Here’s a fairly simple case. Plaintiff signs a real estate contract with a mortgage contingency. If she cannot obtain a mortgage she must give notice. If she properly gives notice she gets her down payment back. She hires attorney who negligently fails to give notice. She does not get her down payment back. Legal malpractice?

Barely submerged below the decisions of trial and appellate courts is the fear that if legal malpractice litigation is given full rein, there will be a legal malpractice case which immediately follows every trial of any nature. After all, the one thing that legal malpractice always has are claims of attorney misrepresentation, and every trial

CLE lecturers almost always warn the listener not to sue for fees. They tell attorneys at the lectures that there will be an inevitable legal malpractice counterclaim. In the case of sole practitioners or small firms, a comparison of their insurance deductible with the fee claim should be made, because they may have to pay