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Thanks. I'm not sure I understand the principle though.Only if that was the agreement in advance. It is more normal in no win, no fee deals.
If you build an extension for nothing and only expect to be paid when and if the house is sold then you can also expect a percentage of the increase in house value. It's down to negotiation as was said by Newchodge above.If I build an extension on your house I get paid for the work I've done - I don't expect a percentage of the increase in house value !
That makes no sense at all. What has this to do with the question being asked.If you build an extension for nothing and only expect to be paid when and if the house is sold then you can also expect a percentage of the increase in house value. It's down to negotiation as was said by Newchodge above.
Why should they get extra ?
If I build an extension on your house I get paid for the work I've done - I don't expect a percentage of the increase in house value !
Do you have a better answer to Fagin's question? If my response doesn't make sense then read Fagin's question and provide your own answer that makes sense to you. Simply saying that something doesn't make sense without contributing anything yourself also makes no sense.That makes no sense at all. What has this to do with the question being asked.
Thanks. I suspect from the responses and the links that there is no one answer. Fees and terms will be negotiated depending on the complexity of the case (eg. medical negligence), the probability of winning (disputed versus 'bang-to-rights'), and the individual firm of lawyers.My understanding is that a solicitor would work at a contracted rate, down to you both to agree.
On no win no fee, normally the work is carried out for “free”, and you get the full award.
You would probably be required to take out an insurance policy to cover the potential costs against you in the event you were to lose, plus the solicitor would tell you not to worry about their costs for working for you, since they are added to the award by the court.
Interesting - I think it's clear but really needs a professional to explain it properly.And see also
Qualified one-way costs shifting (QOCS) for personal injury claims
What changed? How was the change implemented? Can the claimant lose the protection of QOCS? Is QOCS means tested? Why was the change introduced? What are the implications for commercial parties? Wh…hsfnotes.com
I did this for years, and left my partnership 7 years ago because of the changes made. The changes to the civil litigation and funding rules meant that, in most cases, it’s now much more difficult to investigate a case properly, if you’re acting for the claimant. You don’t get paid for the work, even if you win.Interesting - I think it's clear but really needs a professional to explain it properly.
Thank you for your input but what you've said doesn't accord at all with my own research. For example, I understand that the success fee percentage is capped at 25%.I did this for years, and left my partnership 7 years ago because of the changes made. The changes to the civil litigation and funding rules meant that, in most cases, it’s now much more difficult to investigate a case properly, if you’re acting for the claimant. You don’t get paid for the work, even if you win.
The inevitable result of that is, in almost every case, the claimant’s solicitor takes a cut of the compensation. The percentage depends on the type of case, and the firm, but it’s usually between 25 and 50%.
Also, in the majority of cases run by solicitors, they receive a fixed fee which is often insufficient to cover the work done. Hence the contribution above.
In a large proportion of cases, solicitors don’t now get paid at all, mostly RTA soft tissue injuries (not quite that simple, but you can look up the detail). In a low grade RTA injury case, the victim is on their own against the insurer. Unfair, but that’s now the law. This came in last year, and the government chose not to announce the changes, so most people will not be aware of this, until they suffer an injury.
In summary, unless you’re seriously injured, or have a med neg case, your solicitor won’t recover the cost of the work done, they’ll receive a low fixed fee, and the only way they can financially justify running the case for you is to take a substantial cut of your compensation.
This is why 100s of PI firms have closed since 2013. This situation is ongoing, and firms are still going under, as more and more firms are finding it impossible to find a viable business model. So, if this appears to be a case of stereotypical “greedy lawyers”, rest assured, it only appears that way.
No win, no fee is still offered as a contractual model, but the claimant often pays more by proportion on success than they used to, under the old rules.
Dean
That may well be the case. I’ve been out of the industry for 7 years, so I’m not as up to date on the detail as I could be.Thank you for your input but what you've said doesn't accord at all with my own research. For example, I understand that the success fee percentage is capped at 25%.
That is correct to an extent but see the link to qualified one way costs shifting above. The whole costs regime in the uk resembles a dogs dinner and simply maintains the legal industry at great expense to the public.If the case is lost, you pay nothing (no win, no fee).