I have recently filed a lawsuit for a dog bite case. While researching the law, I stumbled upon your website and, I must say, felt very relieved to see such a wealth of information on the topic. I appreciate all the information that you provide on your site as it has helped focus my research immensely.
Best regards,
C.B., Attorney at Law
Return to your topic: Legal Briefs
When a victim loses time from work, it is possible to make a claim for his or her lost income. Employment records are necessary to prove the amount of the loss.
The defendant also will be entitled to seek access to some of your employment records, but not all of them. If there's something sensitive in them, you can tell your attorney, and he will make every effort to ensure that no one will see that.
Your employment records will be copied by a photocopy service. Your attorney will pay the cost of the photocopying if permitted by the law of your state (see Costs). This is one of the expenditures that will be repaid from your settlement.
If you were bitten by a dog, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. It's done by email to protect your privacy. He will discuss your options without charge.
If you are a lawyer, tell him about your case and he will suggest solutions. He can spend an hour on the phone with you for strategizing, connecting you with experts, and sending you pleadings, discovery documents, motions and other materials. Or get a set of the same templates that he uses for dog bite cases all over the USA.
If your dog was injured or killed, get the self-help book he wrote to tell you how to make the guilty party reimburse you and compensate you for what you are going through.
Dog trainers and rescues, get the video of his seminar that comes with essential legal documents that will protect you and your business if you are injured or accused of being liable for an injury.
Landlords and property managers can protect themselves and their tenants from the consequences of vicious dogs on the rental premises by using the Lease Addendum: Pets written by Mr. Phillips.
DogBiteLaw.com and each of its sections and products, including Dog Bite Law, Dog Bite Litigation Forms, What To Do If Your Dog Is Injured Or Killed, Avoiding Liability When You Train, Shelter or Adopt-Out, Anatomy of a Dog Bite Case, and the foregoing text, are (c) 1999-2011 Kenneth M. Phillips. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part prohibited except where advance permission is granted in writing. Please read the disclaimer and our rules for linking and quoting. Reporters seeking interviews are welcome to contact us by clicking here.