WHAT TO DO WHEN THINGS GO WRONG IN LITIGATION: TEN KEY POINTS CONSIDERED: ACT PROMPLY, ACT PROPERLY AND DON’T TELL LIES
Legal Futures carries a report of a paralegal banned from the profession because she tried to cover up a mistake by lying to the court. This gives me a reason to reiterate points made regularly on this blog about what to do (and what not to do) when things go wrong in litigation. A mistake had been made, but could most probably have been easily rectified. Here is a reminder of 10 key points that may help together with links to related posts that may help. The key thing is to seek help, act promptly and do not tell lies in the process. Candour and honesty are often respected by the courts, mendacity never is.
KEY PRACTICE POINT
Things will go wrong in litigation, even with the best fee earners and the best systems being used. The key thing is to recognise that a mistake has happened and act appropriately. It is wise to have a plan to deal with this issues, or at least one person in the office who can properly oversee that the correct actions are taken.
WEBINAR ON WHAT TO DO WHEN THINGS GO WRONG IN LITIGATION: 4th AUGUST 2025: BOOKING DETAILS AVAILABLE HERE
The case we are looking at here is one of many dozens of similar reports that can be read over the years where a fee earner panics and attempts to solve a problem by lying. The cruel irony is that many mistakes are “fixable”, albeit with effort – and often at some expense. However the effort and expense is far preferable to the alternative we see here. This webinar looks at the practical steps that litigators can take should a problem occur in litigation.
THE CASE WE ARE LOOKING AT : MAKING A MISTAKE IN PAYING A COURT FEE
The paralegal in question put the wrong case number on a request to pay a court fee. This mistake led to the action being automatically struck out. However rather than admit the error the paralegal sent the court a fabricated email purporting to show the correct claim number. It was the judge that heard the application for relief from sanctions that raised the concerns that led to the paralegal was sanctioned and prevented from holding any role in a law firm. She was also ordered to pay costs of £600.
THINGS DO GO WRONG IN LITIGATION
EVERYONE IS FALLIBLE?
I have written before that in litigation, as in life, things go wrong. Things go wrong. People make mistakes. If you think you are infallible then you are probably represent a positive danger to your clients.
RECOGNISE FALLIBILITY
I, occasionally, lecture on how to avoid mistakes in litigation (and how to put things right if things go wrong). Naturally I think these subjects should be mandatory.
READ MARILYN’S BLOG
I recommend that all litigators read Marilyn Stowe’s blog on “My first day in court” which looks at these issues both from the point of view of a newly qualified solicitor and the manager of a law firm. Having had a bad experience on her first day in court she writes:
“it did cause me a hell of a lot of stress for a long while afterwards and made me realise that qualified lawyers were only one day further on than non-qualifieds and there was still an awful lot to learn. In fact there always is a lot to learn. You never can say you know it all and those who do think like that are fools.”
There is important guidance for the newly qualified and those responsible for those responsible for the management of firms.
SO TELL YOUNG LAWYERS (AND REMIND OLDER LAWYERS) THAT MISTAKES WILL BE MADE
- Making mistakes does not make you a bad lawyer.
- Failing to admit mistakes makes you a bad lawyer (you are never going to learn).
- Covering up your mistakes makes you a dishonest lawyer (and probably an ex-lawyer).
Mistakes in litigation, if identified early enough and dealt with promptly enough, can often be rectified, or at very least the consequences minimised.
Far better to face up to a mistake than lose your means of earning a living.
PILOTS LEARN ABOUT CRASH LANDING: LAWYERS DON’T
As a passenger I am comforted by the fact that pilots have regular training on what to if anything goes wrong during the flight. I don’t expect things to go wrong, I certainly don’t want anything to go wrong. However there are good reasons for pilots to be trained in this way. Not least they are learning from mistakes made in the past.
However there is very little by way of equivalent for lawyers. It could be said that the issues are “obvious” and do not need telling. However this does not take into account the sheer feeling of panic that can overtake a practitioner when a mistake has been made. There, are, of course, sometimes issues of ego as well. However the purpose of training and instruction is to ensure that people know what to do.
