Thursday, October 31, 2013

Happy Halloween!

Four jack o'lanterns in honor of the holiday

Alien

  
I think this one is spot on.  Those movies were stressful and scary weren't they?


LORD OF THE RINGS
ONE RING TO RULE THEM ALL
ONE RING TO FIND THEM


The detail is just wow.  Very clever. You cannot go wrong with a LOTR reference.  



I call this one "Descent into Sadness"
The night started out so well, and then....

My sister-in-law works for an ENT.  I have begged her for two years to do a jack o'lantern like the puking one appropriately themed for the doctor's specialty for their annual contest. Instead, she did this one.

Don't get me wrong, this pumpkin is great.  
She could totally go for the gross out 
though and it would be hilarious. 
I'm still working on her for next year.


Hope everyone has a happy and safe Halloween! 

Julie
Copyright 2013 Julie Ann Sombathy All Rights Reserved



Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Appointment Cancellations: Equity is Always the Exception


Any professionals (read:  mainly doctors) who charge cancellation fees with no exceptions are just ridiculous.

People sometimes cancel their appointments or fail to even show up at all; it is just part of doing business with the general public.  Things happen: cars break down, people run out of gas, your boss won't let you off work. Fellow lawyers--who hasn't had a hearing set by the judge at the same time you were supposed to be somewhere else? Court wins almost every time because that is your livelihood.

For chronic cancellations or no shows, I fire the client.  Otherwise, I do not see the wisdom in punishing the vast majority of my clients because of those rare inconsiderate people.  If you do not respect my time, then I have none for you. All others get the benefit of the doubt, and on the occasion when I'm late because life happened, or outside factors, I expect to get it in return. 

I've never even considered charging a cancellation fee and I've never heard of any other attorneys doing so. Has anyone out there ever been charged a cancellation fee by a lawyer? Tell me about it in the comments. 

On the issue of respecting my time, an hour wait at the doctor's office is ridiculous and completely disrespectful of a patient's time.  Life happens, and if it is not a chronic problem, I try to be understanding as the patient.  Emergencies (personal and professional) happen to doctors too.  Who hasn't waited extra long at the OBGYN to find out that the cause was an emergency delivery or some other much more important situation? If the wait is always an hour after my appointment time, then I start looking for a new doctor.  The doctor clearly does not value my time as highly as he or she values their own and that is unacceptable.

Which brings me back to the cancellation fee.  Recently I waited an hour past my appointment time to see a pediatrician.  No apology or explanation was given.  The next week I had to cancel an appointment at the last minute because of outside factors beyond my control. Same doctor sent me a bill for $25. Clearly, we have a different way of looking at things, and she will get her $25 but also never see any of my family again. So she made her co-pay for that allotted time, but she loses all the future co-pays and more importantly my good will.  Yes, I've already had one of those "catch up" conversations in the grocery store parking lot with a fellow mom looking to move pediatricians and I thoroughly trashed this doctor's office policies.

I hated ethics class in law school because the professor was a west coast philosophy major who had never stepped foot in the real world to practice law and the course was in no way geared to prepare us for the MPRE.  In fairness to the professor, this was my last year and I was totally over it. 

I have to give that professor credit though, because she taught me a concept that has never steered me wrong:  Equity is always the exception.

This doctor with the cancellation fee not only needs to think harder about her business model but about fairness in general.  She has lost two new patients in less than 3 weeks, all for $25 because I guess my cancellation messed up her one hour ahead overbooking policy.  

I hope she buys a coke and a smile with it.



JAS






Copyright 2013 Julie Ann Sombathy All Rights Reserved




Thursday, October 17, 2013

Thoughts on Women Attorneys and the Conundrum of Appearance

I was sworn in by the late Judge Clinton Foster in September 1994.  My husband, Bob, was two years ahead of me in law school and was working as an assistant public defender.  Bob's entire case load was on Judge Foster's docket so Bob asked Judge Foster to do the honors when I got my bar exam results.

