Importance of the Questionnaire
I will accept another attorney's questionnaire in lieu of my own, but I have found it difficult to (a) reduce fees based on financial need and (b) provide accurate legal advice -- when I do not have a complete set of facts to work from.
Asking all the background questions orally in an initial half-hour interview leaves me at risk of forgetting to ask important questions. In my 25 years of experience, "flying blind" for the first 30 minutes has not proven as effective for me or for the prospective client.
Distinguishing Characteristics of Practice
Our office is distinguished by prompt, skilled service at a reasonable fee. Economies from computerization and paralegal processing of routine tasks are passed along to the client. Those efficiencies result in faster production and higher quality of advocacy. For example, the entire Virginia Code and all Virginia cases for the past 50 years are in a searchable database on Mr. Long's desk. All Virginia forms for support and division of property are computer generated, as well. We pride ourselves on the satisfaction of our clients. Not only is the quality of work high, but clients appreciate the speed with which we return calls, and the personal attention we provide. Contact our references. They will tell you what a difference it makes to have a professional who cares about them as an individual, obtains results, and charges a reasonable fee.
Office Logistics
Olivier Denier Long practiced law in Bethesda, Maryland from 1976-1986, and joined a DC firm from 1986-87.Beginning in 1988, he has operated his practice in Virginia. Although attorneys in the current offices at 1420 Spring Hill Road, Suite 210, McLean VA 22102-3026 are not partners or joint ventures, they occasionally collaborate on projects by specific written agreement for the benefit of clients.
Why Full Service
Full service means consulting, negotiating, drafting and litigating services are all available in three jurisdictions, with twenty years experience. You need not change counsel at the Woodrow Wilson bridge: For example, a judgment entered in Fairfax can be collected by garnishment or attachment in Upper Marlboro by the same attorney in the same retainer agreement.
Typical Retainer Agreement
Any professional relationship with an attorney should have a written contract. The contract should contain a statement of the services being rendered, an hourly rate, and an explanation of possible costs. This document should be signed by both attorney and client. All our clients (except for some legal plan clients) are asked to sign retainer agreements.
Communication With Counsel
Clients can reach Mr. Long by e-mail, fax, office telephone or home telephone. E-mail is checked twice a day. Communications are usually responded to the same day or the next business day.
Billing Practice
Statements are mailed at the end of each month. The statement provides a detailed account of work performed, the hourly rate, the total fees, and the itemized costs. At the bottom of each statement is a reconciliation of the retainer balance, showing the subtraction of the statement balance and the remaining credit, which is money that still belongs to the client.
Credit balances, called "retainers", are maintained in a separate bank account containing only client funds. Interest on money in this account is used to fund legal services for the poor and is called Interest on Lawyer Trust Accounts (IOLTA).The constitutionality of this interest allocation is pending before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Clients participating in a legal plan have balances appearing on their bills for reference purposes only. Their bills are paid by their legal plan in almost all cases.
Keeping Up With Developments
Depositions are recorded testimony of parties and witnesses under oath, transcribed by a court reporter for use at trial. Depositions cost about $3.00 a page plus attorney time. They can be a critically important tool for preparing a case. They may be used --
a. To learn facts before trial to help you prepare. If you learn important facts at trial, it is often too late for them to be helpful (like the existence of documents or witnesses you would not otherwise have known about).
b. To lock in a version of testimony. Once someone is committed under oath to a particular statement, there is less risk of his or her testimony changing later (or of recollection fading with time); or
c. To protect the availability of
testimony. Witnesses sometimes die or disappear before trial. If a witness is important to your case, you want to preserve their
words. In
Virginia, deposition testimony cannot be used to obtain summary judgment.
Interrogatories are written questions one party sends the other to learn about the facts supporting the opponent. Interrogatories are indeed less costly than a deposition, but usually not as effective. Attorneys prepare interrogatory answers. They reflect hours of review and refinement. They do not trap people, or probe more deeply to ferret out nascent recollection. Depositions do. The usual approach is to use interrogatories first, and then follow up with a deposition.
Problem Solving
Dissatisfaction should be communicated immediately by e-mail or telephone. There is no charge for time spent discussing your statement. We want you to be completely satisfied. If it is not possible to remedy the situation, legal services may be terminated at any time, with a refund of the remaining cash balance subject to fees or costs due at that time.
