Friday, May 11, 2007

No Win No Fee Solicitors

    


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It is a sad reality that people meet accidents. The physical toll of an accident-related injury can vary from slight inconvenience to, at the very worst, debilitating injuries that could affect not only a person?s ability to earn money but also his quality of life. The stress that results from the accompanying problems that crop up after an accident can also have a major negative effect on the victim. For every kind of accident, the party or parties responsible for the commission of the accident should face up to their liabilities.
But the sad fact is, most people who meet accidents do not usually pursue any legal actions against the guilty party or parties, for the simple reason that legal fees can be very expensive. Already faced with the expenses for medical care and medicines and sometimes even rehabilitation, and the ability to earn a living already compromised, most accident victims just grin and bear it and opt not to file any charges or legal complaints. This is a reality that most accident victims have to contend with.
But accidents victims should always remember that they have the legal right to compensation for the injuries they have suffered from accidents, especially if there is a clear fault of negligence from certain individuals or entities. But far from the compensation that they will get for the injuries and lost revenue that they have suffered there is also a more important reason for filing legal charges for accidents. It is their responsibility as a citizen to have these incidents reported and, if possible, prosecuted so that the accident will not happen to other people. These parties who have caused the accident or have, through their negligence, precipitated certain factors to cause it should be made culpable for their actions.
Fortunately, there is one way for victims to file the necessary legal charges for the injuries that they received from accidents without necessarily worrying about the costs. In some cases you can use a system where you only need to pay the legal fees if you win the case. This is called a conditional-fee agreement, or a ?no win, no fee? agreement.
A ?no win, no fee? agreement can help pay solicitor costs, unless the case involves family dispute or a matter of a criminal nature. Under this agreement, the victim?s solicitor will take on the case but he understands that if the case loses then he will not get paid. It should be made clear though that there are other costs involved that are not covered by the agreement. For example, even with a lost case, the complainant will still pay the opponent?s legal costs and the disbursements of the complainan t and the defendant. But an insurance can be taken to cover the aforementioned payment if ever the case is lost. This can be arranged by the solicitor. If the complainant wins the case, he will pay the solicitor along with his disbursements. A solicitor may also charge a ?success fee? as a means of compensating the solicitor for taking the risk of not being paid if the case is lost.
Truly, with a ?no win, no fee? agreement, the dispensation of justice for the victims of accidents does not have to stop because of limited funds.

About The Author

Mark Lawson is the webmaster for Accident claim http://www.accidentclaim.uk.com a legal information site. This article is free to republish provided this bio box remains with working hyperlinks.

    
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Thursday, May 10, 2007

New York Scaffold Law Protects New York Construction Workers

    


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There is a great deal of misinformation concerning the New York Scaffold Law. The Insurance and Business Community are wrong when they say that construction workers who are ?lax about wearing safety gear? and fall from a height and are injured can hold their employer liable under New York Labor Law Section 240, the ?scaffold law.? The Court of Appeals ruled definitively in /Cahill v. Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority/ that if a worker has been i nformed about and given safety equipment and fails to use it ?for no good reason,? the employer cannot be held liable under the scaffold law for any resulting injuries.
Indeed, under the scaffold law, if a worker is the sole cause for whatever reason of his or her injury, the owner or general contractor cannot be held liable. An owner or general contractor can be held liable for a worker?s injuries only if their failure to provide appropriate safety equipment for work at an elevated height, like harnesses and properly constructed scaffolding, was the cause of the injuries.
The authors are also wrong when they blame rising contractor liability insurance on the scaffold law. In recent years, contractor liability insurance premiums have risen just as fast or even faster in many states ? and in some countries ? that have no scaffold law. In the United Kingdom, contractors report that liability insurance hikes of up 300% and more are putting many of them out of business.
Enforcement of construction safety by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration has been weak and ineffective. Without the scaffold law, the numbers of construction worker injuries and deaths in New York would surely be greater.

About The Author

Angelo G. Faraci is the founding partner of Faraci Lange, one of Western New York's leading personal injury firms. He can be reached at (585) 325-5150 or info@faraci.com. You can also visit us at www.faraci.com.
    
