Thursday, May 13th, 2010 at
11:12 am
A friend of mine was involved with a criminal trespass case in which he visited an attorney for advise. At no time did he advise this attorney that he wanted his representation. When his court date came, the attorney was there and assisted with the case. There was no contract signed or anything of that nature. This happend in 2003. Bills are still being sent to his house from his attorney, but he has not paid anything.
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Thursday, April 15th, 2010 at
5:37 pm
I called an attorney and they told me USD$1600. They let you make payments, but won’t file until the whole thing is paid. Is that too much or just right?
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Monday, February 22nd, 2010 at
7:03 pm
I live in Texas and I am in the process of buying a home directly from the seller. My bank suggests going to an attorney to have them complete the buyer/seller paperwork. What does it usually cost for this?
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Monday, January 18th, 2010 at
11:14 am
I am working on a property that is in foreclosure in WA state. It is 2 months into the process, $11,500 in back payments and taxes and a few thousand in attorney fees for the mortgage holder’s attorneys. Is there a ballpark estimate of how much attorney fees will be once the 135 days is up and it goes to sale, and is there any formula for calculating the rate of their charges?
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Monday, January 18th, 2010 at
10:24 am
I asked this question in a different way, and I neglected to explain that it’s not a law suit case, so ‘contingency’ is probably not an option.
My question is: If a potential client doesn’t have the entire retainers fee up front for an attorney, is there a way that an attorney can start representing the client with some sort of a guarantee that he/she will be paid? Is there a form of written agreement that can be drawn up between the attorney and the potential client?
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Thursday, December 3rd, 2009 at
9:58 pm
Would the Attorney’s fees be paid by the new trust for the benefit of the Surviving Spouse? The trust of the Deceased?
-OR- Out of the surviving spouses’s personal pocket?”
Monday, November 16th, 2009 at
2:00 pm
Basically my question is this:
Is it Legal in the state of Texas for an attorney to delay filing my divorce if I have not paid the attorneys fees in full?
Divorce papers have been signed by both parties as of the 7th of October.
Wednesday, October 21st, 2009 at
2:44 pm
I am purchasing a salon and I need to hire an attorney. The attorney said he wants $3500 to do the business formation, register the LLC, sales contract, and establish the tax laibilities, etc. He basically said that fee will include everything. He said he would charge about $2000 for services except forming the LLC and registration etc. Please give me some figures based on experience.