presented

But it should always operate behind your role — not replace it.

You remain the decision-maker. Support strengthens you, not substitutes you.

Step 11: Recognise the Red Flags Early

One of the most effective ways to protect your case is to recognise when the structure is beginning to drift.

This rarely happens suddenly. It is usually gradual.

Support becomes more involved. Communication becomes more direct. Decisions start to feel less like yours and more like something being done “for you”.

That is the point at which you need to pause and reassess.

Common red flags include:

  • Emails being sent without your direct involvement
  • Documents being finalised without your review
  • Instructions being given on your behalf
  • A sense that you are being told what will happen, rather than deciding it

None of these, in isolation, automatically creates a problem.

But taken together, they can indicate that the structure of your case is no longer clear.

Clarity is what protects you. Loss of clarity is what creates risk.

Step 12: Real-World Scenario — Where Things Go Wrong

To understand how easily this can happen, consider a common scenario.

A litigant in person is overwhelmed. They engage someone to help. That person is experienced and confident. They begin by assisting with drafting. Then they begin to suggest wording. Then they begin to take a more active role in communication.

At first, this feels helpful.

Over time, however, the balance shifts.

The litigant becomes less involved in the detail. Documents are trusted without being fully reviewed. Emails are sent quickly to “keep things moving”.

From the outside, it may now appear that the case is being run by someone else.

This is not usually intentional.

But intention is not the test.

What matters is how the case is being conducted in practice.

Step 13: The “Safe Structure” Checklist

If you want to be confident that your case is properly structured, use this checklist.

You should be able to answer “yes” to all of the following:

  • I make the final decisions in my case
  • I review and approve every document before it is sent
  • I send all emails in my own name
  • I sign all statements and applications personally
  • I understand the key points being made in my case
  • I can explain my position to the court

If any of these answers are “no”, that is an opportunity to bring the structure back into line.

This is not about blame.

It is about clarity and control.

Step 14: Common Mistakes to Avoid

There are a number of recurring mistakes that litigants make, particularly when under pressure.

These include:

1. Delegating decisions
Allowing someone else to decide what should be said or done without your full involvement.

2. Not reviewing documents properly
Signing or sending documents without fully understanding their content.

3. Allowing others to communicate on your behalf
This is one of the clearest ways the line can be crossed.

4. Becoming disengaged from the case
Relying too heavily on support can reduce your own understanding and confidence.

Each of these is understandable.

But each can also weaken your position if not addressed.

Step 15: How This Strengthens Your Case — Not Just Protects It

It is important to recognise that these steps are not simply about avoiding problems.

They actively improve your case.

When you are clearly in control:

  • Your credibility with the court increases
  • Your submissions are more coherent
  • Your responses are more confident
  • Your case is more resilient to challenge

Judges are used to dealing with litigants in person.

What they look for is clarity, engagement, and understanding.

A well-structured case demonstrates all three.

Step 16: Confidence Comes From Control

Many litigants assume that confidence comes from having someone else take over.

In reality, the opposite is true.

Confidence comes from understanding your case and being able to explain it.

That only happens when you remain actively involved.

Support should increase your confidence, not replace your role.

Step 17: The Strategic Advantage Most People Miss

There is a misconception that staying within these boundaries limits what you can do.

In practice, it creates an advantage.

When your case is structured properly:

  • There is less room for procedural attack
  • Your position is clearer and more focused
  • The court can engage directly with you

At the same time, you still benefit from support behind the scenes.

This combination—control at the front, structure behind—can be extremely effective.

Step 18: A Final Word on Balance

This is not about drawing rigid lines that make your case harder to manage.

It is about balance.

You should not feel that you are facing proceedings alone.

But equally, you should not feel that your case is being taken out of your hands.

The correct position sits between those two points.

You are supported, but you remain in control.

Final Thoughts

The decision in Mazur has brought clarity to an area that many people did not fully consider.

For litigants in person, that clarity is an opportunity.

It allows you to structure your case in a way that is:

  • Compliant
  • Robust
  • Credible

Most importantly, it ensures that your case is judged on what matters:

The facts, the evidence, and the outcome you are seeking.