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Wednesday, May 9, 2007

My Fathers Will

    


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The year was 1981, the state was Florida, and I had just flown back from Germany for my father's funeral. My sister and her family were down from New York, and, a few days after the funeral, we were sitting with my mother in a lawyer's office in downtown Pensacola. My mother had just learned that she didn't have any say over what happened to the money she and my father had saved over the years, and she didn't have any control over what happened to the house they had paid for together. She was at the mercy of the State of Florida because my father had died intestate - without a Last Will & Testament.
Fortunately, she and my father had raised their children well. All that was required was for my sister and me to sign a paper relinquishing our claims to any part of the estate. Had we not signed, however, the estate, including the house, all the money in savings, and the $40,000.00 in Certificates of Deposit would have been divided among the three of us. That was the law, and that was the result of my father not having a will.
My sister and I did not hesitate for an instant. We signed without any problem, but how many families could say that all the possible heirs would be so compliant and agreeable? Even worse, each state has its own way of dealing with the distribution of assets to the heirs of someone who dies without a last will and testament.
There are a lot of options available in addition to the commonplace will for protecting the distribution of assets upon someone's death, including such things as living trusts, but the Last Will & Testament still ranks as one of the simplest and best ways of insuring that your heirs will get what you want them to get without the intervention of courts and lawyers. Taking that for a fact, a Last Will & Testament is one of the most important legal documents a person can create during his or her lifetime: it is the document that determines who receives the assets of that person upon his or her death.
The laws of most states are designed to provide the assets of an estate first to the surviving spouse and then to any children of that person if the spouse is no longer living, but this hierarchy of distribution is not always guaranteed. Indeed, in our case, all three of us, my mother, my sister, and I were considered to be equal in our claims upon the estate. When you think about it, my mother and father had paid for the house without any help from us, and for most of the years she had worked as a gr ade school teacher, my mother had willingly put every penny of her paycheck in their savings account in the expectation of them having that money in their senior years. The laws of the State of Florida said that she no longer had an unchallenged claim to that house or money.
Setting aside just a few minutes to visit a lawyer or fill out a legal Will form is simply smart estate planning. A Last Will and Testament will guarantee that your family receives the assets of your estate in the manner you desire when the time comes. Why allow the uncertain vagaries of state laws and the decisions of someone who knows nothing of you or your family affect your spouse's finances or your children's finances after you die?
Creating a legal Last Will and Testament document allows you, the maker of the Will, to specify exactly who is to receive the assets of your estate. Creating a Will shortens the any legal processes exponentially, as the only major question remaining before the distribution of assets is the authenticity of the Will, which can easily be proven by the signature of the notary. Creating a Will removes nearly all questions about the distribution of the assets of an estate and speeds the transfer of those asse ts to the designated survivors.
Even though the obvious value of having a will may fall victim to a person's uncertainty about choosing a lawyer, or the costs associated with hiring an attorney, there are many other options available today. Many office supply stores have forms for a Last Will and Testament, and there are many sites on the internet where you can find forms, software, or services which will help you prepare a perfectly legal Will for a fraction of what an attorney would charge. You can even write your own will if you wish, but be aware that it is easy to say the wrong thing if you are not aware of the requirements of the law, and a good form or software program will help protect you against most simple errors. Of course, someone with a large estate, or someone with a complicated distribution problem should contact an attorney rather than attempting to prepare a Last Will and Testament themselves.
Copyright 2006 Donovan Baldwin

About The Author

Donovan Baldwin
Retired from the Army, the author has worked as an accountant, purchasing agent, optical lab manager, restaurant manager, instructor and long-haul truck driver. An active internet marketer since 2000, he now makes his living online. He offers a selection of legal software and forms at http://www.legal-forms-supermarket.com/.
    
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Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Misconduct Investigations When Punting Can Save the Game

    


