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Our office business hours are Monday to Thursday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Fridays 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. This enables our staff to balance their careers with their family lives. Technology has changed both the ways in which we get instructions from our clients, and how we serve our clients. It is not necessary, as it may have been, for our clients to make frequent visits to our office, and we try to minimize the number of appointments that are needed. We encourage you to use the telephone, e-mail and fax to communicate with us as much as possible. Our preferred way of communicating on your file will be e-mail. If you have e-mail that you can rely on for private, confidential communications, we can make arrangements to use e-mail to communicate with you, including sending you letters, accounts and copies of the material we send and receive on your file. Although we would encourage you to use e-mail as the primary method of communicating with us, we remind you that for urgent contact, the telephone is preferable. You can learn from the telephone whether your lawyer is in the office and available to help you that day. If your lawyer is not there or available, someone else in the firm may be able to help you. As such it is important to provide as much detail as possible when you are leaving messages. You may be asked to provide our office with written material, in the course of our work for you. This is often an efficient way to get historical or detailed information from you in order to prepare court documents. The written material you provide will be extremely helpful, may be able to be used in several aspects of your case, and will result in greater efficiency for us. If you don't currently own an answering machine at home or have a voice-mail system, we suggest that you get one now. We need to be able to reach you promptly, and if it is difficult or time-consuming to reach you by telephone, it may even cost you more money in legal fees. If you are not reachable through electronic mail and don't currently own a fax machine, but may be getting a fax machine soon, now is a good time to get one. We have found that we can serve our clients who have email, faster and cheaper, particularly with regard to the drafting of documents. It may also result in fewer trips to our office for you to review material, or give us instructions. It will also reduce the cost to you of couriers, which are sometimes needed when timelines are short. Appointments are scheduled on weekdays subject to your lawyer's court schedule and other commitments. In special circumstances, appointments may be available with your lawyer outside normal business hours (that is, after 5:00 p.m.). However, those appointments are the exception. Initial consultations requires an appointment. Please don't "drop in" hoping to see the lawyer. Certain aspects of litigation are crisis oriented, and on occasion, lawyers are called to court on short notice, or are required to stay in court longer than they expected. Consequently, on occasion, appointments may have to be rescheduled or even cancelled on short notice. Every effort will be made to provide you with as much notice as possible, should that be necessary. If you are booking an appointment on a day that is a court day, it is a good idea to confirm the appointment with the office that day. <To Top> TELEPHONE CALLS This firm returns all telephone calls and wherever possible, on the same day. Except for emergencies, calls are usually returned in the order they are received. Our lawyers' assistants deal with as many of the telephone calls as possible, so that the lawyers are free to perform work that only a lawyer can do. This is in your financial interest, so that your legal fees are kept as reasonable as possible. This firm has a 24 hour answering service for calls made outside of our business hours. You can leave a detailed confidential message. It is very helpful to us, and it is in your financial interest, that you leave the purpose of your call with any message, be it on our service or with one of the assistants. For example, if you are looking for a status report, the assistant can probably give you the information you need. But the assistants are not lawyers, and cannot give legal advice. Our lawyers are litigation lawyers, which means they are often in court. When they are in court, and particularly, involved in a trial, it may not be possible for your lawyer to personally return telephone calls. An assistant will deal with your enquiries during these times. Lawyers and law clerks charge for the time they spend. You will be charged for all your contact with your lawyer and law clerk, including telephone calls, voicemail and faxes. Your call may be directed first to an assistant. If the purpose of your telephone call is to obtain specific information or provide information (for example, have we received a certain document yet from the other side?), that contact can be with the lawyer's assistant. There is a cost to you for every contact you have with your lawyer and law clerk, so it is in your financial interest to make your contact with your lawyer valuable to both you and the firm. You should think of telephone calls with your lawyer as though they were long distance calls, for which you are billed by the minute. Where possible, minimize the contact you have with your lawyer, unless the purpose of your contact can only be satisfied by a discussion with him or her directly. Organize yourself before you phone, and ensure you have all the information you need available for the telephone call. Also, consider taking notes during your meetings and telephone call with our office. This is common sense, and good business. <To Top> |
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