Get the structure right, and everything else becomes stronger.

Want to Make Sure Your Case Is Structured Properly?

If you are a litigant in person and want support that strengthens your case while keeping you fully compliant and in control, you can book an initial consultation below.


Regulatory & Editorial Notice: JSH Law Ltd is not a firm of solicitors and does not provide regulated legal services. This article is for general information and commentary only and does not constitute legal advice. Any references to legal cases or third-party practices are provided for public interest analysis and educational purposes.

McKenzie Friend vs Running Your Case: Where the Legal Line Now Sits After Mazur

There has always been a quiet grey area in the family courts around what a McKenzie Friend actually does in practice. Many litigants in person rely heavily on support, and in some cases that support can become so involved that it begins to look like the case is being run for them. Following the High Court decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP, that grey area has now been brought into sharp focus. The court has made it clear that there is a legal boundary between supporting a case and conducting it—and understanding that boundary is now essential for anyone navigating proceedings without a solicitor.

McKenzie Friend vs Running Your Case: Where the Legal Line Now Sits | JSH Law Legal consultation and court paperwork discussion
Key Takeaways for Litigants in Person
  • A McKenzie Friend provides support — they do not run your case.
  • Only authorised or exempt individuals can conduct litigation.
  • The key legal test is who is in control of the case.
  • Crossing the line can expose your case to challenge.
  • Structured support strengthens your position; loss of control weakens it.

McKenzie Friend vs Running Your Case: Where the Legal Line Now Sits

There has always been a degree of confusion around the role of a McKenzie Friend.

For many litigants in person, the distinction feels blurred. You have support. That support may be experienced, knowledgeable, and heavily involved in your case. In practical terms, it can sometimes feel as though that person is “handling things” for you.

But following the High Court decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB), that distinction is no longer something that can be left unclear.

The law draws a firm line between supporting a case and conducting it.

Understanding where that line sits is now essential.

The Role of a McKenzie Friend — What It Is Meant to Be

The role of a McKenzie Friend is well established in the courts of England and Wales. It exists to support litigants in person, particularly in complex or emotionally demanding proceedings such as family cases.

At its core, the role is supportive.

A McKenzie Friend may:

  • Assist with preparing documents
  • Help organise evidence
  • Provide guidance on procedure and strategy
  • Take notes during hearings
  • Offer quiet assistance in court

In some circumstances, and only with the court’s permission, they may also be allowed to address the court.

But even then, the underlying position does not change:

The litigant remains in control of their case.

What “Running the Case” Actually Means

This is where the distinction becomes critical.

Running a case—legally described as “conducting litigation”—goes beyond support. It involves:

  • Making decisions about how the case progresses
  • Sending correspondence on behalf of the party
  • Managing filings and procedural steps
  • Taking responsibility for how the case is conducted

These are not simply administrative tasks. They are the core functions of legal representation.

Under the Legal Services Act 2007, they are reserved to authorised or exempt individuals.

This is the line that Mazur has brought back into sharp focus.

Why This Line Matters Now More Than Ever

For years, there has been a degree of practical flexibility in how cases are supported, particularly where litigants in person are concerned.

That flexibility has, in some areas, led to roles becoming blurred.

The decision in Mazur does not introduce a new rule. What it does is reinforce the existing one—and signal that it will be taken seriously.

The courts are now more alert to:

  • Who is actually making decisions
  • Who is sending communications
  • Who appears to be in control of the case

If the answer is not the litigant, questions may arise.

The Practical Difference — Control

The easiest way to understand the distinction is this:

A McKenzie Friend supports your case. They do not control it.

In a properly structured case:

  • You decide what to do
  • You approve every document
  • You send communications in your own name
  • You take responsibility for the case

Support sits behind that process, not in place of it.

Where that structure is clear, there is no difficulty.

Where it is not, that is where risk begins.

How the Line Gets Crossed (Often Without Realising)

In practice, the line is rarely crossed deliberately.

It tends to happen gradually.

