Originally posted by ValleYum
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How bankruptcy attorneys make money
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But to answer your question, I have never, in all my years of practicing bk law, had a client who paid all their chapter 13 fees up front. I suppose getting paid up front for a 13 would present a temptation, but I still wouldn't do it. I can make a good enough living doing right and not cheating people. And I truly believe that what goes around really does come back around.
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Originally posted by HHM View PostIt depends on business practice and the no-look fee. Generally, the firms I work with, I advise that they get the no look fee up front. If you have a good value proposition in general, and are a good attorney, you can get it.
But your point is well taken. There is one attorney here in town that takes 13s for NO money up front and applies to have the filing fee paid in installments. He gets a lot of cases, to be sure, but he spends an inordinate amount of time filing motions to suspend plan payments; motion to reinstate cases that have been dismissed, etc. I try to strike a balance by adjusting the up-front fee according the liklihood of plan completion. The biggest factor in that determination is how long they've been at their job. I've got about a 70% plan completion rate, and the ones that don't complete are usually in the plan for some time before they fail and I get most of my fee.Last edited by MSbklawyer; 02-09-2011, 06:58 PM.Pay no attention to anything I post. I graduated last in my class from a fly-by-night law school that no longer exists; I never studied or went to class; and I only post on internet forums when I'm too drunk to crawl away from the computer.
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