Four Ways Lawyers Cheat Their Clients

Jack Oceano
The sky is blue. The grass is green. Heat rises. And lawyers cheat their clients. It is an unfortunate fact of American life. Many lawyers treat their bar cards as licenses to steal. And many of them, if not most, get away with it. The only thing you, as a client, can do is be vigilant and know what to look for. Here are four ways in which lawyers cheat their clients.

One. Overbilling. This is probably the most common way lawyers cheat their clients. And unfortunately, it also the most difficult practice to detect. Overbilling occurs when a lawyer abuses his time sheet. This is most prevalent when lawyers at large firms are billing big businesses, but it occurs in law firms across the boards, and to clients of all shapes and sizes. Lawyers round up when counting their billable hours. They bill for phantom phone calls and meetings that never took place. When two lawyers in the same firm get together to discuss your case, they bill you for both their time - even if half that time was spent discussing the latest acquisitions by the New York Mets. Overbilling is, of course, a serious offense, and if you suspect that it is occurring you should not hesitate to bring it to your lawyer's attention, or if need to be, to the attention of the state bar. Legal fees are high enough as it is; you don't want to spend more money for hours never put into your case.

Two. Hidden fees. Read your retainer agreement very carefully. Some lawyers take advantage of the boilerplate language and charge clients for costs they never anticipated paying. In most cases, you should not be paying your lawyer's Westlaw bill, and most lawyers don't charge for photocopies and faxes. Make sure you know precisely what expenses you will be paying to your lawyer prior to entering into your contract.

Three. The Non-Written Retainer Agreement. Some lawyers lure you into the office, and lead you to believe that the initial consultation is free. They might even offer to write a letter or make a few phone calls on your behalf. They won't mention a word about payment. And then you receive a bill for services in the mail. It is usually around a thousand dollars. First of all, do not pay it. This is a despicable practice that is growing in popularity among lawyers. If it happens to you, file for a fee arbitration and then follow with a grievance. Let these lawyers know they cannot get away with such fraudulent behavior.

Four. Settling your case when it is not in your best interest. Many personal injury lawyers want to avoid litigation at all costs. It is much easier for them to accept cases and quickly settle them, rather than go to trial. In looking out for their own interests, many of these personal injury lawyers cheat their clients out of thousands, even tens of thousands, of dollars. Do not give your lawyer authority to settle your case if you do not feel it is proper. Of course, some cases are indeed ripe to settle. If you are unsure, get a second opinion, or educate yourself on injury law as much as possible.

Published by Jack Oceano

Jack Oceano is an attorney whose articles cover a broad range of topics, including politics, legal issues, travel and tourism, dining and nightlife, sports, books, movies, music, and writing.  View profile

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  • Helen Riley10/1/2010

    Glad to see the issue of overbilling being addressed. I have two female attorneys in Boston who gab a lot. There is no way to assess their inflated billing--never mind other things. There ought to be greater regulation on attorneys. I'm a teacher. And, 1 whole year's salary was eaten up by them in a flash, with nothing accomplished. Very sad.

  • frank cater9/14/2010

    if you can meet your lawyer in mutual ground your better off then his office. In his office he sit on a throne and you in a small chair with all kinds of degrees hanging on the wall staring down on you, every thing there is to intimate you, and how much he is worth....sucker!

  • frank cater9/14/2010

    Lawyers are good if you don't have a case and no other lawyers want it....otherwise represent yourself if all possible most of it is just common sense.....Office depot has a lot of legal documents you can do your self...takes time sit down and read, if you have any questions go to the internet...

  • frank carter9/14/2010

    my female lawyers said what we would like to get, comes negotiation time, she panics and comes down to around 10%...I asked how much expenses so far and she gave me a figure...seen that she was not very good in negotiating, I accepted....comes pay day her expenses double. I brought it up to her and she don't remember....the state Bar of Texas said I had no case!!!!

  • Shafted ByLawyers8/27/2010

    METHOD #5: Never present a class action proposal to a law firm unless they agree to specific conditions regarding the lawyer-client relationship. SPECIFICALLY: they cannot pursue the matter withhold your involvment. My class action case was presented in confidence to vultures-with-a-bar-card, and was eventually purloined by immoral crooks. This Chicago gang decided it would be in their best interest to file the case in CA, so they simply absconded with my work product.

  • Mary Sue Fisher2/18/2010

    I gave my lawyer Frances Dallmeyer from chelmsford 1,500.00 She wasted it on phone calls , went to her office 3 times, not even a full hour,. went to court twice, one hour on both,, never got any where the second time into court was suppose be the end of my divorce, and she was told by the judge she was unorganized, and here I had all paper work, facts reciepts, and got contuinued to sep. 2010. and she wants more money.. NEVER recived a finicail paper at the end of each month.. The phone calls was a waste, nothing got done on her part,, she wanted me to come to the office and sit with her secretary and sort out my stuff Thats WHAT I THOUGHT I PAID HER TO DO FOR ME. I DID AT MY HOUSE, I had everything
    in FOLDERS, I think I will represent my self.. I gave my husband divorce papers Oct. 28 2009, he signed and initail every paper, and notarty public stamped . He changed his mind after one month. And i have no money left to be robbed again. My husband had his girlfriend move in 4 months

  • Lori Wheat9/4/2007

    Great, objective article!

  • Tigerlobo8/8/2007

    This is going to come in handy; I will presently need a lawyer for guardianship of my special needs daughter and my financial hardships that threaten to take what little I currently earn. 'Preciate your honesty.

  • sharon green7/11/2007

    I am need of help! Can you show help me? We are having a hostile takeover at our apartments. I am being terrorized and bullied into dropping a court case> I need to find shelter to protect my self from them because they have slaughtterd my pet. I fear for my life and am looking for exposure to save the other tenants and myself from eviction which will make me loose my section 8. I don't want to be homeless but my life is in danger and the police are making reports but it doesn't save me from what could happen. Exposure would save my life and kee these thugs from doing illigal evictions to all these hispanic families who will be homeless.My court case is LA superiorcourt case summary#B5095187 . When someone is being harrased they may sound like the don't have a sound mind but isn't that what it is meant to
    do? Discredit the witness. We need someon bigger than the criminal to come to our defense.Would you step in and at least check it out before this can continue on much broader scal

  • Yona Williams6/27/2007

    This article really helped me out - I never knew you could file for a fee arbitration. Thanks!

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