A litigant feels overwhelmed. Someone steps in to “help more”. That help becomes more hands-on. Decisions start being made. Emails start being sent. The case begins to feel as though it is being handled by someone else.

At that point, the structure has shifted.

What began as support may now look, from the outside, like conduct.

And it is how it appears externally that matters.

Why This Can Affect Your Case

If the distinction is not maintained, the issue is not simply theoretical.

It can become a point of challenge.

The other side may argue:

  • That your case has not been properly conducted
  • That procedural steps are open to question
  • That your position should be treated with caution

Even if those arguments do not ultimately succeed, they can create distraction, delay, and pressure.

In litigation, that matters.

The Strongest Position You Can Be In

The strongest position is one where the structure of your case is clear, transparent, and beyond challenge.

That means:

  • You are visibly in control
  • Your decisions are your own
  • Your documents reflect your position
  • Your case is supported, but not run by someone else

This does not weaken your case.

It strengthens it.

A Better Way to Think About Support

The most effective support model is not one where someone takes over.

It is one where you are equipped.

Where:

  • Your case is structured properly
  • Your evidence is organised clearly
  • Your arguments are prepared carefully
  • You understand what you are doing and why

That is what good support looks like.

It is not about removing your role.

It is about strengthening it.

Final Thoughts

The distinction between a McKenzie Friend and someone running a case has always existed.

What Mazur has done is make it impossible to ignore.

Support is allowed. Conduct is restricted. Control must remain with the litigant.

Once that is understood and properly structured, the position becomes clear—and your case becomes stronger for it.

Need Structured Support Without Risk?

If you want support that strengthens your case while keeping you fully in control and compliant, you can book an initial consultation below.


Regulatory & Editorial Notice: JSH Law Ltd is not a firm of solicitors and does not provide regulated legal services. This article is for general information and commentary only and does not constitute legal advice. Any references to legal cases or third-party practices are provided for public interest analysis and educational purposes.

Mazur Explained: The Case That Changes Who Can Run Your Court Case | JSH Law

The High Court has just drawn a firm line around who is actually allowed to run a court case—and it’s a line many people have been crossing without realising. In Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB), the court made it clear that only authorised or exempt individuals can conduct litigation, and that supervision is not enough. For litigants in person, this is not just a technical legal point—it goes directly to how your case is handled, how it is perceived by the court, and whether your position is open to challenge.

Mazur Explained: The Case That Changes Who Can Run Your Court Case | JSH Law High Court legal proceedings and litigation documents
Key Takeaways for Litigants in Person
  • Only authorised or exempt individuals can legally conduct litigation.
  • Even well-meaning support can cross the line if someone starts running your case.
  • You must remain in control of your case at all times.
  • Getting this wrong can expose your case to challenge or criticism.
  • Structured, compliant support can strengthen your position significantly.

Mazur Explained: The Case That Changes Who Can Run Your Court Case

There has been a significant shift in how the courts are approaching who is actually allowed to run a case.

The High Court decision in Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB) has clarified something that, until now, many people in the legal world had quietly blurred:

Only certain people are legally allowed to conduct litigation — and supervision is not enough.

For litigants in person, this matters more than you might realise.

What Happened in Mazur?

The case arose from a situation where work on a legal matter had been carried out by someone who was not an authorised solicitor or exempt person, but who was working within a legal environment.

The argument was that because this individual was supervised, their actions were acceptable.

The High Court disagreed.

The judgment made it clear that:

  • “Conduct of litigation” is a reserved legal activity under the Legal Services Act 2007
  • Only authorised or exempt individuals can carry it out
  • Supervision by a solicitor does not make an unauthorised person compliant

This was not a new rule — but it is now being applied much more strictly.

What Does “Conduct of Litigation” Actually Mean?

This is the critical question.

It does not just mean standing up in court. It includes:

  • Making decisions about how the case is run
  • Sending correspondence on behalf of a party
  • Filing documents
  • Taking responsibility for procedural steps

In simple terms:

If someone else is effectively running your case — they may be conducting litigation.

