Description
How to Maximize Efficiency and Settlements in Small Cases
Instead of being blindsided at any point during the case, Maximizing Damages in Small Personal Injury Cases will help you be fully prepared and armed to take on the insurance adjuster, the defense attorney, and even the judge if necessary. Maximize the value of your case by either removing or reducing the weaknesses in your case. This book is based upon Mr. Rundlett’s 40-year experience in dealing with the most difficult insurance carriers in the country.
While the costs of processing small cases continue to rise, insurers and jurors are constantly reducing settlements and awards. This puts intense pressure directly on the shoulders of personal injury attorneys. This book helps to relieve some of that pressure. It delivers guidelines, techniques, checklists, and forms to help you screen, document, negotiate, and settle or litigate your smaller cases. It also includes more than 100 custom-drafted checklists and forms to help reduce your time and costs. Maximizing Damages in Small Personal Injury Cases will teach you dozens of proven techniques for obtaining top dollar in small cases. For example:
Settlement
- 14 negotiating techniques that really work. §445
- Insurance carrier negotiating tactics and how to deal with them. §450
- How to minimize the impact of independent medical examinations. §458.4
- 18 steps to evaluation of a small personal injury case. §466
- 16 mediation preparation tips guaranteed to lead to settlement. §474.1
- How to deal with unreasonable insurance adjusters and carriers. §490.2
Commencing suit
- 9 major case weaknesses to consider before filing suit. §512
- 14 defense tactics you need to know about before filing. §513
- How to deal with nominal property damage impacts. §512.7
- 23 tips on how to deal with large chain store cases. §131.3
- Strategies for maximum discovery at minimal cost. §522
Trial
- The 30 most common objections in small-case trials. §664.1
- Techniques to avoid in openings and closings. §§643, 684
- Topics that are prohibited in closing argument and how to get around them. §682
- 37 trial tips from jurors. §685
In addition to the practical advice and tactics, over a hundred forms and checklists will help save you time on your small cases. Most published forms are overkill for small cases, but these short and simple forms will save time and dollars, both of which are limited in smaller matters. The custom-drafted pattern-specific forms are specifically tailored for small cases: liability checklists, interrogatories, deposition checklists, adjuster letters, motions, trial preparation checklists, and even public relations letters. Some of the forms and checklists include:
Screening
- 11 liability checklists for common small non-auto cases: falls, falling objects, animal attacks, dram shop, inadequate security, intentional torts, medical negligence, pharmacy negligence, and school negligence. §131
- Minimize the time-consuming task of dealing with clients’ questions and concerns by distributing the author’s original 20-page information booklet for small-case clients. §251
Investigation
- Checklist of 13 items to tell the new small-case client before he or she comes to the first meeting. §202
- A handy three-page list of abbreviations and symbols commonly found in medical records. §344.1
- Simple, direct letters to doctors that request only the essential information. §340
- A letter to the employer requesting lost wage data that avoids many of the common information shortfalls. §352
Negotiation
- Small-case negotiation checklist. §410
- Model paragraphs for demand letters. §421
- Pattern written responses to unsatisfactory settlement offers for specific types of small cases. §463
Discovery
- Pattern responses for abusive deposition tactics. §521
- Litigation cost-containment checklist. §511.3
- Motion for a protective order from extensive interrogatories. §521.1
- Pattern language for handling abusive deposition tactics. §521.4
- Checklist of maximum discovery techniques for minimal cost and time. §522
- Model interrogatories, deposition checklists, and requests for admissions for the key types of small cases. §§523-26
- Timetable and accompanying task checklist for avoiding stale files. §372
Litigation
- Checklist for building small-case trial notebooks. §621
- Sample direct examinations of plaintiff’s physician, occurrence witness, before-and-after witness, and employer or co-worker. §§653-56
- Foundation checklists for medical charts and models, medical and business records, and maps and charts. §674
REVISION 22 HIGHLIGHTS
This update to Mr. Rundlett’s popular book Maximizing Damages in Small Personal Injury Cases offers dozens of new techniques and tools for obtaining top dollar in your small cases and includes valuable insights into personal injury practice in the wake of COVID-19. In this update you receive these new and updated sections:
- Trying Cases in 2020 and Beyond, After COVID-19 (§123.1)
- Medical Negligence in 2020—Post COVID-19 (§131.5.6)
- Cell Phone Cases—2020 (§131.17.2)
- Cruise Ship Cases After COVID-19 (§131.22.3)
- The Improbable Coincidence Defense (§283.39.1)
- Medical Records—2020, after COVID-19 (§341.3.6)
- Resolving Cases Post COVID with Mediation and Arbitration (§479)
- Zoom and Virtual Depositions in 2020 (§525.3)
- Should I Get a Jury Consultant (§635)
- Medical-Legal Code of Cooperation (§821.2)
- Relations with Insurance Adjusters (§830.1)
AND MORE!
Now Maximizing Damages in Small Personal Injury Cases can do a better job of helping you fight back against low settlement offers and defense verdicts and other barriers to fair settlements and awards. Remember to use these time-saving tips and tools in the book—suggestions based on over 40 years of trying cases.
ABBREVIATED TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1 THE SMALL PERSONAL INJURY PRACTICE
CHAPTER 2 INITIAL CLIENT CONTACT
CHAPTER 3 INVESTIGATION AND PREPARATION OF THE CASE
CHAPTER 4 SETTLEMENT NEGOTIATIONS
CHAPTER 5 WHEN SETTLEMENT FAILS—COMMENCING THE LAWSUIT
CHAPTER 6 THE TRIAL
CHAPTER 7 AFTER THE VERDICT
CHAPTER 8 PUBLIC RELATIONS IN SMALL PERSONAL INJURY CASES
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ellsworth T. Rundlett III known to his friends and family as Derry is a personal injury trial lawyer with close to 50 years of experience. He is a past president of the state’s largest county bar association, a former member of the board of governors of the Maine Bar Association, and a past president of the Maine Trial Lawyers Association. In 2017 he was awarded the prestigious “Legend” award from the members of that association along with another trial lawyer and friend, Terry Garmey, whose success in the courtroom was an inspiration to the author. Mr. Rundlett was certified as a civil trial specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy in 1991 and is presently a member of the Maine chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates.
He is listed in “Best Lawyers in America,” New England Superlawyers, and in 2017 was chosen as “Lawyer of the Year” by Best Lawyers in the field of personal injury in his region. He is also listed as one of the Top 500 Consumer Plaintiff Attorneys in the country by Lawdragon, in the 2020 edition of that book. After the publication of this book, he has lectured throughout the country to various state trial lawyer organizations and currently does national and state webinars on personal injury practice. He also lectures frequently for the National Business Institute and has published articles in Trial Magazine, the Insurance Settlements Journal (James Publishing), and various state trial lawyer publications. Some of these articles include “Settling Cases,” “Achieving Optimal Recovery in Personal Injury Cases” and “Winning in Court.”
For the past 20 years, he has been the host of television shows in his community including “Law on the Line,” “The Derry Rundlett Show,” and “Me. On 5” where he interviews famous celebrities, politicians, and front-page newsmakers. He has been inducted into several halls of fame such as the Portland Players Hall of Fame and Maine Senior Games Hall of Fame. Lastly, he is a subject of biographical reference in “Who’s Who in American Law,” “Who’s Who In America,” and “Who’s Who in the World.”
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