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LAWYER'S BILLS.

The Graphic says: —It is a pleasant thing to be reminded on the authority of a legal journal that the old-fashioned lawyer's bill which tortured the client by taking him through endless details of letters, attendances, drafts, instructions to sue, and what not, is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. It is true that the substantial fact that the law is an expensive indulgence, and must be paid for accordingly, still remains, but it is a good maxim that where punishment is inevitable it is well to get it over as quickly as possible, and hence, perhaps, the growing custom of the assimilating bills of costs to fashionable doctors' bills and give us something approaching to a lump sum for the services rendered. It is probably too much to hope that the legal profession will ever go a step further and establish iu law that free trade which the lawyers are already agreed is a wholesome and proper thing in every other vocation but their own. It is notorious that there are a great many attorneys who have little or no connection, and would be glad to accept business on very much lower terms than the tariff of Dax's " Book of Costs," or tho legalised scale of the Master's office. Professional etiquette, however, which appears to be a sort of refined trades unionism, prescribes absolute idleness rather than reduction of fees; and it is perhaps doubtful whether an agreement to do business at reduced charges could be maintained against the legal practitioner. All this seems to the lay mind to be somewhat opposed to the public interest, it is evident that it can only be favourable to the interests of a fraction of the profession. It is difficult to see what sound objection there could be to an attorney undertaking a given business for a fixed sum, or giving a client a guarantee that expenses shall not exceed a certain limit.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WEST18740320.2.14

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Westport Times, Volume VIII, Issue 1160, 20 March 1874, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
324

LAWYER'S BILLS. Westport Times, Volume VIII, Issue 1160, 20 March 1874, Page 2

LAWYER'S BILLS. Westport Times, Volume VIII, Issue 1160, 20 March 1874, Page 2

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