Why This Matters for Litigants in Person

Many litigants in person rely on support. That support can be incredibly valuable — and in many cases, essential.

But there is now a much sharper line between:

  • Support (which is allowed), and
  • Conduct (which is restricted)

If that line is crossed, it can lead to:

  • Challenges from the other side
  • Increased scrutiny from the court
  • Questions about how the case has been handled

This is not about creating fear — it is about understanding how to stay on solid ground.

The Difference Between Support and Running the Case

A properly structured support model looks like this:

  • You make the decisions
  • You send the emails
  • You sign and file the documents
  • You speak for yourself in court

Support can include:

  • Drafting documents for you
  • Helping you prepare your case
  • Advising you on strategy
  • Assisting you in court as a McKenzie Friend

The key distinction is control.

You must remain in control of your case at all times.

What This Means in Practice

If you are receiving support, you should always be able to say:

  • “I reviewed and approved this document”
  • “I chose to send this”
  • “These are my instructions”

That clarity protects you.

It also strengthens your credibility in court.

A Shift in the Legal Landscape

This decision reflects a wider shift.

The courts are becoming more alert to:

  • Who is actually running a case
  • Whether the proper boundaries are being respected
  • How unregulated support is being used

At the same time, the reality remains:

Access to justice increasingly depends on litigants in person having the right support.

The answer is not less support.

It is better-structured support.

Final Thoughts

Mazur does not remove your ability to get help.

What it does is make one thing very clear:

There is a right way to do this — and a wrong way.

If your case is structured properly, support can be a powerful advantage.

If it is not, it can become a vulnerability.

Understanding that distinction is now essential.

Need Support With Your Case?

If you are navigating proceedings as a litigant in person and want structured, strategic support that keeps your case clear, compliant and strong, you can book an initial consultation below.


Regulatory & Editorial Notice: JSH Law Ltd is not a firm of solicitors and does not provide regulated legal services. This article is for general information and commentary only and does not constitute legal advice. Any references to legal cases or third-party practices are provided for public interest analysis and educational purposes.

The Rise of McKenzie Friends: Support, Risk, and the Reality in UK Courts | JSH Law

As more people navigate family court proceedings without legal representation, McKenzie Friends are becoming an increasingly visible part of the system. For many litigants in person, they offer practical support at a time when it is most needed. But while the right support can make a real difference, the wrong support can create serious and often irreversible consequences. Understanding that distinction—and where the risks lie—is now essential for anyone managing their own case.

Female litigant reviewing family court documents with McKenzie Friend support in UK courtroom setting
The Rise of McKenzie Friends: Support, Risk, and the Reality in UK Courts | JSH Law
Key Takeaways for Litigants in Person
  • McKenzie Friends can provide valuable support, but they are not legal representatives.
  • They operate outside formal regulation and oversight.
  • There is a wide variation in quality and experience.
  • Understanding their role — and its limits — is essential.
  • Used properly, they can strengthen a case. Used incorrectly, they can create risk.

The Rise of McKenzie Friends: Support, Risk, and the Reality in UK Courts

Over the past decade, the landscape of the family courts has changed significantly.

Increasing numbers of people are now navigating proceedings without legal representation. The reasons are well understood — rising legal costs, reduced access to legal aid, and the practical reality that many simply cannot afford traditional representation.

In response, a growing number of litigants in person have turned to McKenzie Friends for support.

For many, that support can be the difference between managing a case and becoming overwhelmed by it.

But as their presence in the courts has increased, so too has the need to properly understand what they are — and what they are not.

What Is a McKenzie Friend?

The concept of a McKenzie Friend originates from case law and is now an established part of court practice in England and Wales.

At its simplest, a McKenzie Friend is someone who provides support to a litigant in person during legal proceedings.

That support can include:

  • Taking notes in court
  • Helping organise documents
  • Assisting with preparation
  • Providing quiet guidance during hearings

They may sit beside you in court and help you stay focused and organised.

But their role is limited.

They are not your representative.

They do not automatically have the right to address the court, they cannot sign documents on your behalf, and they do not conduct litigation.

This distinction is fundamental.

