Hey, wait, what’s that? A person’s lawsuit will probably never go to court? How can that be? Well, as any lawyer could tell you, the answer is simple: the vast majority of personal injury cases are settled out of court. There is a good chance that this may be true with your personal injury lawsuit.
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Car accidents are as fun to think about as tax season is. Both are a necessary part of life and both occur often in life. If you are ever involved in a car accident and you sustain property damage or bodily injury, no matter how minor, your natural impulse is to file a lawsuit against
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Though no one wants to think about it, T-bone car accidents are all too common. You may have been involved in this sort of accident. If you have been and want to file a lawsuit against the defendant, hire a personal injury lawyer in Cambridge to help you navigate through the maze of personal injury
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Sometimes the attorney for a person that has become the victim of an accident-caused injury will urge that client to refrain from rushing to file a claim. Still, it does not make sense to delay that process for a long time. During that delay, valuable documents might get lost.
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The law defines negligence as careless and neglectful behavior. A charge of gross negligence suggests that the defendant has managed to amplify to a marked degree the type of behavior that the law defines as simple negligence.
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At times, a win in court can deliver to the plaintiff a huge award. Still, there are good reasons for choosing on occasion to settle a lawsuit outside of the courtroom.
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The law in Ontario demands possession of automobile insurance by anyone that owns or leases a motored vehicle. In the absence of such a policy, the owner has no right to operate his or her vehicle. By the same token, a leaser has no ability to provide a customer with an insured vehicle, one that
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Personal injury lawyers keep one fact foremost in their minds, when deciding whether or not to take on a potential client’s case. That one fact is this: If there is no proof of negligence, then there is no case.
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Anyone that has watched a televised scene of a trial-in-progress has heard use of the term “cross examination.” Yet some examinations take place before the trial. Each of them is part of an examination for discovery.
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During the typical personal injury case, the plaintiff claims that the defendant did not do what an ordinary, reasonable, prudent and cautious person would have done in the same situation. Yet not every defendant can be described as an ordinary man or woman. When that is the case, there is a different definition for Ontario’s
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