After the pictures and congratulations he told me to "make an appointment with my girl and come talk to me. I'd like to give you the benefit of my 40 years of practicing law."  So I did.  Judge Foster had a lot of good advice that day, but the one thing he said that has stuck with me for 19 years is this:

"Let me tell you how I feel.  
The thing I hate to see the most is a
 woman attorney trying to act like a man."

You are probably thinking that this was an awful thing for him to say and it was (I'm sorry Judge Foster!):  it is sexist, for starters.  But don't beat up Judge Foster too much.*  For all the faults to be parceled from what he said, this bit of our conversation remains to this day to be one of the best lessons I have ever learned about the practice of law.

Whenever I have a conversation with a new woman attorney, I always tell this story.  Why?  Because it illustrates the main concept that influences how I present myself every day as an attorney.

Dress for your audience.

As an attorney, it doesn't matter how you feel about how you look for court.  How you feel is totally irrelevant.   You are there to do a job:  if you are in the courtroom or chambers it is to convince the judge to do what your client wants or needs.  If it is in trial, it is to convince the jury to see the facts your way and the judge to see the law the way that best benefits your client.  In the negotiation room, it can be any of a number of goals depending on the particular dynamic.  Meeting with clients? You want to develop a good rapport and impress them without being unapproachable.

Does it matter how you look when you are doing your job?  I'm sorry but yes, it does.  That is life. Everyone is influenced by the appearance of the people around them. I cringe when I hear younger women attorneys talk about how they are going to dress like they want and force everyone to deal with it.  That's a nice sentiment.  I guess.  But this isn't Utopia, and our jobs as attorneys is to persuade. We teach our children that they shouldn't judge a book by its cover but the truth is that we all do it to some extent.  Maybe not "judging" but we are influenced by how we perceive other's appearance.  My goal with my appearance is always to wring the maximum benefit out of it in any given situation.  If you are not doing that, for whatever reason, are you really doing your job well?  I don't think so.  I think you are letting a major advantage pass you by, and maybe hurting your client in the process.

Early in my career someone told me that the late Judge Bower's father was a "holiness" preacher.  I don't know if that is true, but from that point on I wore only demure "Sunday" dresses or the rare dress and blazer combination in his courtroom. Same goes for Judge Foster.  Both of our recently retired female judges were very sharp dressers, so I always made sure that my look was totally on point when I had court with Judge Costello or Judge Pittman. A law school classmate of mine was recently appointed to the circuit court. When I eventually have court before Judge Gay you may rest assured I will be wearing my best and that it will also be my most fashion forward because Shonna Gay knows her clothes and shoes.  I know a private criminal defense attorney who once made her fabulous hot pink high heels the centerpiece of her closing argument.  She won because she has skills not because the jury liked her shoes, but the point remains that she made an argument using the shoes on her feet to persuade the jury to come back not guilty.

This is not a concept that only works for (or against) women.  Men do it too, it is just easier for them. Basically, all men need to do is wear a suit and tie, get a good hair cut, keep up their basic personal hygiene.  Beyond that, throw away the clown ties (personal pet peeve) and buy some decent shoes. Depending on the situation, tone it down. If you work for the public defender, maybe don't wear a $1,000 suit.  Simple things, really.

My advice to women attorneys is ignore all the "how to dress" type articles out there. Don't even read them, all I ever do is get mad when I do. Invariably, another woman has made a list which consists of: Wear a skirt.  Put your hair up.  Don't wear pants. Wear hosiery.  Wear makeup, but not too much (you'll look aggressive/slutty/frivolous/stupid) or too little (you'll look dowdy and no one likes a sexless spinster).  Wear enough make up so you look "put together" or "polished" and above all else, "natural."  Wear heels, but not too high because that's slutty and not too short because that's dowdy. Look attractive and soft but not too soft because you have to look serious and above all, don't look "manly" because the death of your career is some man thinking you are too aggressive.  Make sure you look "feminine." Don't look trendy but don't dress dowdy either.

