DO YOU KNOW WHO YOUR ATTORNEY IS? AND DOES YOUR ATTORNEY KNOW YOU?

Far too frequently I hear of situations where a Social Security disability or SSI claimant meets their attorney for the first time on the day of the hearing. This troubles me. At Winter, Chewning & Geary, LLP we try to establish an individual attorney-client relationship in every case. The attorney you meet with you at your initial consultation should be the attorney that handles your case and appears with you at the hearing, if we are unable to obtain benefits beforehand. In my opinion, you should have the same attorney handle your case every step of the way rather than being passed off from associate to associate within the same firm. At Winter, Chewning & Geary, LLP we do our best to make sure this happens. In the unusual situation where scheduling may prevent me from appearing at one of my client’s hearings, I will ask my partner to take on the case only with the client’s consent.

Knowing the identity of your attorney is important, but it’s also important that the attorney know you – not just your name, your medical conditions and your work history. It is important that the attorney understands your personality and has a sense of who you are as a person. Social Security disability hearings can be very dynamic situations. It is not simply a circumstance in which an attorney reads a list of questions to his clients. Rather, there is an interaction – a give-and-take – between the attorney and the client (and the judge). For your attorney to truly present your case in the best fashion in such a circumstance, it is important that the attorney has spent time with you talking about your case beforehand, preferably in person. Because I need to get to know my clients, I usually require an in-person meeting with them. While I will accept a case from time to time based on telephone contact alone, I almost invariably advise the clients that I prefer to meet face-to-face with them and expect to meet with them face-to-face prior to a hearing.

 

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2 Responses to “DO YOU KNOW WHO YOUR ATTORNEY IS? AND DOES YOUR ATTORNEY KNOW YOU?”

  1. Gordon Gates Says:

    As always, a good post. This article will lead off Friday’s disability blog roundup! Glad to have you back.

    Gordon

  2. Rangeley Chewning Says:

    I so agree! I get so frustrated when I see an attorney meeting their client for the first time IN the waiting room at the hearing.


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