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Terminating a attorney/client relationship.

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MichaelMMont

Junior Member
California


Our firm has hired an attorney who we now believe to be incompetent. He has spelled our company name, individual name, and other parties name wrong on at least two occasions. Furthermore, he has repeatedly not been able to understand the emails we have sent to him, and when they are sent he loses them and we need to resend them. We had to help him look up case law and provide the cases because he couldn’t find it on his computer. Finally, a piece of evidence used in the complaint contained the opposing party’s signature on a contract. The other party called him to say it was a fraud, he said that “it looked to be a fraudulent signature” although he did not compare it to any other signature.

He is now demanding his payment of $2,500 per his contract, but frankly he has not done anything to progress this case. We told him we'd pay it if he confirmed that he'd be willing to go to trial on this, and he has yet to confirm this in writing. That is another reason we don't want to pay him. He’s been terrible and we have no faith that he will be able to act on our best interests due to his incompetence. Based on the above can we 1) terminate this agreement with him and refuse payment? 2) Is it malpractice for him (a non expert) to state an expert opinion on a signature to the opposing party since it is against our interests? What recourse do we have if he still demands payment? Bar complaint, arbitration, reviews of his services online?
 


Up to you if you wish to pay him; you can have him withdraw at any time.

If you are the plaintiff he may place a "lien" on any future possible judgment in your favor.
 

cyjeff

Senior Member
Up to you if you wish to pay him; you can have him withdraw at any time.

If you are the plaintiff he may place a "lien" on any future possible judgment in your favor.
Wrong.

What is the basis of the contract you signed with the attorney?

Hey Willy, have you found that source that states 500 people have died by taser in the last 10 years yet or were you lying and wrong there, too?
 
Wrong.

What is the basis of the contract you signed with the attorney?

Hey Willy, have you found that source that states 500 people have died by taser in the last 10 years yet or were you lying and wrong there, too?
You are wrong. Jesus gave us the choice to choose. Not you. Not all choices we make will not result in favorable results bu there you go. You acknowledge an issue with service via non-payment.
 

cyjeff

Senior Member
You are wrong. Jesus gave us the choice to choose. Not you. Not all choices we make will not result in favorable results bu there you go. You acknowledge an issue with service via non-payment.
Again, you are wrong. Just because it is getting close to Christmas doesn't mean Jesus got his law degree.

Have you found the source for your LAST huge "fact" yet? Or are you lying here, too?
 

cyjeff

Senior Member
Jesus/God...
Did they also give you the tasers killed 500 people in the last 10 years data?

No? Then where did that come from?



For the rest of the folks... sorry about having to pin Willy's ears back like this. If I don't, he will never go away.
 

Proserpina

Senior Member
Did they also give you the tasers killed 500 people in the last 10 years data?

No? Then where did that come from?



For the rest of the folks... sorry about having to pin Willy's ears back like this. If I don't, he will never go away.

No need to apologize.

It is your painful burden, and we appreciate your efforts.

:cool:
 

Mass_Shyster

Senior Member
1) terminate this agreement with him
yes
and refuse payment?
No. If you do not pay him per the terms of the contract, you are in breach on contract. You can expect to be sued.

2) Is it malpractice for him (a non expert) to state an expert opinion on a signature to the opposing party since it is against our interests?
An expert is not required in court to testify to the authenticity of a signature.
 

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