If you're wondering how pervasive billing hijinxs are...
Posted: Tue Mar 26, 2013 12:11 am
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TY TY Brorad lulz wrote:Good looking out Ruxin
Pokemon wrote:Eh... apparently adopting a different system would lead to higher agency costs according to one of my profs. Firms for example would try to finish a merger even if they find information that would make the merger a bad outcome for their client since they only get paid if the merger is successful.
I think small firms also inflate their hours, at least the ones I have interacted with do. Sure, they charge less. I think the problem with the billable hour is that unless people are keeping track of their timeas they go (which it seems that many people do not), they are very bad at estimating how long something took hours or days later. They think, 'well, I was here for 12 hours, and I worked about 10 (likely an overestimate), so let me apportion the work that I did to equal 10 hours.' That kind of thinking happens at big and small firms. I actually recently consulted a lawyer at a small firm for something and just got the bill, which was for double what I expected and it listed things I wasn't even sure why the lawyer would have done (like writing emails when there was no need to, making an apparent .5 hour phone call that I can't imagine took that long - plus our one-hour consultation started 15 minutes late bc of the lawyer yet I still got charged for the whole hour). My mother, a big firm lawyer, told me to just pay it. My other experience with a small firm lawyer was also like this.reasonable_man wrote:Pokemon wrote:Eh... apparently adopting a different system would lead to higher agency costs according to one of my profs. Firms for example would try to finish a merger even if they find information that would make the merger a bad outcome for their client since they only get paid if the merger is successful.
This isn't about the billing process. Hourly billing isn't perfect (as a whole). This is about a problem that is pervasive in biglaw. Overbilling in biglaw runs rampant. Its out of control. One only needs to litigate with or against a few biglaw firms to realize just how out of control the bills can be on routine cases. I'm currently handling a fairly sizable tort case where the insurer brought in a big law firm to "back us up" because we are a small firm. The clients refuse to speak to the biglaw attorneys alone and have zero trust for them. And it doesn't help when you take a step back and realize that we are litigating the entire case, the big firm is "observing" and somehow they are charging more hours at a higher fee than my firm and are just watching the case unfold. Its sort of sickening.