Florida Medical Malpractice Lawyers & Attorneys
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Florida Medical Malpractice attorneys
deal with medical malpractice claims in
Florida. There are two forms of malpractice
in Florida. Legal malpractice occurs when
a lawyer fails to render competent professional
service to a client and the client is not
paid for damages as a result of the failure.
Medical Malpractice occurs when negligence
by a medical professional can be proven.
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The three major theories of liability are negligence,
breach of fiduciary duty, and
breach of contract. To prove legal malpractice, i.e.,
to establish your lawyer's liability, you must prove
that your Florida malpractice attorney owed you a duty
to represent you competently, that he or she made a
mistake or otherwise breached the duty owed to you,
and that your lawyer's mistake harmed you, causing you
damages.
Additionally,
you must file your legal malpractice lawsuit within
the statutory time period or "statute of limitations"
established by Florida law for legal malpractice claims.
This is where you will need a Florida legal malpractice
attorney.
Florida Medical Malpractice claims are not always valid
with every medical injury and they do not always provide
a basis for a Florida medical malpractice law claim.
To prove medical malpractice, i.e., to establish your
health care provider's liability, you must have expert
medical malpractice testimony that no reasonable health
care provider would have done what yours did.
Also the Florida medical malpractice attorney must
prove your health care provider's negligence was a cause
of injury or death. If you establish liability, then
you are entitled to medical malpractice damages.
Additionally, you must file your lawsuit with a Florida
medical malpractice attorney or a Florida malpractice
lawyer within the statutory time period or "statute
of limitations" established by Florida medical
malpractice law for medical malpractice claims.
Florida medical malpractice attorneys are required
to certify in writing at the time they file a medical
malpractice lawsuit in a Florida court that they have
made a reasonable investigation of the case and have
come to a good faith belief that there is a reasonable
basis to file the claim.
If the judge later determines that the malpractice
lawyer did not have a reasonable basis to believe the
case was meritorious, the judge may enter sanctions
against the Florida medical malpractice attorney, including
requiring him or her to personally pay the attorneys'
fees of the other side.
The Florida Supreme Court and the Florida Bar have
adopted a maximum fee schedule that Florida medical
malpractice attorneys are permitted to charge in contingency
fee cases. Generally speaking, contingency fees may
not exceed 40% of the first $1 million, 30% of the amounts
recovered between $1 million and $2 million, and 20%
of all amounts over $2 million.
If an appeal is filed the fee may rise 5% more. There
are other limitations, exceptions, and special circumstances
where this may vary. The Florida Bar has also adopted
a Statement of Client's Rights, which must be followed
by any Florida medical malpractice attorney handling
a case on a contingency fee.
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