Fees
Yes. Your attorney works at your direction, as your agent. If you intend fees to be limited for a time period or project, let counsel know, and make sure the understanding is in your contract or communicated elsewhere in writing.
Advance fees are called a retainer or a funds advance. They go in a separate bank account containing exclusively money belonging to clients. If we request these fees, they must be paid before we begin work, and sometimes replenished from time to time as the case progresses. These fees are pre-paid partly to assure timely compensation for services rendered, but for other reasons too.
Retainers are a way of making sure all hourly and flat fee clients are treated fairly. It would not be fair, for example, for Client A to provide fees up front, and then have to wait in line while we handled the identical type of matter for Client B who might pay when she gets around to it, according to how much she likes the results, or not at all.
If you only look at yourself, the problem seems small. If you look at our side of the problem -- waiting for 20, 30 or even 50 people to send whatever amount they feel like might make it difficult for us to stay in business.
We are not bankers or loan officers. Every minute of work that is not immediately paid represents a loan of our time.
We don’t want to charge everyone interest while we wait to be paid, or prioritize clients with more cash over clients with less, or do better work for people with the most money.
Treating each client as well as possible requires that for hourly or flat fee work, we start with a reasonable amount of money from you in advance, and make some effort for fees collected to keep up with time billed.
Why Client Owes Fees Absent Legal Plan Coverage
A query from a client: You told me yesterday that my legal plan will pay for all the expenses and there won't be any fees or charges incurred by me. ... [Y]our proposed agreement is open-ended and it indicates that I may be opening a can of worms that has no end in site. I don't feel comfortable signing it.
Dear Client:
Not exactly. I said that for covered legal matters, your legal plan pays the
attorney fees.
For all matters, you are responsible for expenses, such as Court filing fees,
messenger service if needed, process service if needed. Your plan does not
cover these items and your plan does state that you are responsible for them.
For matters not covered by your legal plan (because coverage lapsed, the legal
service was not among services included in your plan, etc.), you are responsible
for my fees. I and my staff attempt to confirm coverage before we begin
service, but that is ultimately your responsibility, as are the fees incurred
for services for which you are not covered.
In other words, I do not personally guarantee that a particular legal matter is
covered by your plan, or stays covered. If there is no coverage for whatever
reason, I still expect to be paid for my time.
Think of the alternative! Each month my staff would need to contact your legal
plan to verify coverage was still in effect, not just for you but for every
legal plan client!
Doctors don't guarantee a patient has continuing medical insurance. Likewise, I
cannot guarantee that client remains covered by a legal plan?
The administrative overhead would be enormous, to say nothing of lost revenue
from clients who claimed to have plan coverage but didn't for whatever reason.
ODL
Pro Se Litigation
You might be able to do some things an attorney could do. But here's the catch --If you have not graduated from law school, passed the bar examination and had courtroom experience, your efforts are likely to be time consuming, frustrating, and ultimately less successful. If you are concerned about fees, we can work with you. Perhaps you can do some of the work and allow us to supervise. Even if you help us, however, we still charge for reviewing what you did and putting it in proper form. And sometimes -- like installing a closet full of telephone wires -- it might take less time if we did the work from the outset ourselves.
Local Counsel
We offer preferential rates for out-of-state attorneys who seek local assistance in Washington Area jurisdictions. We can handle filing of all pleadings, or simply lend our name and presence to your litigation. We can also accompany you to motions and to trial, recommend local experts, and assist you in negotiating red tape..
Technology
“Carnivore
was designed to help law enforcement officers determine who receives a
suspect's e-mail and who sends e-mail to the suspect, but it can also be
programmed to capture whole messages. The technology has been criticized
partly because it samples the communications of the innocent, as well as the
accused. But if Carnivore, which is formally called DCS-1000, encounters
communications that have been encrypted, the FBI is unable to read the
messages.”
TOOLS FOR THE AFTERMATH --
In Investigation, Internet Offers Clues and Static
By JOHN SCHWARTZ
© The New York Times, September 26, 2001
Questions We Missed
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1420 Spring Hill Road, Suite 210
McLean VA 22120-3026
703-748-0600