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A bungled investigation can quickly turn a reasonable, still employed complainant into a hurt, damaged and angry former-employee-plaintiff. --Anonymous
For Tammie C. Allen, former admin assistant to MTSU President Sidney McPhee, the unsolicited advances, kisses, groping and requests for sexual activities from her boss were less injurious than the humiliating and biased sexual harassment investigation that followed her complaint. She expressed this outrage in a civil complaint, seeking monetary redress for incurred medical expenses and "severe emotional distress, mental anguish, indignation, wounded pride, shame and despair." Among the allegations: the investigators were under the direct supervision of the alleged offender; Ms. Allen?s attempts to provide the investigators with more witnesses to the alleged sexual harassment were ignored; Allen took a polygraph test in November to prove her case, but the TBR refused to consider that as a piece of evidence; her request for a meeting to discuss the findings of the investigation was denied; she received an involuntary transfer following the investigation that resulted in less responsibility, prestige and pr omotional opportunities.
Just the FACTS
The integrity of the investigatory process will be jeopardized if the investigator is perceived (rightly or wrongly) as partial or sympathetic to one view or another. In some situations, the conclusion of an internal investigation and the action it took based on the investigation will be questioned either as a whitewash or as a pretext for firing the individual without breaching his contract. This is just one of the circumstances where it pays to bring in an outsider. However, until March of this year, third-party investigations of employee misconduct were subject to the notice and consent requirements of the Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970. At the same time, Supreme Court decisions in Ellerth and Faragher [Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Ellerth, 73 Emp. Prac. Dec. (CCH) ?45,340 and Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 73 Emp. Prac. Dec. (CCH) ?45,341] made it imperative for employers to conduct investigations of harassment allegations in order to meet the second prong of the affirmative defense. Employers were in a double bind, attempting to comply with the requirements for a reasonable investigation while also complying with the FCRA requirements.
Third-party investigations of employee misconduct are no longer subject to the notice and consent requirements of the Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970 (FCRA). On December 4, the President signed the ?Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003,? P.L. 108-159. Section 611 of the new law amends the FCRA?s definition of ?consumer report? to exclude communications made to an employer in connection with an investigation of (1) suspected misconduct relating to employment, or (2) compliance with federal , state or local laws and regulations or pre-existing written employer policies.
The 2003 FCRA amendments clarify that communications to an employer by outside third parties hired to investigate employee misconduct or compliance with the employer?s pre existing written policies will not be considered ?consumer reports? and will not require advance notice or authorization. If any adverse action is taken based on the communication, however, the employer generally will be required to disclose to the employee a summary containing the nature and substance of the communication.
The Trend Toward Outsourcing
However, even before the FACT Act was signed, many employment attorneys and human resource professionals had begun advising employers to pay more attention to conducting a reasonable investigation than worrying about avoiding the FCRA requirements. There were some court decisions that pretty much dismissed the FTC opinion letter and follow-up opinions of the FTC General Counsel. Recent opinion has shifted toward using third party investigators, with or without full compliance with the FCRA, as interpret ed. Part of this advice was EEOC-driven. Chairwoman Castro has repeatedly emphasized the EEOC?s position with respect to the importance of using outside investigators to conduct investigations into suspected discrimination or harassment. Specifically, Chairwoman Castro noted that the use of outside investigators is important:
1) where the employer lacks the resources to conduct investigations in-house 2) where the employer wishes to have an objective and unbiased party investigate the conduct at issue; 3) where the conduct complained of was perpetrated by very high-level employees within the company.
Although the EEOC does not generally require employers to use outside parties to conduct investigations into harassment claims, the EEOC has expressed the view that using outside investigators is important in certain circumstances, and may even be necessary where the accused harasser is a senior company official or where there is otherwise a conflict of interest. Examples of such conflicts include situations where an investigator:
* Has a personal relationship with either party.
* Has witnessed any alleged material occurrence.
* Has very strong feelings about either the complainant or the accused
Thus, employers who indiscriminately conduct internal investigations not only lose what advantages exist for having neutral third parties conduct such investigations, they risk running afoul of EEOC guidance.
When to Outsource ? And Why
While most employers are mainly concerned about liability to the victim of misconduct, there is a growing trend among employees who are accused of and disciplined for misconduct to strike back and accuse their employers of violating their rights during the investigatory or disciplinary process. Conducting a fair and thorough investigation reduces the risk that an employee will be disciplined or discharged for something he or she did not do and provides a powerful defense against a claim that the company condoned unlawful conduct in the workplace.
Employers should consider using an outside investigator for four reasons:
1) Promptness. Despite the need to promptly investigate allegations of misconduct, investigations are not always management?s number one priority.
2) Expertise. Outside investigators are specialists whose expertise results in a more thorough investigation, especially where the organization involved is a small one. This expertise is particularly critical when the allegations are serious in nature and the stakes are high, such as sexual assault. In addition, outside investigators have the courtroom experience that will make them a powerful witness should the complaint eventually go to trial.
3) Impartiality. Although the employer hires the investigator, Morgan believes there still is the sense that the investigation is not an ?inside? job. Based on my experience conducting investigations, I believe people are more open and more willingly share more information with an outsider, especially when the allegations are against a high-ranking individual in the organization. The objectivity of an internal investigation in that scenario is more easily quest
4) Confidentiality. There is a strong need for confidentiality for the persons who are asked to report what has happened. They are often concerned about retribution, so the ability to offer a considerable blanket of protection is helpful. When I am hired to conduct an investigation, I want to know to what degree the comments I gather will be held in confidence by management.
The Bottom Line Increasingly, the scales are tipped in favor or employers who use outside investigators to investigate misconduct allegations, particularly when they involve a potential conflict of interest, possible litigation, or high-ranking individuals.
Checklist: Advantages of Using An Outside Investigator Now that employers are relieved of some of the notice and disclosure requirements of the Fair Credit Reporting Act when investigating allegations of misconduct, they may want to consider some of the following advantages to bringing in an outside investigator.
- Knowing that he or she will not have to ?live? with either the accused or the accuser after the investigation may help the investigator remain impartial.
- The outside investigator has no previous experience with any of the parties involved and so comes to the investigation without the kinds of prejudices that arise from knowing someone?s past performance or history.
- Witnesses may be more forthcoming with an outsider, not having to fear that what they tell the person may someday become ?conversation around the water cooler.?
- Using someone from an outside investigation firm may benefit the investigation as he or she could be familiar with the type of investigation needed and have questions to ask or tools to use that might not have been thought of internally.
- The outside investigator will be brought in specifically for the purpose of carrying out the investigation and will not require that someone from the organization find time in his or her schedule to do the work.
Copyright 2006 Joni Johnston

About The Author

Joni E. Johnston is a clinical psychologist and CEO of WorkRelationships, (www.workrelationships.com) an employee relations training and consulting company that helps employers turn employment liability into employee productivity.
    

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Monday, May 7, 2007

Medical Malpractice for Babies

    


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Medical practices are some of the causes of pain and suffering among the American Families. The bad news is that it affects the babies in some situation. Researches have shown that around two million babies have suffered from trauma during delivery at the time of their birth. Birth trauma has a lot of consequences which can go from mild to temporary up to devastating injuries. This can also cause tragic impairments that can lead to permanent conditio ns.
We all know that babies are young and if they experience medical malpractice, they might not recover from the pain and suffering that they are going through. Their body is weak so doctors should take extra care of them.
In some cases, birth trauma cannot be prevented because of some conditions. However, if a good doctor handles the delivery, these situations can be prevented. If a doctor is not that trained and experienced, he might fail to diagnose the cause of the birth trauma. This is where medical practice takes place. There are laws regarding medical malpractices. Doctors should be very careful in treating these cases especially in babies because they might be suffering this for the rest of their lives.
When a medical professional or a doctor fails to diagnose some common prenatal infections, or some other factors, it is expected to have birth trauma. If on the day of the delivery, a medical assistant did not provide the proper treatment, the baby can develop birth trauma that easy. We might not be aware of this but even the babies have feelings at such early stage. Some heavy bruising can be caused by improperly using birthing techniques like vacuums and forceps. These equipments need extra care in us ing it. Another common example of birth trauma us shoulder dystocia. When a shoulder of the baby is impacted on the pelvis of the mother during birth, which is considered shoulder dystocia. If this is not treated properly, it can lead to serious injuries to the upper extremities of the child.
Medical malpractice and negligence is something that cannot be forgiven to doctors. It has been clear from the start that once they have committed to the care and attention of patients, he must do his best to perform a good action, an action that can alleviate the suffering of the individual. Our babies? life is important so they should be given the proper care and treatment.
For more related articles, you may visit http://www.socialsecuritylawattorney.com.

About The Author

Karen Nodalo has graduated from the Bicol University specializing in Computer Science, she graduated with flying honors being one of the top notch students of the graduating class. She has been into writing for almost 5 years now, and has been into different topics. She has also been into student publications since her elementary years, giving her the much coveted exposure that writers of her kind battles for.
karen@rushprintingservices.com

    

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