Clients Prefer Online Fee Payments
If your firm doesn’t accept online fee payments, it’s a wonder you’re able to keep your office doors open. That’s because 66 percent of clients prefer to pay their a… Read More
If your firm doesn’t accept online fee payments, it’s a wonder you’re able to keep your office doors open. That’s because 66 percent of clients prefer to pay their a… Read More
In this remote work era when tech savvy is essential, a new survey shows that more than two-thirds of in-house counsel think lawyers are technologically incompetent. In a simila… Read More
If you practice trial or appellate law, you should know about a comprehensive revision of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure. The Supreme Court of North Carolina adopted an ord… Read More
You’ve been told a thousand times to return phone calls promptly, but you might mistakenly think that advice mostly applies to calls from clients. It also applies to calls from other … Read More
With the median student debt load topping $150,000, a majority of recent law graduates question whether their legal education was worth the cost. Even so, six out of 10 say if they could do… Read More
When you’re working on the marketing plan for your law practice, here’s a number to keep in mind: 1.88 billion. That’s the number of daily Facebook users worldwide. And h… Read More
Lawyers Mutual has published previous alerts regarding the new filing requirements under the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”) that went into effect January 1, 2024. After reviewing additional resources, we want to emphasize concerns that we have about the risks and increased potential liability for lawyers undertaking the reporting requirements. This is especially true for the continuing reporting requirements after entity formation and initial reporting.
The North Carolina Administrative Office of the Courts (NCAOC) recently announced additional go-live plans for counties transitioning from paper files to Enterprise Justice (Odyssey), which currently serves Harnett, Johnston, Lee, Mecklenburg and Wake counties. Twelve northeastern counties comprising Track 3, as previously announced, will go live on February 5, and 10 counties comprising Track 4 (Alamance, Chatham, Durham, Franklin, Granville, Guilford, Orange, Person, Vance and Warren) will go live on April 29.