Explaining The Length of Injury to Jurors

Most states have a statutory life excpectancy statute in cases where there is permanent harm to the plainitiff. But what is the best way to explain that to the jury? Once you have a statutory life expectancy of 34.6 years? How do you get a jury to see the maximum impact?

One good way is to flip the time backwards and show them all that's happened in the past 34.6 years. Something like this:

Ladies and gentleman of the jury, the judge is going to instruct you that Joe is going to have these problems for 34.6 years. That's a long time. You don't need a lawyer to tell you that. You know that. But it's difficult to understand just how long 34.6 years is.

If we look backwards, rather than forwards 34.6 years ago was 1972. Richard Nixon had just been re-elected and Watergate had not taken place yet. First Time Ever I Saw Your Face by Roberta Flack was the most popular song.

1972 was 10 years before the personal computer. Our soldiers were still in Vietnam.

Think about the presidents we've had since that time and what all has happened in your life. Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan twice, George Herbert Walker Bush, Bill Clinton twice, George W. Bush twice. That's a long time.

Think about all that's changed in our life since 1972. The invention of computers, vcrs, cable tv, dvd's, the internet and so on....

That's how long 34.6 years is. That's how long Joe will have to live with his pain. 34 birthdays, 34 Christmases, 34 New Years Eve's and 34 anniversaries.

Meso: A Primer

As far back as the early 1900's, corporations knew of the dangers associated with exposure to asbestos containing products. Yet every year, including this year, as many as 3,000 people are diagnosed with
asbestos-related cancer.

The reason is that corporations, with full knowledge of the dangers made a deliberate decision to expose employees to asbestos containing products and those workers today are paying the ultimate price with their life. If you worked as a pipe fitter, steam fitter, changed brake pads, broiler maker, in construction or demolition trade chances are pretty good that you were exposed to asbestos.


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Intake Forms

Our office has a short form intake form for all new calls.  In my practice, we also  are referred cases  like most attorneys.

Our intake form has these fields -does yours?

1)Email address

2)Cell phone -  in addition to home and work

3)Telephone number of the nearest relative not living with you

On our post contract form, we now ask for:

IM Screen Name - through AIM,Yahoo, MSN or other. It is this one addition that I had to battle the more seasoned attorneys (those over 50) who don't think we'll need it.  I've already used IM at least a dozen times, and simply send one that says "please contact our office, tel # __________. Thank you."). It works every time we have used this.

Folks can either fill it in or leave it blank.  Currently we are running about  50% of our clients under 40 providing that information, and that % will surely go up. 

18 Wheeler Spoliation Letter

Over the years we have crafted/borrowed from/added to the spoliation letter my offices sends out in cases involving  tractor trailers. Here you go:


Dear Mr. XXX:

    As you may be aware, my law firm represents XXXXXXXX as a result of personal injuries resulting from an accident which occurred on XXX in XXXX.  We specifically request that the following evidence be maintained and preserved and not be destroyed, modified, altered, repaired, or changed in any matter:

    1.    The tractor and trailer involved in this accident.
   
    2.    Bills of lading for any shipments transported.

    3.    Any oversized permits or other applicable permits or licenses covering the vehicle or load on the day of the accident.

    4.    The daily logs for the day of the accident and the eight day period preceding the accident.

    5.    The daily inspection reports for the day of the accident and the eight day period preceding the accident.

    6.    Daily inspection reports for the tractor and trailer involved in this accident for the day of the accident and the eight day period preceding this accident. 

    7.    Maintenance, inspection, and repair records or work orders on the tractor and the trailer for the day of the accident and for the six month period preceding the accident.

    8.    Annual inspection report for the tractor and trailer covering the date of the accident.

    9.    The complete driver’s qualification file, including but not limited to:
           
        a.    application for employment
        b.     CDL license
        c.    driver’s certification of prior traffic violations
        d.    driver’s certification of prior accidents
        e.    driver’s employment history
        f.    inquiry into driver’s employment history
        g.    pre-employment MVR
        h.    annual MVR
        i.    annual review of driver history
        j.    certification of road test
        k.    medical examiner’s certificate
        l.    drug testing records
        m.    HAZMAT or other training documents

    10.    Photographs of the vehicles involved in this accident or the accident scene.

    11.    Any post-accident alcohol and drug testing results

    12.    Any lease contracts or agreements covering the tractor or trailer involved in this accident.

    13.    Any interchange agreements regarding the tractor or trailer involved in this accident.

    14.    Any data or printout from on-board recording devices, including but not limited to ECM (electronic control module), any on-board computer, tachograph, trip monitor, trip recorder, trip master, or other recording device for the day of the accident and the six month period preceding the accident.

