Attorneys for insurance carriers are rarely the subject of a legal malpractice case…it is much more often plaintiff’s attorney. The Poppe law firm blog reports this case of a car insurance defense attorney who goes to trial on the underlying auto accident without ever meeting with the client, and to make matters worse, admits liability
Legal Malpractice News
Attorneys, Billing and Clients
The rules for attorney billing are different from those of any other profession. While the general principals are the same, attorneys are required to utilize retainer agreements, or a similar document, while this is not true for accountants, dentists, etc. There are consequences for the failure to use a retainer agreement, but Courts, especially the…
Why is this a NY Legal Malpractice Case?
Patriot Exploration, LLC v Thompson & Knight LLP ; 2010 NY Slip Op 06217 ; Decided on July 27, 2010 ; appellate Division, First Department presents a discussion of forum non conveniens
as well as the question of why this is a NY case? Defendants wanted the case to be moved to Texas, notwithstanding the…
It’s Legal Malpractice Thrown in at the End
Nelson v. Patterson, 2010 NY Slip Op 31799 [Justice Mdden in NY County Supreme Court] is a case about loans, employment contracts, fraud and, oh yes, legal malpractice. After a discussion of breached employment contracts and the like, the court grants plaintiff’s request to add a cause of action for quantum meruit. "In general the existence…
Starting Point of the Statute of Limitations Can Be Confusing
When does the statute of limitations start to run in legal malpractice? Is it on the day that former attorneys are "substituted out" or perhaps on the day that successor counsel sign a retainer agreement? One answer is found in Fur Online v. Rivkin Radler, LLP, Supreme Court, New York County, Index No. 113292/08. …
When Does the Statute of Limitations Start in Legal Malpractice?
Frederick v Meighan ; 2010 NY Slip Op 06076 ;Decided on July 13, 2010 ;Appellate Division, Second Department is a case in which Supreme Court dismissed, sua sponte on the basis of statute of limitations, the Appellate Division reversed.
When does the statute of limitations start to run in legal malpractice? The easy answer is…
Financial Downturn and Fraud Coupled with Legal Malpractice
The question of whether legal malpractice litigation is tied to [and affected by] downturns in the financial and economic worlds is often asked. Our answer is that legal malpractice litigation is apt to come up in every situation where attorneys are present.
The Drier episode, punctuated by fraud, crimes and large money numbers is a…
Legal Malpractice Claims Reinstated Against Boies Schiller
Yesterday, the Appellate Division, First Department, reversed Supreme Court and reinstated the negligence causes of action on behalf of Mary Anne Fletcher against Boies Schiller in Fletcher v Boies, Schiller & Flexner, LLP; 2010 NY Slip Op 06140 ;Decided on July 20, 2010 .
From the Decision: "Plaintiff, a fashion model, pleaded that…
Sometimes It Just Wasn’t the Attorney in Legal Malpractice
One theme that we have considered over the years is whether attorneys get preferential treatment in legal malpractice litigation. Are motions to dismiss granted on too little evidence? Do the attorneys get the benefit of the doubt? Is the fact that legal malpractice law is written mostly by attorneys, is decided upon by attorneys and…
9/11 and Judicary Law 487 in Legal Malpractice
9/11 is almost 10 years behind us. Its direct effects may have passed, but the indirect effects still resonate. Here is a fraud, foreclosure scam and legal malpractice case which arises out of the post 9/11 world.
Cullen v. Steinberg, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 62138 is a case in which plaintiff was the surviving…