Who has time for that?  Not me.

For women attorneys, there's a lot more to consider with respect to our appearance, and there is no one foolproof suit we can wear that works for any situation.  So, I start every day with a review of who I'm going to interact with and how.  When in doubt, I go for the more conservative clothes, hair and makeup.  For shoes (my favorite part), in addition to the above considerations, I think about comfort and whether or not I can wear them all day if that is on the agenda.

In the end, I think women attorneys have an advantage here, however subtle.

My advice is this:  use it.

Julie






*I loved Judge Foster to pieces and the point of this post is not to run him down in any way.  He was a great jurist and attorney, and a good, decent human being. So please do not judge him by this one anecdote.  He always did what he thought was the right thing, even when it wasn't popular or easy. He once found a couple suffering from AIDS guilty of cultivating marijuana (which back then was used to alleviate the side effects of the medications) and rejected their defense of medical necessity.  He withheld adjudication, and sentenced them to one year of unsupervised probation and 500 hours of community service only to be discharged by rendering "care, comfort and concern to each other."  The sum of Judge Foster's character was made of way more than this one off the cuff comment he made to me in the Fall of 1994.

Copyright 2013 Julie Ann Sombathy All Rights Reserved


Monday, October 7, 2013

Faye's Story Redux

Back in March, I told the story of my old client Faye in three parts:  Part OnePart Two, and Part Three.

The critical moment in Faye's story was when at the eleventh hour on the eve of the bench trial on the issue of whether or not Faye's brothers would be heirs of their mother's intestate estate, Faye and the private investigator both located copies of the Final Judgment of Adoption.  When we disclosed to the brothers' attorney that we had located the document, the brothers dropped their claim.  So we never had to go to court and prove the fact of the brothers' adoption, which was essential to Faye's case.

My next post will go through how I had planned to get the key pieces of evidence admitted into evidence at the bench trial.


Julie





Copyright 2013 Julie Ann Sombathy All Rights Reserved


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Homestead, Will Contests, and Car Titles: The Last of Smokey Susan

Last month, I shared the sordid tale of one of my least favorite clients, Smokey Susan.  Susan's case involved numerous aspects of Florida probate law, some of which I addressed in this posthere, and here.

In addition, the results of Susan's case were directly affected by Florida Homestead law. Basically, Joe could not leave his interest in his homestead (really 100% but swindled by Susan for 50%) to anyone other than Tami because Tami was under 18 at the time of Joe's death. For a more in depth review of Florida Homestead law, check out this post.

The thing which ultimately tore it for me with Susan was the shenanigans she pulled with the title to the Cadillac.  For more information about how to transfer a title to a car after the owner dies without probate, check out this post.

Lastly, Susan's case involved a will contest.  The basics of a will contest were addressed by Faye's Story, Part OnePart Two, and Part Three.

A short epilogue to Smokey Susan's story:

Whatever happened to Joe's remains?  Melanie skipped out as soon as she figured out she wasn't getting the Cadillac or the house.  Susan did pay for Joe's funeral.  But don't give her too much credit for that sole act of decency;  she charged Tami's half of the sale proceeds from the homestead with the funeral expense in the guardianship.

Like I said, Susan was a real piece of work.


Cheers, and Happy Wednesday. We have officially made it to the downhill side of the week!

Julie





Copyright 2013 Julie Ann Sombathy All Rights Reserved








Statutory Interest Rate in Florida: October 1, 2013 Adjustment

In May 2012, I told you about the new model for statutory or judgment interest in Florida here.  The October 1, 2013 adjustment is out, and it is basically a non-adjustment.

Judgment interest remains 4.75% per year, with a daily percentage rate of .0130137%.  You can see the adjustments, starting with the first one under the new law in July 2012 at MyFloridaCFO.

Julie






Copyright 2013 Julie Ann Sombathy All Rights Reserved