TEN KEY POINTS: AVOIDANCE OF PROBLEMS AND DEALING WITH A PROBLEM THAT HAS OCCURRED
1. SOMEONE SHOULD KNOW WHAT A “SENSIBLE” CASELOAD IS: OR YOU COULD BURY EVERYBODY
I have written before that a failure to assess what a realistic caseload is remains a fundamental weakness of the litigation process. This is something recognised by those who work for law firms but…
“It is surprising how this question can often generate hostility (from those who manage firms, not those who actually do the work, I should add). It “depends”; it is “too difficult”; it is “impossible to say”.”
There is a useful discussion in The Optimum Caseload which has a sensible discussion of caseload and discusses the “bury everybody” approach.
“The “bury everybody” approach. In most firms, the primary goal is to ensure that there are no idle hands. Because every person drawing pay represents a load on the financial resources of a firm, there is a general terror of hiring more lawyers than are absolutely necessary. To serve this end, firms often operate on the principle that no more attorneys or staff should be hired than are absolutely necessary in light of the firm’s caseload. The goal in such firms is to keep each attorney as busy as possible, in order to reduce the likelihood that the firm will be forced to fire people if there is a drop in workload. This may seem like a good idea to limit the likelihood of being forced to implement a reduction in force due to a dip in business. In firms that follow this approach, the underlying value judgment is that the firm at its existing size is more stable with a “packed” caseload, which creates the sense that business is booming and all is well. The senior partners in such firms tend to think the stress level of this caseload forces attorneys to continually operate in a “maximum billing mode” all the time, yet remaining “efficient.”
The primary flaw. In reality, what such firms are actually doing is implementing a policy whereby the short-term risk of reduced job security for any given person has a higher priority than the quality of the firm’s work, its long-term growth, or any one person’s sanity or professional development. This short-term, fear-motivated thinking tends to stifle, rather than promote, growth and advancement for individuals as well as the firm as a whole. The “bury everybody” approach not only penalizes the individual attorneys in the firm by reducing the quality of the work environment; the attorneys who work the hardest are punished by ever increasing workloads. Despite the assumptions mentioned above, the added stress experienced by all produces no additional income, because attorneys with lighter caseloads are already billing all they can and still not getting everything done in their cases, so this approach jeopardizes clients’ interests for no real gain. In the long run, the likelihood of losing business with this approach is actually increased, because the overall quantity and quality of the firm’s output and marketing activity is radically decreased. For these reasons, the “bury everybody” approach is usually counter-productive, especially in an hourly billing context.”
It is always worth looking at “The Caseload Benefit Graph” and the guidance that goes with it.
2. IF YOU MAKE A MISTAKE THE COVER UP IS OFTEN MORE HARMFUL THAN A MISTAKE
An avalanche of problems often starts with one mistake. This is overlooked or covered on and it becomes a regular occurrence. Recognise that people make mistakes. Most mistakes can be put right. However often, indeed all too often, a failure to deal with the matter immediately (or even worse an attempt to cover it up) has far worse consequences than the original mistake ever would. If you make a mistake:
- Recognise it.
- Deal with it.
- Tell someone.
It is never that easy, of course, but not hiding the mistake is always the best start.
3. PILOTS LEARN ABOUT CRASH LANDING: LAWYERS DON’T
As a passenger I am comforted by the fact that pilots have regular training on what to if anything goes wrong during the flight. I don’t expect things to go wrong, I certainly don’t want anything to go wrong. However there are good reasons for pilots to be trained in this way. Not least they are learning from mistakes made in the past.
However there is very little by way of equivalent for lawyers. It could be said that the issues are “obvious” and do not need telling. However this does not take into account the sheer feeling of panic that can overtake a practitioner when a mistake has been made. There, are, of course, sometimes issues of ego as well. However the purpose of training and instruction is to ensure that people know what to do.
(I know I have said this here twice. However since first writing this I have seen Sully and I am even more convinced about the benefits of the value of training on these issues).