Why Their Use Has Increased

The increase in the use of McKenzie Friends is not accidental.

It reflects a wider shift in access to justice.

Legal representation is, in many cases, expensive. For some, it is simply out of reach.

At the same time, the complexity of family proceedings has not reduced.

The result is a growing number of individuals who are expected to manage legally complex situations without formal support.

In that context, it is entirely understandable that people seek assistance where they can find it.

McKenzie Friends have emerged as part of that response.

The Benefit — and Why It Matters

When used properly, a McKenzie Friend can provide genuine value.

They can:

  • Help you stay organised
  • Improve how your case is prepared
  • Support you during stressful hearings
  • Provide clarity where the process feels overwhelming

For many litigants in person, particularly in emotionally demanding cases, that support is not just helpful — it is essential.

It can increase confidence, improve presentation, and make the process more manageable.

The Other Side of the Picture

However, the growth of this sector has also highlighted a more difficult reality.

There is no single standard for who can act as a McKenzie Friend.

Unlike solicitors or barristers, they are not subject to:

  • Formal qualification requirements
  • Regulatory oversight
  • Mandatory professional insurance

This creates a wide variation in the quality of support available.

Some individuals operate with care, structure, and a clear understanding of their role.

Others may not.

Where Risk Can Arise

The risk is not simply about competence.

It is about structure.

Problems tend to arise where the boundary between support and control becomes unclear.

For example:

  • Where decisions are effectively made for the litigant
  • Where communication is handled on their behalf
  • Where the case begins to feel as though it is being “run” by someone else

This is rarely intentional.

It often develops gradually.

But when it happens, it can affect both the integrity and the perception of the case.

There is also a very real, practical cost where support is poorly structured. What may initially appear to be a cheaper or more accessible option can, in some cases, lead to significant financial and personal loss. This can arise where a McKenzie Friend has little or no legal experience, offers services without clear boundaries, or operates without any form of professional accountability. Warning signs can include a lack of onboarding or written agreement, no clear explanation of their role, no insurance, and a tendency to take control rather than support. In those circumstances, mistakes are not just procedural—they can affect outcomes. Poorly drafted documents, missed deadlines, or misguided strategic decisions can result in prolonged proceedings, increased costs, and in some cases, irreversible damage to a person’s position. The reality is that in litigation, the consequences of getting it wrong are not theoretical—they are measured in time, money, and outcomes that cannot always be undone.

The Variation in Experience

Another factor to consider is the variation in experience across the sector.

Some McKenzie Friends bring years of practical exposure to court processes.

Others may have very limited experience.

Without formal standards, it can be difficult for a litigant to distinguish between the two.

This places an additional responsibility on those seeking support to ask the right questions and make informed decisions.

Practical Safeguards

If you are considering using a McKenzie Friend, there are some simple steps that can help protect your position:

  • Ask about their experience and background
  • Understand clearly what they will and will not do
  • Ensure you remain in control of your case at all times
  • Keep all arrangements clear and documented
  • Be cautious of anyone presenting themselves as a substitute for a solicitor

These steps are not about limiting support.

They are about ensuring that support is used properly.

The Balance That Needs to Be Struck

There is a clear tension within this space.

On one hand, access to justice requires that people are able to obtain support.

On the other, there is a need to ensure that support does not become something it is not intended to be.

Finding that balance is essential.

Support should strengthen your position, not compromise it.

Final Thoughts

The rise of McKenzie Friends reflects a system under pressure.

It also reflects the adaptability of those navigating it.

For litigants in person, the key is not whether to seek support.

It is how that support is structured.

Used correctly, it can be a significant advantage.

Used without clarity, it can introduce unnecessary risk.

Understanding that distinction is one of the most important steps you can take in protecting your case.

Need Structured Support With Your Case?

If you are navigating proceedings as a litigant in person and want clear, structured support that strengthens your case while keeping you in control, you can book an initial consultation below.


Regulatory & Editorial Notice: JSH Law Ltd is not a firm of solicitors and does not provide regulated legal services. This article is for general information and commentary only and does not constitute legal advice.