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Thursday 2 May 2013

No Win No Fee and Your Lawyer


Idealism
If all kinds of No Win No Fee lawyers were equally sympathetic and just, then there would really be no need to discriminate among the many lawyers on the market today. Rather, any claimant would be represented well by his solicitor even without much prompting on his part, either financially or morally, for the simple reason that his lawyer would be motivated by the intrinsic goodness of pursuing justice alone. Moreover, there would also be no conflict between many lawyers in this case because no lawyer would accept a case once he sees that it does not really contain any merit or that the prospective client facing him was the guilty party all along. In short, the legal world would not be in as shaky as foundation as it is now and it would be removed of the many academic earthquakes that frequently shock its disputations.

But this is not the case. And so, as a claimant it is incumbent upon you to choose well who you will hire as your representative. It might not be a completely impertinent idea to suggest here that of all the lawyers you meet, you should avoid hiring those who you think are too idealistic and unable to get their hands dirty. The real world is far from ideal. To hire someone who can function only in an ideal world is to hire someone incapable of handling the real.

Competitiveness
For many people, hard work is an absolute virtue. This is true, according to them, most especially when doing something intrinsically arduous or boring, such as demanding No Win No Fee. In line with the way many athletic companies portray this virtue in their numerous advertising materials, they think that without practicing hard every day and without pushing our personal limits to its maximum on a consistent basis, we would never be able to attain whatever it is that we are interested in accomplishing. To a certain extent, this view is correct. For no one would deny that energy and activity are the keys to progress, whether personal or social. Nevertheless, hard work is not an absolute good. In many cases, it may cause untold evil.

To begin with, limits must be had in working hard because our wills are not as strong as our bodies. Consistently working hard can injure our mind and our body because we can only handle so much punishment before we give in to illness and trauma. Second, it is not at all advisable to work hard when, just in demanding compensation, you find yourself not yet completely healthy. Hard work when moderated is a boon, but when overdone becomes a suicidal vice.

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