I think that I have narrowed down my short list of attorneys to two.
One guy is a named partner (his name is part of the firms name). Their firm doesn't appear to advertise, and there is almost frighteningly little information about them on the net other than they represented the trustee for a forced bankruptcy involving massive fraud by a local company which gathered national media attention. I only got about 10 minutes of his time, the rest with his assistant. Also, he is in another county, 60 miles away, but they have other clients in my area and are used to the commute.
The other guy is a solo practitioner, with a couple of legal aids, very easy to talk to, spent over an hour with me. But, his office seemed a bit disorganized, and I'm not quite sure how to take that. He has a very good rating on AVVO.com, but I don't know how much that means.
I've interviewed over 10 attorneys, and am running out of steam. Should I go with the easy to talk to, close by guy, with slightly disorganized office, and hope that it doesn't indicate a proclivity for missing filing dates, and such. Or, go with the guy in the next county. Both have A+ BBB ratings, and both have promptly replied to post meeting emailed questions. Or should I keep looking--sigh... Is there such a thing as perfect client-lawyer fit? Am I expecting to much?
One guy is a named partner (his name is part of the firms name). Their firm doesn't appear to advertise, and there is almost frighteningly little information about them on the net other than they represented the trustee for a forced bankruptcy involving massive fraud by a local company which gathered national media attention. I only got about 10 minutes of his time, the rest with his assistant. Also, he is in another county, 60 miles away, but they have other clients in my area and are used to the commute.
The other guy is a solo practitioner, with a couple of legal aids, very easy to talk to, spent over an hour with me. But, his office seemed a bit disorganized, and I'm not quite sure how to take that. He has a very good rating on AVVO.com, but I don't know how much that means.
I've interviewed over 10 attorneys, and am running out of steam. Should I go with the easy to talk to, close by guy, with slightly disorganized office, and hope that it doesn't indicate a proclivity for missing filing dates, and such. Or, go with the guy in the next county. Both have A+ BBB ratings, and both have promptly replied to post meeting emailed questions. Or should I keep looking--sigh... Is there such a thing as perfect client-lawyer fit? Am I expecting to much?
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