exskibum
~<>~<>~<>~<>~
Well, see a lawyer . . . soon. The statute of limitations is running.
Unfortunately, Twigg is mostly right. My only quibble is that (here, at least), such a case is likely to be handled for a contingent fee that would avoid the need to pay attorney's fees or costs unless there is a recovery. Those minimum insurance limits would make any lawyer skeptical that the guy has sufficient funds to be worth going after, but he'd probably at least do a basic asset search in deciding whether to take the case. Beyond that, Twigg does a good job of sketching the too usual circumstances in another example of an irretrievably broken legal system (for working class citizens, at least).
Unfortunately, Twigg is mostly right. My only quibble is that (here, at least), such a case is likely to be handled for a contingent fee that would avoid the need to pay attorney's fees or costs unless there is a recovery. Those minimum insurance limits would make any lawyer skeptical that the guy has sufficient funds to be worth going after, but he'd probably at least do a basic asset search in deciding whether to take the case. Beyond that, Twigg does a good job of sketching the too usual circumstances in another example of an irretrievably broken legal system (for working class citizens, at least).
Last edited by a moderator: