Litigation Attorney Vs. Trial Counsel

Litigation attorneys file and defend lawsuits, beginning with the complaint and ending with the judgment or settlement. Trial counsel, on the other hand, does not get involved until the lawsuit actually goes before a judge or jury in trial.

  1. Generally

    • Trial counsel is a sub-specialty of litigation attorneys.

    Time Frame

    • A lawsuit can last for several years between the time a complaint is filed and the case actually goes to trial.

    Function

    • Before a trial actually occurs, litigation attorneys spend hours and hours preparing and responding to written pleadings. When the trial actually begins, trial counsel goes to the courthouse and handles the presentation of physical evidence to the judge and jury.

    Attributes

    • Each attorney has unique strengths and weaknesses. Litigators must be detail-oriented and good writers. Trial counsel, conversely, must have good public presentation skills.

    Expert Insight

    • It often makes sense to hire one attorney to litigate a case before it goes to trial and to hire a different attorney to represent you at trial. This allows you to take advantage of different strengths from different attorneys.

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