    15.    Any post-accident maintenance, inspection, or repair records or invoices in regard to the tractor and trailer.

    16.    Any weight tickets, fuel receipts, hotel bills, or other records of expenses regarding the driver or the tractor or trailer involved in the collision for the day of the accident and the eight day period preceding the accident.


    17.     Any trip reports or dispatch records regarding the driver or the tractor or trailer involved in this collision for the day of the accident and the eight day period preceding this accident.

    18.    Any e-mails, electronic messages, letters, memos, or other documents concerning this accident. 

    19.    The accident register maintained by the motor carrier as required by federal law for the one year period preceding this accident.

    20.    Any drivers manuals, guidelines, rules or regulations given to drivers. 

    21.    Any reports, memos, notes, logs or other documents evidencing complaints about the driver. 

    22.    Any DOT or PSC reports, memos, notes or correspondence concerning Chip P. Bledsoe or the tractor or trailer involved in this accident.

    In regard to the tractor and trailer involved in this incident, we would like to set up a mutually convenient time for our expert to inspect, examine, and conduct tests on the unit.  We specifically request that you make no repairs or adjustments to the tractor or trailer until this inspection is completed.  I must have a response within the next ten (10) days. 

                           

Winter Speaking Engagements for Matt Garretson

November 25-December 2, 2006 - The Consumer Attorneys of California will once again be convening in Maui, Hawaii.  I will be speaking on November 29th on the Growing Role Of Medicare And Medicaid Reimbursement Claims And Liens In Liability Settlements. 

December 9/10, 2006 - The 20th Annual ATLA Weekend with the Stars event will be held at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers.  On December 10th, I will be speaking on the Ahlborn Decision - "What Does the Ahlborn Decision Really Mean? Medicaid Reimbursement in Personal Injury Cases after Arkansas Dept. of Health and Human Services v. Ahlborn".

How to Convert from Paper to Electronic Files: Start With a Policy

Is this you? You have been scanning legal documents for years. You scan pleadings, contracts and other documents and convert them to PDF or TIFF images, then email them to clients and other lawyers. Even some courts require filing documents electronically instead of in paper. You have been thinking about getting a faster scanner and converting all your paper files to electronic files. You see this as an answer to the continually-growing room of closed files or the large monthly bill for offsite closed file storage. If this is you, now is the time to write an electronic file policy.

Electronic files are ethical. The Florida Bar Professional Ethics Committee recently issued Opinion 06-1 which expressly states that lawyers may store files electronically. There are a few exceptions, such as the need to keep originals required for evidence, the need to keep originals belonging to clients, the need to keep originals to comply with a statute or rule (6 years for trust account checks), and the need to keep a paper document when destroying it would adversely affect the client�s interests. The opinion states:

Lawyers may, but are not required to, store files electronically unless: a statute or rule requires retention of an original document, the original document is the property of the client, or destruction of a paper document adversely affects the client�s interests. Files stored electronically must be readily reproducible and protected from inadvertent modification, degradation or destruction.

The file belongs to the lawyer. The ethics opinion makes sense because files relating to client matters are assets of the lawyer and do not belong to present and former clients. "Files prepared and maintained by an attorney for the purpose of representing a client are the attorney's personal property." Potts v. State, 869 So.2d 1223 (Fla. 2nd DCA 2004), citing Long v. Dillinger, 701 So.2d 1168 (Fla. 1997. The Florida Supreme Court in Long stated:

As noted by the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Dowda & Fields, P.A. v. Cobb, 452 So. 2d 1140 (Fla. 5th DCA 1984), files prepared and maintained by attorneys on their clients' cases are commonly referenced by a particular client's name. In reality, however, such referral simply means that the file relates to a particular client; the file and its contents are the personal property of the attorney. Id. at 1142. The court reached this conclusion based on the fact that the attorney's file may or may not contain documents or other property of the client. Importantly, the court noted that, while the attorney may have an ethical duty to communicate information to successor counsel, only actual property of the client must be returned.

The federal court provides a good starting point. Much of the work in drafting an electronic file policy for lawyers has already been done by the federal courts in adopting procedures for electronic filing. The procedures provide sound wording to make it clear that the court file is the electronic file that resides on the court's computer server and not the paper document that was the source of the electronic file. Therefore, a starting point for drafting an electronic file policy for a lawyer or law firm should be to review the electronic filing policy of the local federal court. For example, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida adopted the Administrative Procedures for Electronic Filing in Civil and Criminal Cases, which states:

1. A. Effective Date: Unless otherwise permitted by these administrative procedures, by a general order of the Court, or by authorization of the Judge, all documents filed in Civil and Criminal cases in this District on or after July 12, 2004, no matter when a case was originally filed, shall be filed electronically.

