Wednesday 15 August 2007

Phone a friend

One of the few remaining perks of being learned counsel is that you don't have members of the public approaching you directly to chat about their legal woes. (Unless you do public access work, that is, but even then you're not at risk of being called by just anyone.) The beauty of being a member of a referral profession is that you only really have day to day dealings with solicitors. Sadly, no such filter exists to protect us from friends and relatives. I've lost count of the number of times someone I know has called on me for some free legal advice. Invariably, they begin by saying something like, "I hope you don't mind, but I'm in a bit of a mess and I could really do with some advice, it won't take long..." And then they launch into a long-winded explanation of some legal quandary that's making their life a misery.

This will almost certainly involve an area of law that you know nothing about. If I asked a medical type for his opinion on a broken leg and he replied that he only worked in dermatology, I'd accept it. When it comes to lawyers, however, people think that you should be an expert in all areas of law. If you tell them you don't know anything about, say, wills, they think either that you're lying or that you can't be any good at your job after all. If, unusually, their problem concerns an area you are familiar with, there are still loads of problems. Leaving aside the vast professional conduct issues (direct access, insurance etc...), people never give you a coherent account of what their problem is.

All of this is most annoying when the pest is someone you hardly know, wanting advice without paying for it, but families can be almost as bad. I spent ages on the phone to my cousin over the weekend, alternating between telling him I couldn't advise him and listening to his rambling account of his evil landlord's latest misdeeds. Of course, when I finally relented and agreed to look through the paperwork with him - on a strictly informal basis, mind! - it was obvious he'd inadvertently told me a complete load of rubbish and the situation was entirely different to the one he'd described.

It's not just lawyers who have to put up with this kind of thing. My mother used to be a nurse and was constantly being pestered by people for advice. She got so fed up with it that she told people she'd just met that she worked in the sock department for Bhs. I think I might have to come up with a similar lie...

21 comments:

  1. He he he, so true! I love it when I get asked about Immigration Law: an area I have never ever practised in, nor have an interest in doing so!

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  2. If you think you've got it bad, you should try being in computers... x

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  3. Or like me, undergraduate degree in Comp Sci and now at the bar (not doing IP or anything computer related).

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  4. I counter-attack with Chancel Repair Liability at the next opportunity - word soon gets around.

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  5. Hi LB,

    Know how you feel - I used to work in the sock department at BHS too!

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  6. LB,

    I just blundered onto your blog. Are you gone for good, or only taking a break?

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  7. BoZSGd Your blog is great. Articles is interesting!

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  8. XSMBx1 Wonderful blog.

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  9. Thanks to author.

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  10. Wonderful blog.

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  11. Please write anything else!

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  12. actually, that's brilliant. Thank you. I'm going to pass that on to a couple of people.

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  13. psl1KV Good job!

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  14. Why are you allowing SPAMMING in your comments? Good post BTW

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