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BOSTON
PERSONAL INJURY LAWYERS |
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Boston, Massachusetts
1 Constitution Plz
Boston, MA 02129
Directions
Providence, Rhode Island
Shakespeare Hall,
128 Dorrance Street
Providence, RI 02903 Directions
Worcester, Massachusetts
S71 Elm Street
Worcester, MA 02903 Directions
Las Vegas, Nevada
610 South Second Street
Las Vegas, NV 89101 Directions
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By Attorney Eric Parker
The following is
an article about considerations you will face when selecting
a personal injury lawyer. For more information please contact
Eric J. Parker.
An
Unexpected Personal Injury
Personal
Injury Experience Matters
Don't
Settle a Personal Injury Case for Less
Select
an Experienced Personal Injury Lawyer
A
Personal Injury Lawyer's Level of Service
Doing
Your Homework When Selecting A Personal Injury Lawyer
Finding
The Best Personal Injury Lawyer for Your Case
| An
Unexpected Personal Injury |
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It's Friday night after a long and stressful
workweek. Time to shut down the computer in preparation for
your long drive home.
The temperature is unseasonably warm, so you decide to drop
the top on the Miata and let the warm air do its thing. As
you veer onto the Massachusetts turnpike ramp, an 18-wheeler,
traveling at an unnerving clip, passes you on the right, leaving
you directly in the wake of its belching exhaust pipe. Without
warning, the truck's rear tire bursts, sending nearly 90 pounds
of hard rubber and razor-sharp wire over the top of your car's
hood and directly into your face and chest. Your car careens
out of control, violently slamming into another motorist.
Your injuries are life threatening. The disfigurement is permanent.
Your life, and the lives of your wife and children, will never
be the same. You need a personal injury lawyer with the smarts
and hands-on experience necessary to deliver a substantial
recovery.
| Personal
Injury Experience is Key |
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When
a medical doctor is granted a license to practice, that license
is not limited to any particular area of practice. Aside from
hospital policy, there is no law that prevents an anesthesiologist
from performing surgery. Fortunately, common sense and the
fear of lawsuits prevent such crossover. Though the same general
rule applies to an attorney's license to practice law, crossover
- the tendency for a lawyer with limited experience in a particular
sub-specialty to handle a case in that practice area - is
all too common.
One explanation for why lawyers risk venturing into unfamiliar
territory has to do with "fee sharing." Lawyers,
unlike doctors, are not legally prohibited from sharing fees
with colleagues who refer clients to them. In fact, lawyers
routinely outsource cases that do not fall within their own
area of specialization. In most instances, the referral is
made with the client's best interests in mind, and without
any expectation of compensation from the referee counsel.
The same cannot always be said in the area of personal injury
law.
In most states, including Massachusetts, lawyers who refer
cases to personal injury attorneys are paid a "referral
fee," typically one third of the net legal fee recovered
on behalf of the client. For example, if a lawyer referred
a medical malpractice case to an attorney specializing in
that area and the case resulted in a $300,000 award, the referring
attorney could expect a $33,333 referral fee. Therefore, it
is not difficult to understand why a lawyer might be tempted
to take on a seemingly simple medical malpractice case, rather
than refer it to an attorney with considerably more experience
in medical malpractice litigation. Unfortunately, the lawyer's
decision to retain the case often comes at the client's expense.
There's an old saying among trial
lawyers: cases prepared for trial usually settle, while cases
prepared for settlement usually try. Lawyers who take cases
with little or no intention of bringing the case to trial
often reveal that inclination to the law firms and insurance
companies they oppose. Insurance defense attorneys are acutely
aware of those lawyers and law firms who seldom, if ever,
take their cases to trial. The result is undervalued offers
by insurance companies and 11th-hour settlements at a fraction
of the case's full value. Reluctance by many lawyers to take
their cases to trial can be traced to a number of factors:
lack of trial experience, insufficient resources, even the
simple fear of losing. Regardless of the cause, a lawyer who
is not willing to try a case has no business accepting the
case, and he should immediately refer the case to an attorney
willing to go the distance.
While a lawyer's past
trial experience should be a consideration when selecting
an attorney to handle your personal injury case, the actual
number of trials previously undertaken by one attorney over
another should not be the controlling factor in the selection
process. According to recent studies, only two percent of
all personal injury cases are resolved by trial. The remaining
98 percent are resolved either through settlement or dismissal.
The rarity of personal injury trials is due in large part
to the fact that good cases - cases where the defendant's
liability is likely to be proven at trial - are often resolved
by insurance companies long before trial. Therefore, the ability
to develop evidence of a defendant's liability is among a
trial lawyer's most valuable assets.
Another important factor in selecting
a personal injury lawyer or law firm to handle your case is
the degree of personal service offered by the firm. Such services
include: regular communication between lawyer and client;
lawyer accessibility by way of telephone, e-mail, or personal
conferences; the reliability of the lawyer and his staff to
deliver on promises; and the professionalism of the legal
support staff. While it is often difficult to evaluate a law
firm's commitment to client service in advance, there are
some telltale signs. An attorney who is slow to return a call
seeking an office appointment for a new matter is not likely
to improve over time. The real test of a law firm's commitment
to client service begins after the honeymoon has ended.
In past years, clients might have
had only the Yellow Pages to help them find a personal injury
lawyer. Welcome to the Internet. When it comes to accessing
the most important information about a lawyer or firm, the
Internet is a client's most valuable tool. Law firm websites
now include detailed attorney profiles, descriptions of past
personal injury cases handled by the law firm, pro-bono or
other charitable legal work performed by the law firm, and
a view of the firm's "look and feel." An Armani
suit will not try a winning case, but the "culture"
of a law firm may speak volumes about the firm's resources
and manner.
| Find
The Best of "The Best" |
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While many law firms claim to be "the best" in
their respective practice area, there are more objective and
reliable indications of a lawyer's stature in the legal community.
