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sws4420
08-07-2008, 11:17 AM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2008/0808/can_i_sue_0805.jpg

Beginning next month, anyone with access to the Internet should be able to log onto WhoCanISue.com. The new website plans to help consumers determine whether they actually have a case and help them find an attorney from a list of lawyers who advertise their expertise on the website. The attorneys will pay an annual fee of $1,000 to appear on the site, plus an additional amount of their own choosing that will determine how prominently they appear in the listings on the site. The website will vet the attorneys to make sure they are in good standing with their state bar associations.

Curtis A. Wolfe, formerly general counsel for Fort Lauderdale-based private equity firm Ener1 Group and the founder of WhoCanISue.com, plans to unveil the new website in September. But he will begin signing up attorneys to advertise on the site when the American Bar Association convenes it annual meeting in New York City on Thursday.

Wolfe's website is not the first of its kind. His most direct competition includes SueEasy.com and LegalMatch.com, among others. But Wolfe says his service — which is free to the consumer — differs from the others in that he will provide real-time access to attorneys. After consumers answer a set of general questions about their grievances, they will be given some guidance about whether they might have a case worth pursuing; if they do, they will be immediately put in touch with an interested attorney.

The proliferation of legal matchmakers like Wolfe leaves some in the profession skeptical. "As if there aren't enough lawyers out there inventing lawsuits, now we're going to invite the public to do so," scoffed prominent Miami trial attorney Richard Sharpstein, a partner at Jorden Burt. "I think this is nothing more than a referral service," he says of WhoCanISue.com. "It encourages, if not creates lawsuits. Our country's courts are clogged with unnecessary and frivolous lawsuits which delay, if not obstruct, the access to courts of people that really need to get there, that have serious legal grievances."

But Wolfe maintains his service could just as easily help someone realize he doesn't have a case — or that, while they may have a legal claim, it won't generate enough money to interest an attorney to take it on.

"With our system they can either find a lawyer or find out by talking to our lawyers that they don't really have an interest in that case," Wolfe says. "I don't think WhoCanISue.com is going to, by itself, increase the number of lawsuits there are, but it may make people more aware of what their rights are."

University of Florida law professor Lyrissa Lidsky believes the service "is likely to increase the number of lawsuits." But, adds Lidsky, who specializes in Internet law and the First Amendment, "It's a good thing to the extent people are vindicating their legal rights to the extent they didn't years ago."

However, if you're looking to use the website to find a good lawyer, in most states you could do just as well by checking with the local bar association. In Florida, for example, lawyers can sign up for the state bar's referral system by paying a $125 membership fee, agreeing to charge clients only $25 for an initial 30-minute office consultation and guaranteeing $100,000 in liability insurance coverage.


http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1829725,00.html

Hockey2006
08-07-2008, 01:01 PM
Great, now those stupid cases are being assisted and encouraged...

Dave
08-07-2008, 01:04 PM
I'm gonna sue my neighbor for running out of beer last night. I had to head back home earlier than I planned. My in-laws were still there.

MedicCook
08-07-2008, 01:19 PM
I think you could sue your in-laws on that also. They over stayed their welcome and cuased you emotional distress.

Dave
08-07-2008, 01:46 PM
I think I like that idea.

MedicCook
08-07-2008, 01:48 PM
Just request a judgement in booze and cigars.

trojanmiro
08-08-2008, 07:12 AM
this is something i would honestly try for shits and giggles. ive been mulling back and forth over if i wanted to try to sue st marys or not.

Donna
08-08-2008, 09:17 AM
this is something i would honestly try for shits and giggles. ive been mulling back and forth over if i wanted to try to sue st marys or not.

for........................

trojanmiro
08-08-2008, 06:08 PM
for........................

going to the hospital 3 times when i couldnt walk and them basically pushing me out the door because i didnt have insurance. they never correctly diagnosed the problem. i think if my condition was caught early on enough the joint damage could have been prevented and i mighta still been able to carry on in my field of work.

Thomas the Solitary
08-08-2008, 08:29 PM
I hear all the time about people getting all sorts of money for stupid stuff. Well, maybe I shouldn't say stupid stuff... one guy I was told about drank quote "two fists of whiskey" and passed out on the rail road tracks. Cut off both his legs. Now he's living the good life with a federal check coming in every month and a maid to dust off his balls after every sneeze. Of course, he doesn't have any legs, though... hmmmm.

Anyway. I don't think I can be creative enough to find something to sue about.

(although that McDonalds hot Coffee thing sticks out in my mind.)

Donna
08-09-2008, 07:51 AM
going to the hospital 3 times when i couldnt walk and them basically pushing me out the door because i didnt have insurance. they never correctly diagnosed the problem. i think if my condition was caught early on enough the joint damage could have been prevented and i mighta still been able to carry on in my field of work.

well, look at all the trivial b.s. lawsuits that win........you never know. You have a valid grievance.

Thomas the Solitary
08-09-2008, 02:50 PM
Just make sure to send me a couple bucks after you get your millions, ok? heh.