nobody does, ur screwed
A Lawyers Role Is To Defend His/Hers Own Client Whether Their Client Is In The Wrong Or Right.The Must Give Evidence Of What They Are Holding Against The Other Person (Who Will Also Have A Lawyer)A Lawyer Must Be Confident And Know What To Say.
They listen to the client's case and if they are up for it they will take the case but if the lawyer disagrees with the client, he/she will recommend some other lawyers to take care of the case.
Yes, being a lawyer is competitive, since you are competing to get hired by a client against thousands of other lawyers who also want to get hired by a client. It is a very competitive job.
Prove their client innocent
A client can find many lawyers these days since there are billboards everywhere and also TV commercials that are shown. Lawyers need experience too so finding a lawyer that is well suited to the situation the client is facing it is better to search on the internet.
Stephen Gillers has written: 'Regulation of Lawyers Statutes and Standards/Supplement' 'Regulation of the legal profession' -- subject(s): Discipline, Lawyers, Attorney and client, Malpractice, Legal ethics 'Regulation of Lawyers, Statutes & Standards, 2002' '18th annual ethics CLE' -- subject(s): Practice of law, Legal ethics, Attorney and client 'Regulation of Lawyers' 'Regulation of the legal profession' -- subject(s): Discipline, Lawyers, Attorney and client, Malpractice, Legal ethics 'Regulation of the legal profession' -- subject(s): Lawyers, Discipline, Attorney and client, Malpractice, Legal ethics 'Regulation of lawyers: Statutes and standards'
No.Added: ABSOLUTELY not! UNLESS - they have a Power of Attorney from their client to act in the client's stead.
Lawyers are people who stand for a person like a client and help them win in court they try to do anything to help or distroy the opposite cadate
By seeing how long they have to meet up with the judge in court. Or they just figure out how big the client is in trouble or what they did that was really wrong.
Some bankruptcy lawyers are totally honest, others are not.
Sure. Unless they are in the midst of a trial, they can "fire" a client.
Lawyers and other service professionals usually charge retainers as a form of protecting themselves against clients who might end up not paying. So by asking for a retainer, a part of the work is covered, if the client does not pay the rest for some reason, at least it was not a total waste of time for the lawyer.