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Appendix J - Special Rules Favoring Lawyers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Lester Brickman
Affiliation:
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
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Summary

Courts have constructed many rules favoring the interests of lawyers. Consider, by way of example, the different rules regulating malpractice liability for doctors and lawyers that lawyer-judges have created. If a patient has a 70 percent likelihood of dying from a certain condition and in the course of treatment his doctor fails to prescribe a drug that would have raised the odds of survival from 30 to 40 percent and the patient dies, then in a majority of states, the doctor is liable in damages for the “loss of chance,” that is, the heightened risk caused by his negligence even though the patient was unlikely to survive even if the doctor had correctly treated the condition. Lawyers, however, have a special rule largely exempting them from malpractice under equivalent circumstances. When a client sues her lawyer for malpractice because the lawyer failed to file an action within the time limit for doing so, she must show that “but for” the lawyer's negligence, the client would have had a 100 percent likelihood of prevailing in the underlying action. Similarly, when a surgeon makes a mistake in the course of a grueling protracted operation, the surgeon is liable. But a lawyer who errs during the course of a grueling protracted trial is exempt from liability because “tactical decisions” do not constitute grounds for legal malpractice.

Type
Chapter
Information
Lawyer Barons
What Their Contingency Fees Really Cost America
, pp. 537 - 540
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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