rckcrlr said:
Honestly, nothing matters if the lawyer is good/bad enough.
LLC's, insurance, disclaimers are are good, but it all goes out the window if they (lawyer) can show neglect in any way. Remeber civil cases are decided by the proponderance of the evidence, NOT beyond a reasonable doubt. Meaning if it is more likely than not, your SOL.
Umm . . . not quite;
If your business is an LLC, personal assets are NOT touchable. There is no way that an attorney can get at the personal assets of a partner/owner in a properly operated and registered LLC.
There COULD be case law allowing Plaintiffs to go after personal assets if there is evidence of fraud by the LLC to shelter assets . . . But it will be VERY difficult to prove.
When you form an LLC, you register the companies assets with the Department of State. That is what attorneys look at when they sue a LLC. The attorney will have no idea what your personal assets are, nor will an attorney be able to successfully go after your assets.
If you do everything right, there is NO WAY an attorney (no matter how good) can get to your personal assets (this is an offshoot of the concept of 'Piercing the Corporate Veil,' which, again, requires fraud to allow a Plaintiff to get after non-company assets).
Also, neglect is an element in proving a claim. The presence of neglect doesn't void contractual, or legal protections.
That is what fraud and waivers are for.