Practical Advice For New Lawyers

Scheduling will consume much of your time. Even in the age of electronic calendars mistakes happen.

For example, this summer, I went to a pretrial conference and opposing counsel was no where to be found. I called his office and they tried to locate him. He ended up arriving an hour and a half later. I wasn’t mad. It happens to the best of us.  But I did waste an hour and a half of my time.

Later this summer, I got a call from another lawyer saying “where are you?” to which my response was “at my desk”.  He politely informed me that I was supposed to be at a pretrial in Bridgeport.  I frantically looked through my file – I did not receive a calendar notice.  When I told this to the clerk he said we sent one and I said “yeah but I don’t have it”.  Maybe the notice got lost in the mail or maybe it was misfiled in my office – I’ve never found it.  Needless to say the pretrial didn’t go forward.  I couldn’t attend an event that I was unaware of.

In practice, your clients will forget court dates. Opposing counsel will forget court dates. Scheduling mishaps happen and they shouldn’t.

The solution is simple – call opposing counsel a day or two before an event be it a court date or a deposition. Otherwise you risk finding yourself with  court reporter sitting in a room and no witness to depose.

Ryan McKeen is a trial attorney at Connecticut Trial Firm, LLC in Glastonbury, Connecticut. In 2016, he was honored by the CT Personal Injury Hall of Fame for securing one of the highest settlements in the state. He is a New Leader in the Law. ABA 100. Avvo 10. 40 under 40 for Hartford Business Journal. He has been quoted in Time Magazine, the New York Times, Hartford Courant, Wall Street Journal Law Blog and the Hartford Business Journal. He focuses his practice on Connecticut Personal Injury law. He loves what he does. Contact him ryan@cttrialfirm.com or 860 471 8333

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