Personal Injury Claim: Should You Hire An Attorney?
By Rex Bush, Attorney at Law
I ll answer that question with a few questions:
Should you use a realtor when you sell your home? Should you use an
appraiser to value your home? Should you use a title company when it
comes time to have the transaction closed?
Let s say you want to sell your home that you bought 40 years ago
for $10,000.00. Someone offers you $35,000.00, you decide to sell
because it sounds to you like a good offer. In reality, your home is
worth $60,000.00 and you just gave up $25,000.00 because you took what
sounded good, and not what it was worth based on current market values.
If you had consulted an appraiser he would have told you that your
home was worth $60,000.00. Perhaps then you would have made the
decision not to sell.
Let me give you a personal injury example. You re injured in a car accident. The day after the accident you re contacted by the other
party's insurance carrier. They offer you $2,000.00 for your pain and
suffering. That sounds like a good offer, so you take the $2,000.00 and
sign all the releases.
Two weeks later your neck is really hurting you. You spend the
$2,000.00 plus an additional $2,000.00 to get treatment for your badly
injured neck.
The value of an attorney to personal injury claimants was conceded
by a noted critic of personal injury attorneys. In his book The Injury
Industry and the Remedy of No Fault Insurance Jeffery O Connell stated
the following:
Studies tend to show that hiring an attorney not only increases
the chance and amount of payment but leaves more net payment for the
claimant even after deducting his attorney s fee.
According to one statistical study conducted at the Columbia Law
School, `the claimant who retains an attorney improves his chances of
recovery; and, in addition, `the increment to the victim who retains an
attorney is large enough so that, even after the attorney's fee is
deducted, he will net more than if he had handled the case himself.
Insurance companies seem willing to pay claimants, when they
retain attorneys, a sufficient increment to more than cover the
attorney's cost. In other words, in the tough test of the marketplace,
the contingent fee seems to prove its worth.
Additional support is found in a 1994 study by the Insurance
Research Council which shows that, on average, claims resolved without
an attorney settled for $9,000 less. According to that study the
average settlement when no lawyer was involved was $3,262.00 compared
to $11,939.00 when a lawyer handled the case. The difference:
$8,677.00. A little arithmetic shows that, after deducting a typical
contingency fee and some costs the represented party made out better
much better.
Another reason to hire a lawyer on your personal injury case:
stress reduction. Without the pressure of self representation you are
likely to heal up much faster.
And, finally, you could make a mistake and screw up the case and end up with far less than you deserve.
Be wise, make sure you have competent legal counsel to represent you in your personal injury claim.
| Author Resource:-
Rex Bush is founder of Bush Law Firm near Salt Lake City, Utah where he
handles personal injury cases in Utah and throughout the United States
and Canada. For information on personal injury issues visit his
website: http://www.utah-personal-injury-attorney.com |
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