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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
Santorum's Wife Sued Doctor For $500,000, Despite Senator's Calls For Tort Reform
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<blockquote data-quote="JB Books" data-source="post: 1721338" data-attributes="member: 6889"><p>Most of the time, yes, you have to prove the underlying case. So for example, if you go to a lawyer with a slip and fall case and your lawyer blows your statute of limitations by not properly filing your case in time, you'd still have to prove the case was viable. In other words that your case was good to begin with.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JB Books, post: 1721338, member: 6889"] Most of the time, yes, you have to prove the underlying case. So for example, if you go to a lawyer with a slip and fall case and your lawyer blows your statute of limitations by not properly filing your case in time, you'd still have to prove the case was viable. In other words that your case was good to begin with. [/QUOTE]
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The Water Cooler
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Santorum's Wife Sued Doctor For $500,000, Despite Senator's Calls For Tort Reform
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