Choosing a Lawyer
The lawyer/client relationship is a personal
one and there are many reasons which will dictate who you can and
cannot work with. If you don’t like your
lawyer, should you change? Ultimately, the
relationship between a lawyer and client must be built on mutual
trust. Having said that, it can be common for clients to switch
lawyers and shop for both advice and a personality that they
perceive will suit their particular needs. Sometimes it is
worthwhile to think before changing. Here are a few reasons
why.
If you are consulting a lawyer
the odds are that something has gone wrong. You have been accused
of a criminal offence, something is wrong at work or
a commercial transaction has gone pear shaped. Changing lawyers is not going to
change that. The law, your situation and resources will all
remain the same. Unfortunately the cost of services
is seen by many as the primary criteria for selecting a lawyer.
Legal advice and representation are looked at as a commodity and
one size fits all. This is inaccurate because clients only pay more
or less for professional assistance based on performance, integrity, trust and
results.
Generally speaking the cheaper the lawyer the poorer the advice
and the less certain the result. Realistically advice is only worth
what you pay for it and no one treasures a cheap nasty experience
which leads disappointment and possibly gaol. No one can afford to
take such risks!
A good professional advisor may tell you things that you
do not want to hear. Your lawyer is required by law to
look after your interests. Your lawyer owes a duty of care to provide
you with the best possible legal advice. A
good lawyer should provide a robust practical opinion concerning your
prospects. This is what you are paying for. This will inevitably mean
telling you about the problems and limitations of your situation. This is
often confronting but it allows clients to plan accordingly.
Sometimes clients retain one lawyer for the bail application and
because they are threatened or hear that X or Y is good decide they
would be better off elsewhere. In these cases where they make the
change these clients often crash and burn because what is good for
one person is often not good for another as the person making the
referral highly exaggerates the other lawyer’s competency. The
referrer over promises, the other lawyer under delivers and the
client bears the consequences. Everyone needs to look at who is the
referrer and whether this person is just another bush lawyer who is
uninformed and is a legend in their own lunchtime.
It is not uncommon for client to shop for
advice. You should not necessarily take the lawyer who is the most
optimistic about your problem. A lawyer’s initial optimism is more
likely to indicate a desire to attract you as a client, the
inadequate instructions you have provided and or a lack of
professionalism. A lawyer who makes you feel relaxed about a serious
problem is being helpful but they must demonstrate that they can act
in your long term best interests. Some lawyers tell clients what
they want to hear leading them up the garden path and leave
them stranded when they get out of their depth. This is a very
threatening experience. Be wary of those who comb the gaol system
for clients as this tends to be a measure of their
competence.
The legal system is imperfect and you need
someone who understands this. A good lawyer will attempt to protect
you from some of the known pit falls and assist you in achieving the
best result. This will not have much to do with your initial
expectations. Any form of litigation is inherently a risk; even the
strongest case can come unstuck and be expensive to conduct.
Remember you are consulting a lawyer because you have a problem that
you cannot deal with yourself. If you become an advocate in your own
cause then you have a fool for a client because even the best
lawyers find the vagaries of the system challenging at best. What
everyone must remember is you need to obtain the best legal advice
you can afford and to prejudice your chances of obtaining the best
possible outcome by following the advice of someone to change
advisors where they bare no risk is dangerous.
Any lawyer will charge you money. You
also get what you pay for. Lawyers seek to recover their costs and
routinely sue clients for unpaid fees. If you repeatedly
change lawyer your legal costs will be significantly higher. You
will have to pay some of the costs associated with the new lawyer
familiarizing him or herself with your matter and redoing some
tasks. More importantly, the job will more likely not get done
properly. There will be a lack of continuity, opportunities for
mishaps and misunderstandings. Your problem will be crisis rather
than expertly managed. The projected outcome needs to be effectively
managed overtime to secure the best possible outcome and to minimize
the consequences for clients. Clients should only change lawyers
where it is obvious they are not up to standard and have
demonstrated a real lack of competence.
At Nominate a Lawyer we will do our best to
match you and your legal problem with the best possible legal
advice. We make choosing a
lawyer easy as we understand the law and lawyers and we listen
about you and your problem and put everything together for
you.
|