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About
Your Personal Injury Case
Your case is extremely important to us because we
know it is extremely important to you. We know it may have resulted
in immediate injury and pain, adverse economic impact to your life,
and loss or damage to your property.
We immediately start working to resolve
your problems and lay the groundwork for your long range settlement
or courtroom case.
Communication
is the key to victory, and you will be advised of every concrete
development in your case as it happens. Each case follows a course
of preparation that includes gathering information about your injuries
and the accident or incident that caused them. If you have a question,
need advice about your case, or need to make us aware of new developments,
do not hesitate to call the Cohen and Cohen attorney handling your
case or his assistant immediately. The purpose of this page is to
provide a general outline of how your case will develop. Obviously,
no two cases are alike, and the results of all cases might vary
- even if the accidents are similar.
The
Beginning of Your Case
Confidentiality is the cornerstone of the attorney-client relationship.
You should not discuss your case with anyone who isn't entitled
to information concerning it. Friends and acquaintances can innocently
affect your claim adversely without even knowing it. Anyone who
contacts you regarding your case should be immediately told to call
your attorney. If insurance personnel, investigators, or others
approach you, you should inform them you are represented by our
law firm and refer them to us for any information. Any statements
you make to other persons could be used against you in court, and
it is impossible for us to know about these attempted contacts unless
you tell us.
At your
first interview, we will ask for general information concerning
your accident, how it happened, and your injuries. A file is then
opened in your name and assigned to an attorney, his assistants,
and a legal secretary. This team of legal technicians will then
begin to prepare your case, contacting the appropriate parties and
placing them on notice of your claim. Your attorney will evaluate
your case and
immediately advise you as to what steps
need to be taken for the best possible results. If witness statements
are needed, they will be pursued. All the efforts at the beginning
of your case are to ensure that the attorneys handling it can formulate
a general theory of injuries and liabilities, which enables them
to present your case to the insurance company for a settlement.
Preparation
for Settlement
Gathering
Medical Information
After your attorney and his staff have all the
liability issues information, they
will gather all the medical documents from all the treating physicians
and health care providers. These include treatment records, hospital
records, x-rays, and test results. Often they will consult directly
with your treating physician to determine the seriousness of your
injuries. It is frequently difficult to obtain all the medical records
needed from physicians simply because they and their staff are very
busy. Sometimes your treating physician will not write an opinion
report of your injury until he has treated and examined you a number
of times. In all automobile cases and most other cases, we request
that your physician tell us whether there will be permanent injuries
from your accident. Sometimes there are other questions a doctor
cannot answer during the first weeks or even months following an
accident. We will advise you if there are any unusual delays.
Reaching
a Settlement or Pursuing a Lawsuit
Early on, we will contact your insurance company to discuss a possible
settlement of your case before any lawsuit is filed. Before insurance
companies consider settling cases, they usually want to see all
of your medical records, information concerning lost wages (past,
present and future), the damages to personal property (which might
include your automobile), other expenses, and all relevant information
concerning your claim. They will not settle a case until they are
convinced that they have a legal duty to compensate you, so you
must thoroughly substantiate and document your claim. Your attorney
will prepare a settlement demand letter with all relevant enclosures
to the insurance company. They will then review the documents and
determine whether to offer a settlement.
If the
insurance company does not make an acceptable offer, a lawsuit will
be considered. A lawsuit or a "complaint" is the initiation of formal
litigation. The complaint, which lists the nature of the accident
and the injury sustained, is filed in the county courthouse where
the accident happened or the plaintiff resides. The courthouse personnel,
usually the court clerk's office, will assign the case a number
and give it to a judge. That judge will then examine your case.
Early on in litigation, the defendant and plaintiff exchange discover
information, which allows them to anticipate the other side's position
and study their theory of the accident and injuries. Your attorney
will attempt to obtain a trial date from the court as soon as possible.
This process usually takes between eight to twelve months after
the lawsuit is filed.
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