Concerto
Well-Known Member
Just to follow on from that, lawyers are simply people trained in legal thinking, procedure and certain areas of law. It isn't magic and the same goes for most other occupations/professions. We could probably all do each other's jobs with a bit of practice though the skill and experience to make it polished would be missing.
One good lawyer once said: 'A good lawyer in not necessarily one who knows the law but where to find it".
That used to be difficult but now most people can find the law on most things and, with a bit of confidence, can piece it all together - it may not be quite how a lawyer would do it but so what.
So people with a bit of commercial nouse and savvy and confidence can be effective if they bone up on the (very small) area of law that they need to deal with. Equally lawyers have a lot to learn from people with lots of commercial savvy.
Before I sued the electricty company I did read huge amounts of the electricity act and the company's terms and conditions, so I was fully prepapred. The result was more about satisfaction in being proved right than the compensation I received. I did fail to mention my brother, now retired, was a solicitor in a series of commercial businesses dealing with contracts. However I did not consult with him in this case.
I fully agree the training to be a solicitor is detailed and comprehensive. A lot of the law can be common sense and there is a standard procedure for a lot of situations that are simple. Complex problems do require involving a solcitor. The only case I have ever lost was a liable case against a national newspaper. My brother had recommended a solicitor specialising in liable actions. It hinged on a lower case "a" rather than a capital "A". So even specialist solicitors do not guarantee success.