B. Official Record: The official court record is the electronic file maintained on the Court's server and any physical item or document permitted to be filed in paper format. When a document filed in paper format is scanned and uploaded to the Court's server, the electronic file shall constitute the official record.

Here is a sample electronic file policy. Set forth below is a sample electronic file policy for a sole practitioner or small law firm in Florida. It is only a beginning, though, because the policy should include the specifics applicable to that lawyer or firm.

Electronic File Policy

[Lawyer]

[Date]

1. Electronic Files
All files that we maintain regarding clients and their matters are stored electronically on our computer file server. All incoming and outgoing paper documents are scanned daily and added to these electronic files. After scanning, the paper documents are placed into paper file folders in chronological order for convenience, but the electronic file is this office's actual file relating to that client and that client's matter. The paper file folders are shredded from time to time (see below), but the electronic files are maintained after the paper file folders and contents are shredded.

2. Scanning
Each day all incoming and outgoing paper documents are placed by the lawyer into the sorting box in the order to be filed for that day (basically chronological). At the end of each day, the paper documents are scanned and uploaded to the office server into an electronic file designated as the general file relating to that client and the paper document is then filed in a paper file folder labeled with the client�s name and the designation "general file". Once the paper document is scanned and uploaded to the office server, the electronic file shall become part of the office file. The paper file is merely for the lawyer�s convenience while the case is open. Any original paper documents are copied and scanned to the electronic file and returned to the client or other person who gave them or filed with the court (see below).

3. File Backups
All electronic files that we maintain regarding clients and their matters are backed up daily by synchronizing the entire server to an external hard drive, which is then taken off site. There are seven external hard drives that are backed up in rotation and kept off site as follows:

Daily A and Daily B [specify offsite location]
Weekly A and Weekly B [specify offsite location]
Monthly A and Monthly B [specify offsite location]
Annual [specify offsite location]

In addition, whenever paper file folders are shredded, the electronic files are copied to three CDs and kept onsite and offsite at [specify locations] and are also copied to a remote online storage server by SSL-secured Internet transmission.

4. File Ownership

All files that we maintain regarding clients and their matters belong to this office and not to the client. This includes both the electronic files and paper file folders. As noted by the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Dowda & Fields, P.A. v. Cobb, 452 So. 2d 1140 (Fla. 5th DCA 1984): "[F]iles prepared and maintained by attorneys on their clients' cases are commonly referenced by a particular client's name. In reality, however, such referral simply means that the file relates to a particular client; the file and its contents are the personal property of the attorney. Id. at 1142. The court reached this conclusion based on the fact that the attorney's file may or may not contain documents or other property of the client. Importantly, the court noted that, while the attorney may have an ethical duty to communicate information to successor counsel, only actual property of the client must be returned."

5. Document Originals
Our policy is that we do not keep original documents that belong to clients or others. If a client provides us an original document, we scan it to our electronic file and make a copy for our paper file folder and return the original to the client. Therefore, the contents of our files regarding clients and their matters do not contain any original documents belonging to the client. The only exceptions to this are as follows:
i. Original will of a decedent, which we file immediately with the Clerk.
ii. Evidence for lawsuits, which is filed with the Court or returned to the client at the conclusion of the case.

6. Client Copies

Our policy is to keep our clients informed by providing them copies of documents that we receive and that we send regarding their matter at the time they are received or sent. It is the responsibility of the client to maintain their copies of documents for their own files.

7. Shredding Paper Files

Paper file shredding is performed at the lawyer's direction by an outside service provider in such a manner that the provider cannot view contents of files. Shredding is observed by the lawyer or legal assistant. Paper file folders can be shredded at any time upon the lawyer's direction as long as they have been scanned and uploaded to the officer server because the electronic files are the office's files regarding clients and matters. When a paper document is scanned and uploaded to the electronic file on the office server, the paper document will be filed in the paper file folder, which can be shredded upon the lawyer's direction (see exception above for original documents).

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Litigating Spinal Cord and Brain Injury pt. 5

LOSS OF CONSORTIUM

Loss of consortium is finally recognized in most jurisdictions. In lay terms, loss of consortium or “trauma to the marital relationship” recognizes the fact that due to injury, a spouse may not be capable of performing those tasks as pre-morbidly performed.

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Litigating Spinal Cord and Brain Injury pt. 4

LIFE CARE PLAN

     Spinal cord injury cases necessitate the retention of a life care planner. This specialist is taxed with the obligation to coordinate with all of the plaintiff’s treating physicians in order a clear medically probable future care plan is developed.

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