Perhaps the most well known such credential is the rating
system used by Martindale Hubbell. The venerable, 130-year-old
law library is America's oldest and largest directory of lawyers
and law firms. Lawyers surveyed by Martindale Hubbell are
issued ratings attesting to each lawyer's professional skill
and legal ethics. Professional skill ratings range from "C,"
denoting a good to high ranking, to "B," indicating
a high to very high rating, to "A," the directory's
preeminent rating. Added to this skill ranking is an ethical
grade, the highest of which is signified with a "V,"
making an "AV" the preeminent ranking for both skill
and ethics. In addition to confidential surveys, an attorney's
membership in "invitation-only" legal associations,
such as ABOTA, the American Board of Trial Advocates, may
be a valuable indication of an attorney's peer regard. Memberships
in many other associations are granted solely by paying an
annual fee.
While there will never be a fool-proof
method for selecting the right personal injury lawyer to represent
you in an important case, availing yourself of the information
available on the Internet or at most public libraries can
help assure you that you've made an informed decision when
you do choose your lawyer.
Related Personal Injury Articles
Understanding
snow and ice cases in Massachusetts
What
to expect if you've been injured in a car accident
Personal
injuries caused by dogs that attack
Confidentiality
provisions in medical malpractice settlement agreements
Other Personal Injury Resources
Massachusetts
legal links
Glossary
of common traumatic medical injuries
Back
to top
For more information, please contact us.
About Attorney Eric J. Parker
Eric J. Parker is the Managing Partner and co-founder of the Boston-based trial firm Parker Scheer LLP, with offices in Boston, Massachusetts, Providence, Rhode Island, and Las Vegas, Nevada. Mr. Parker has more than 23 years of active experience as one of Massachusetts’ leading civil trial lawyers, and holds the highest peer-review rating awarded to any attorney for professional skill and ethics. Mr. Parker is a member of the American Association for Justice (formerly the Association of Trial Lawyers of America), the and the Massachusetts Academy of Trial Attorneys. Mr. Parker is an elected member of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA; Elected President, Massachusetts Chapter, January 2009), and is a certified member of the Million Dollar Advocates Forum. In 2007, Mr. Parker was appointed to the Editorial Board of Massachusetts Lawyer Weekly, the leading weekly legal newspaper serving the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Mr. Parker has been named a Massachusetts Super Lawyer by the publishers of Boston Magazine, every year since the distinction was first created. Mr. Parker's legal practice focuses on plaintiff-oriented personal injury litigation, including product liability, motor vehicle tort, medical and dental malpractice, premises liability claims, workplace sexual harassment and assault, aviation-related injuries, and wrongful death. Mr. Parker is a Graduate of Vassar College and received his law degree from Suffolk University Law School. In addition to his legal practice, Mr. Parker is also an FAA Certified Private Airplane Pilot, and was a founding member of the Board of Trustees of the Media And Technology Charter High School (MATCH) located in Boston (Chairman 2001-2005), the goal of which is to provide inner city high school students with a successful college education.
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Parker
Scheer LLP lawyers handle personal injury cases in Massachusetts
towns including Acton, Amesbury, Amherst, Andover, Arlington,
Ashburnham, Ashfield, Ashland, Athol, Attleborough, Barnstable,
Barre, Bedford, Belmont, Berkley, Berlin, Bolton, Boston,
Boxborough, Boxford, Boylston, Bradford, Braintree, Burlington,
Buzzards Bay, Cambridge, Carlisle, Charlemont, Charlestown,
Charlton, Chelmsford, Chelsea, Clinton, Concord, Danvers,
Dedham, Deerfield, Dudley, Duxbury, East Longmeadow, Essex,
Fall River, Fitchburg, Foxboro, Framingham, Franklin, Freetown,
Gardner, Gill, Gloucester, Granby, Groveland, Hadley, Hamilton,
Hanover, Haverhill, Holbrook, Holliston, Holyoke, Hopkinton,
Hubbardston, Hudson, Ipswich, Kingston, Lakeville, Lancaster,
Lawrence, Leominster, Lexington Lincoln, Lowell, Ludlow, Lynn,
Lynnfield, Malden, Marblehead, Marlborough, Marshfield, Maynard,
Melrose, Methuen, Methuen, Middleborough, Middlefield, Milford,
Milton, Monterey, Nantucket, Natick, Needham, New Bedford,
Newbury, Newburyport, Newton, North Attleborough, North Brookfield,
Northampton, Northborough, Paxton, Peabody, Pepperell, Pittsfield,
Plymouth Provincetown, Quincy, Reading, Richmond, Rockport,
Rowe, Rowley, Salem, Saugus, Sherborn, Southbridge, Spencer,
Sterling, Stoughton, Stow, Sturbridge, Sudbury, Templeton,
Topsfield, Townsend, Truro, Upton, Wakefield, Waltham, Watertown,
Wayland, Wellesley, West Boylston, West Newbury Westborough,
Westford, Weston, Westport, Williamstown, Wilmington, Winchendon,
Winchester, Woburn, Worcester, Yarmouth. Parker Scheer also
provides referral services for personal injury lawyers in
states other than Massachusetts.
Parker
| Scheer, LLP - Boston, Massachusetts. © 2006 Parker
| Scheer, LLP. All rights reserved. |
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