It appears a single set of legal encyclopedias for research costs about $11,000 before tax. Hum.
This would make starting a practice difficult. O well.
MaximumZero cancels jaw-drop: Head exploded.
http://west.thomson.com/ohio-jurisprudence-3d/1598/14101487/productdetail
One of the many reasons lawyers cost so much.
...how many actual books are there in that? Because as far as I can tell from the description, it looks like two, but that can't be right.
Edit: 120 of them. And "Ohio Jurisprudence 3d 2011 Pocket Part " is $2,439, on its own.
The "pocket part," is a set of little books you put in the back of the encyclopedia that show you updated cases.
Yups, this is a lot of what I do. People don't understand why it takes lawyers hours to research things; nothing, nothing is simple.
First you read a couple hundred pages, then you read all the cases they refer you to and the cases the cases refer you to while checking to see if those cases have been overruled, etc, etc, etc. Then you draft a memorandum to keep all of this crap straight, then you draft and file pleadings, discovery requests/responses, motions, settlement prep/trial prep.... Even this is an oversimplification. This doesn't even count reviewing the facts, the paperwork supporting it, the notices from court and papers from opposing counsel. It is no exaggeration to say I read well over 4,000 pages a day at work. [tired].
Did I mention you need other sets of books like these, like one for other areas like case ledgers, federal, etc (remember, this was only for one state) [headdesk]. The computerized version costs over $1000/month from Lexis Nexis. Trying to work in law without these things is like trying to fix a car without tools. It doesn't work, or at least it doesn't work well
.
[ends rant]
Simply, there are a million pitfalls and I can't allow myself to fall through any of them. No pressure but the client wants all this shit yesterday and doesn't understand/want to pay a bill...
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