Sentences with phrase «means taking a case to trial»

If that means taking a case to trial, our firm will not hesitate to do so.
A Topeka truck accident lawyer from Palmer Law Group LLP can work hard on your behalf to seek the best possible resolution, even if that means taking your case to trial.

Not exact matches

The brief moments we see of the case during Josey's plight at the mine help flesh out her character, but the later scenes where the trial takes focus are merely the means to bring social relevance to the story.
Finally, the day has arrived: the trial of Larry Henderson is beginning at last, and as we're assured in the opening moments of the proceedings — by which I mean the episode, not the legal proceedings — there hasn't been a case of this magnitude in town since the East Peck Witch Trials of 1994... and I'd tell you to take...
I've always seen Oatley Vigmond as a firm that shared my belief that properly representing the injured means having an earned reputation for taking cases to trial — putting the gowns on.
If the case goes to trial, this can mean that the lawyer pays to take depositions, to copy documents for discovery, copy documents that will be used as evidence, prepare exhibits, pay medical experts and pay other experts to provide valuable information about the case.
«I think the [Supreme] court reaffirmed the idea that... the oppression remedy is a broad remedy, [meant to be] applied flexibly by a trial judge, taking into account the particular circumstances of any case,» Douglas Mitchell of Irving Mitchell Kalichman LLP in Montreal and lead counsel for the respondent, told Legal Feeds.
In some cases, that can mean turning down settlements, going to trial and taking a chance.
This means that he develops his cases as though they are going to trial, and takes a hard nosed approach with opposing counsel.
Ensuring the best interests of victims and their families are met and that they receive maximum compensation, even if it means foregoing a settlement offer and taking a case to trial.
This means that there was no basis for the Crown to even take the case to trial.
While 80 - 90 % of our cases settle out of court (before trial) our strong trial experience means we're not afraid of going to trial if that's what it takes.
If they want money up front we see this as a bad sign for two reasons: it could mean that the law firm doesn't have the money to back a case, meaning they won't be able to afford to take your case to trial and get you the highest settlement possible, or they aren't established.
That argument was enough to raise an «issue of fact» which meant that the broker was entitled to take his case to trial.
The original trial judge said that that previous case, in which the Crown took a case against Wallace Duncan Smith, meant «that the Crown Court had jurisdiction to try the appellants for their conduct because a substantial measure of the activities constituting the crime took place in England,» according to the Court of Appeal.
That means police and prosecutors must ensure it takes no more than 18 months from the laying of a charge to complete a trial in provincial court, and 30 months for serious, often more complex cases in superior trial courts.
The lower cost and time commitment means that you can take an opportunity to conduct a mock jury trial early in your case and make strategy decisions based on what you learn.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z