Evolution of Attorney Fees in the United States
In the 17th Century, most states capped
legal fees based on the attorney’s area of practice. For example, there would
be a cap for divorce, a cap for real estate transactions and a cap for criminal
representation. Attorneys would therefore have to compete heavily for clients
based on their skills because it wasn’t easy for an attorney that charged less
than the cap to make a living. That’s why attorneys lobbied heavily for
additional fee options and developed innovative ways to make more money. Most Queens accident
attorneys use a contingency retainer, so you don’t have to pay anything
until you collect money making it possible for even the poorest injury victim
to obtain representation.
The Rise of the
Contingency Fee
A Queens
catastrophic injury attorney may need to spend hundreds of hours on a case,
making the cost of representation unaffordable by most injury victims without a
contingency fee arrangement. That’s why the legal profession developed what
they called a “success fee” during the 19th Century. The fee caps were still in
place, but it became accessible and legal to charge a success fee in addition
to the capped amount. By the early 20th Century, the American Bar Association
codified the “success fee” as what we call the contingency fee, based on the
notion that this is the most ethical way to bill clients for legal services.
For riskier cases or cases where the goal was not to collect money, such as
criminal matters, attorneys would skirt the rules and demand a retainer before
they began work. Most Queens accident attorneys handle cases on a pure
contingency retainer without requiring a retainer.
The Backlash
In the 1930’s a powerful backlash turned
attorney billing on its head. The contingency fee fell out of favor and the
“capped” fee structure became the “base” fee structure. This meant that instead
of protecting clients from being overcharged, the laws required that lawyers
must be charged a minimum amount for each type of case. Lawyers that accepted
less money were subject to a fine and the ABA’s model code considered it
unethical to charge clients too little money. The rationale was that charging
clients too little led to a reduction in the prestige of the profession due to
low quality work. Thankfully, this lopsided system was short-lived because it
was extremely unfair to injury victims that were unable to work and had
expensive medical bills to pay. That’s why Queens catastrophic injury attorneys
were sometimes willing to use contingency retainers even though they were
considered unethical at that time.
The Rise of the
Billable Hour
In the 1950’s, the ABA built on the concept
of base fees to consider how keeping track of hours could justify higher fees
for attorneys. The Supreme Court backed this up by holding that setting “base”
or “capped” fees for legal services violated antitrust laws because it was a
form of price fixing. This led attorneys to beginning to charge for their time
in the form of the billable hour. In addition to billable hours, attorneys were
allowed to charge contingency fees for certain types of personal injury
matters, including medical malpractice.
Modern Attorney
Billing
The laws governing attorney fees are more
flexible now, allowing attorneys to create fee arrangements that best serve
their niche of clients. For example, business lawyers that cater to startups
are starting to offer flat rates for certain types of services such as setting
up a business entity. Divorce attorneys are notorious for running up huge bills
for single mothers and other poor souls that can’t afford it, charging for
hours spent fruitlessly negotiating with a stubborn spouse. That’s why the
trend is now towards flat rate billing for some types of matrimonial matters to
keep costs down. Contingency fees are still alive and well with most Queens accident
attorneys willing to take on strong cases without charging clients a dime until
they collect money.
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