Disclaimer

This Blog/Web Site is made available by the lawyer or law firm publisher for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. By using this Blog/Web Site, you understand that there is no attorney-client relationship between you and the Blog/Web Site publisher. The Blog/Web Site should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state. Accepting these terms and conditions is a condition to visiting this site.

The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertisements. Before you decide, review the written information about qualifications and experience.

This Blog/Web Site is intended to provide interesting information to visitors as well as to function as the equivalent of a seminar attended by lawyers and non-lawyers. No information posted here is intended to constitute legal advice or to form an attorney-client relationship.

This Blog/Web Site is a public resource of general information that is intended, but not promised or guaranteed, to be correct, complete and/or reasonably up-to-date. We cannot guarantee the accuracy of posted information, especially as it relates to individual situations. We also cannot guarantee that every query will get a response.

Neither the receipt nor the distribution of materials, including the use of electronic mail, fax, or telephone communications shall constitute the formation of an attorney-client relationship. An actual attorney-client relationship will be formed with an attorney only upon the execution and delivery of an attorney fee contract in the State of Georgia, and the satisfaction of the conditions contained therein. Any attorney fee contract that may result from communication initiated through this Blog/Web Site shall be made only upon acceptance by the attorney in the State of Georgia and shall be subject only to the laws of the State of Georgia.

Communication through the Internet shall not constitute "presence," "doing business" or the practice of law in any place other than the State of Georgia. No reader outside Georgia should consider this information to be an invitation for an attorney-client relationship. Moreover, the owner of this Blog/Web Site does not wish to represent anyone desiring representation based upon viewing this Blog/Website in any state where it fails to comply with all laws and ethical rules of that state, or in any state in which state laws seek to impose local jurisdiction upon owners of Blogs/Web Sites that are capable of being viewed in such states without regard to the lack of any other indicia of minimum contacts with such state. All readers should always seek the advice of competent counsel in the reader's state.

The lawyer providing the information in this web site is licensed to practice law in the State of Georgia (USA) only, does not seek or accept employment in cases not legitimately related to or arising in the State of Georgia, or in other states pursuant to any applicable multijurisdictional practice rules that may have been adopted in a particular jurisdiction reciprocal with the Georgia multijurisdictional practice rules, or in association with local counsel and compliance with pro hac vice admission requirements under the laws and court rules of the other state or Federal court.

The owner of this web site will not accept referrals for employment from unregistered referral services.

The information provided herein is not intended to create any unjustified expectation about results that the lawyer providing the information can achieve, or to make any comparison between this lawyer's services or qualifications and those of any other lawyer.

No World Wide Web domain name or caption on any page within this Web site, or listed in any directory or search engine, is intended to constitute practice of law under a trade name.

The attorney providing this information normally represents clients in workers' compensation, personal injury, wrongful death and insurance cases, very selectively, on a contingent fee basis, charging only a percentage of the amount of money ultimately recovered for the client, and often advancing the expenses of litigation. For this reason, it is necessary to make the following disclosure:

"Contingent attorneys' fees" refers only to those fees charged by attorneys for their legal services. Such fees are not permitted in all types of cases. Court costs and other additional expenses of legal action usually must be paid by the client. "No fee unless you win" or similar language refers only to fees charged by the attorney. Such contingent fees are not permitted in all types of cases. Court costs and other additional expenses of legal action usually must be paid by the client.

Links are provided for your enjoyment and no endorsement should be inferred therefrom. The owner does not intend links on this Blog/Web site to be referrals or endorsements of the linked entities. No one shall be entitled to claim detrimental reliance on any views, opinions, links, forms, or models provided or expressed herein, or upon any publication purchased by link from this site to any other web site, or to claim that there is a duty to update information provided in this web site, or answers or materials provided, or to use care to protect the interests of the recipient.

You should not rely on any statements found here (or those in any other web site) for legal advice, and should always confirm such information with your lawyers who should be responsible for taking whatever steps are necessary to check all information and for personally assuring that the advice they provide is based on accurate and complete information and research from any available sources.

While we will seek to protect the confidentiality of communications we receive by electronic mail, there is no such thing as perfect security. The dominant view today is that the expectation of privacy in unencrypted email is comparable to the expectation of privacy in mail and telephone communication; however, it is possible that a court in some jurisdiction could hold, contrary to the current trend, that the use of unencrypted electronic mail constitutes a waiver of confidentiality. Also, there is no such thing as perfect security in any means of communication. So, while unlikely, it is possible for electronic mail messages to go astray and to fall into the wrong hands; for this reason, each person should take responsibility for exercising prudence and discretion regarding the use of electronic mail for sensitive communications.