4. IT OFTEN HELPS IF SOMEONE ELSE DEALS WITH A FILE THAT IS STARTING TO GO WRONG
When matters go wrong on a file it, normally, becomes the bane of the lawyer’s life. It is often passed onto someone else. Hence the courts often see witness statements that say:
“I now have conduct of this matter because I am the newest/youngest/ most gullible person in the department and everyone else realised that this file was a bag of rats.”
Of course the statement does not say that expressly. However most of our District Judges and Masters can recognise the “hospital pass” file. It is not difficult to read the writing between the lines and Judges are, often, not impressed. Any personal sympathy for the litigator involved is overtaken by anger (if not disgust) with the firm that put the litigator in that situation.
Further it is doubtful whether the new fee earner is comfortable with the file. I have been involved in cases, particularly for large firms, where the assistant solicitor given charge of the matter regarding being handed the “problem” file as somewhat of a blot on their career. They have explained to me that they felt that even being associated with the file would taint their reputation and their prospects. Further because much of the time spent on the file could not be billed they were unwilling to spend enormous amounts of time on it.
5. SOMEONE SENSIBLE AND EXPERIENCED NEEDS TO TAKE THIS ON
If a decision is made that problem files should be moved on (and my Advice is that, subject to the views of the client, they should be at least for the purpose of solving the immediately problem) they need to be moved to someone senior and with considerable, patience, wisdom and experience. There is an abundance of talent in our litigators and, in most firms, someone will fit the bill. Dealing with problem files should be the pinnacle of the litigator’s career. With these files it is often your firm’s money and reputation at stake it is sheer folly to hand the file to someone who is uncomfortable with them, no matter how diligent they are.
6. GUIDANCE FROM OVER THE POND – WORKLOAD TRIAGE
If you have temporary overload a useful starting point is Michael Hyatt’s “When you feel overwhelmed by your workload” My favourite point from here is “practice workload triage”
“Some patients will survive without medical care. Some won’t survive even if they have medical care. Triage means ignoring these two groups and focusing on those that will only survive with medical care.
You must know which things you can safely ignore and which things demand your intervention.”
7. WORKING TOO MANY HOURS IS JUST COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE
Little analysis goes into the issue of whether additional hours spent in work are counterproductive. See the earlier post on this topic “It’s Nuts”
“The Business Roundtable study found that after just eight 60-hour weeks, the fall-off in productivity is so marked that the average team would have actually gotten just as much done and been better off if they’d just stuck to a 40-hour week all along. And at 70- or 80-hour weeks, the fall-off happens even faster: at 80 hours, the break-even point is reached in just three weeks.”
8. LEARN FROM THE EXPERIENCE
An important point here is anyone involved in putting things right should make sure that the whole firm benefits from the experience of any file that has gone wrong. Steps must be taken to:-
- Ensure that the cause of the problem is identified and steps taken to deal with this.
- If the problem is one of a system breaking down then the system must be remedied.
- If the problem is one of overwork then the litigator’s workload must be examined.
- If the problem is one of an individual litigator’s ability. Then consider re-training or re-allocation.
- Do your very best to ensure that the specific problem never arises again.
9. ENCOURAGING CANDOUR WILL SAVE MUCH TIME AND MONEY IN THE LONG RUN
What is very important is that staff are confident that they will receive help if they rely on the contingency plan. If your staff are not confident of this then mistakes will get hidden or (usually bungled) attempts will be made to remedy the situation. In these circumstances the plan is useless. The earlier you deal with problems the better.
10. LAST, BUT BY NO MEANS LEAST, A TRIP TO COUNSEL SOMETIMES HELPS
This is part of the “trouble shared” argument (and obviously advertorial material). However it is surprising how often problems with have kept solicitors awake for weeks can be dealt with and resolved by a conference.
RELATED POSTS
- Being a litigator – when it all gets too much.
- Litigation: what is an appropriate case load and is it important?
- Litigators, litigation and the appropriate case load 2: “It’s nuts”.
- Litigation and workload 3: insurers
- In litigation, as in life, things will go wrong: having a strategy in place.
- Stress, litigation and litigators: useful links to avoid and deal with problems.
- Dealing with fish files: overcoming procrastination