Q: Hello. I have a question in regards to hiring a different attorney on my workers comp case in Texas.What is the process?
My accident is work related. The forklift was pulling on a bundle of conduit and the Strap Broke, While i was in the trench, caught me blind sided. I was treated by the ambulance and fire dept. The initial MRI showed i had suffered brain tissue was swollen and a brain tumor was diagnosed. My present attorney has not informed me since two months. I just had an MMI, with no follow up on the head trauma. Thanks, to whom it may concern
A: While you are always free to fire and then hire a new workers' comp attorney, the 2nd attorney will, in many cases, not be willing to represent you because you have to make sure your first attorney doesn't have a big attorney fee bill that needs to be satisfied first. Attorneys like to help, but we can't be working without some guarantee of payment.
A: A client can fire his own attorney at any time for any reason. The old attorney will still be entitled to compensation for services rendered up to the date of his termination. A new attorney often will not agree to take over a case until you have first paid the previous attorney as agreed.
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