Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Inducing a Breach of Attorney-Client Relationship In the recent case of Jackson v. Traveler's Insurance Co., the Federal District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee stated: "While the law does not bind a client to an attorney merely because [the client] has entered into a contingent fee contract, the court will vigorously protect the contractual relationship when a third party wilfully interferes with this relationship by inducing the plaintiff-client to discharge [his] attorney and settle with the third party."'

626, 522 @ 8:22 am

Protecting Attorney Client Privilege and when a certain City Hall somewhere in America attempts to interfere in that privilege


 Can you imagine an attorney saying something to another attorney to smear a client? 

How grossly unethical!   How unfair!  How malicious, one of the elements of criminal harassment.

Gee, wonder if there is evidence out there of some malicious attorney attempting such a stunt to be vindictive and inflict emotional distress on a resident during a classic hate campaign that so many in a certain city in America appear to have suffered, women named Doreen and Lisa, men named Pat and Joe, or a guy with a dash cam being humiliated until he gets the upper hand....golly gee, what kind of sick city would attempt smears like that?


8:22 am

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"While the law does not bind a client to an attorney merely because [the client] has entered into a contingent fee contract, the court will vigorously protect the contractual relationship when a third party wilfully interferes with this relationship


Inducing  a  Breach of Attorney-Client Relationship
In  the  recent  case  of  Jackson v. Traveler's Insurance Co.,
the
Federal
District Court
for
the
Middle District
of
Tennessee
stated:
"While
the
law does
not
bind
a
client to
an
attorney
merely
because
[the
client]
has
entered
into
a contingent
fee
contract,
the
court
will
vigorously
protect
the
contractual relationship
when
a
third
party
wilfully
interferes with
this
relationship
by
inducing
the
plaintiff-client
to
discharge
[his]
attorney
and settle
with
the
third
party."'