The Archive
October 12th, 2009The original Toiletlaw blogger had quite the ride, which we won’t spoil here. Below you will find all of his posts – we recommend you start from the beginning.
The original Toiletlaw blogger had quite the ride, which we won’t spoil here. Below you will find all of his posts – we recommend you start from the beginning.
So I’m partnering up and one of the conditions my soon to be partner placed on our union was for me to stop blogging, and I don’t hold that against him. When I started this blog, I was doing my best to survive life as a toiletlawyer. I used the blog to cope with my struggles, and hopefully entertain some people along the way. Further, because I was working for a soulless personal injury firm, I didn’t mind over-sharing facts about the firm and the cases I worked on. Now that I’m in business for myself, it’s probably time to move on.
The site isn’t dying though, Subtle Dig has told me that they plan to save my old posts under a moniker I will choose shortly, and bring in a new writer. At my request, they are going to hold off their search for a few weeks and allow me some time to find a successor. So here goes, I’m looking for someone who:
1) Works for a personal injury firm or insurance defense firm.
2) Has a few hours each week to put together an interesting post. Current bloggers are more than welcome.
3) Isn’t going to turn this into a hate-filled, anti-law blog.
I know Subtle Dig is going to alter the website soon, so you will be able to give your input there. They are great people to work with and did a pretty great job bringing in readers and revenue. Since my first post, toiletlaw.com has received over 14,000 visitors and I’ve made just over $50.* It boiled down to slightly more than minimum wage, which I think is pretty impressive for a personal blog with virtually no advertising. Send an email to blog@toiletlaw.com if you are interested.
With that out of the way, I guess it’s time to head out. I truly enjoyed the emails and other feedback the readers gave, hopefully I will be talking to you all for years to come. Thanks for everything.
* Sorry about the seemingly strange math, that includes removing the taxes for this year at the monster independent contractor rate. I was also unaware that minimum wage had increased. To clarify, I spent about 18 hours on the blog and made $109 pre-tax.
Office
Initially, I imagined leasing a small executive suite in or near downtown. I wanted a reception area, an office, and some extra space for what I was going to call the “mailroom” – a place for filing, copying, faxing, postage, etc. I was hoping to find 500-750 square feet for $1000-1400 a month. There were a number of offices that would have worked too – but nobody would budge off their 5 year term requirement. As arrogant as it sounds, I want to the option to grow in 2 or 3 years.
Then I got a call from an old undergraduate buddy. He’s graduated from the University of Texas law school in 2007 and practiced in Philadelphia biglaw until he was laid off in February. He opened his own shop afterward. A mutual friend informed him that I was about to open my own shop.
Long story short, he has extra space and offered me one of his two spare offices at a very reasonable rate ($475 a month, utilities included). He also offered to bring me in as a true partner for a tiny buy-in ($1000 and I have to outfit my office out of my pocket).
To partner or not
My potential partner was very honest about his income and cash-flow. After paying the firm’s bills, he’s averaged about $2500 take-home each month, which seems pretty great given the age of the firm. His primary work has been entity formation, though he’s done some estate/tax planning as well.
If I come in, we would both forgo a draw for the first 2 months while I build our personal injury practice. I would also be lead on any probate case should one come up. My potential partner has never stood before a judge in court.
So the positives:
And the negatives:
Just looking at that list, it seems like I should partner up. If you guys see anything I missed, please let me know. I told him I would let him know by October 1.
$74,523.38
My final check – with all taxes removed. I wish I could tell you that the firm was sad to see me go, or that they even noticed. I’m going solo; this blog is going to take a bit of a turn.
Interesting details to come.
Like most people in my idiotic generation, the first thing I did after my breakup was change my facebook relationship status to ‘Single’. A few hours after the change, I received a how-you-doin’ message from a former high-school love interest. Well, at least I was interested. She was a Freshman and I was a Senior – I think the age gap prevented her from taking my advances seriously – at least that’s what I told myself at the time.
The girl, Naomi, is now a Senior at Penn and the daughter of an old family friend. My dad actually dated her mom (the family friend) when they were teenagers, and though there is absolutely no chance Naomi is my half-sister, simply having to consider the possibility adds some weirdness to the situation.
Anyways, after a few facebook emails, we scheduled a meetup. We were meeting for dinner and drinks, but it wasn’t entirely clear that the event was of a romantic nature, that is until she showed up in a cocktail dress. I felt pretty stupid in my jeans and tshirt.
The date went well. She is almost assuredly more intelligent than me but she still deferred to me regularly during the night – which was neat. I told her about the big case and my thoughts on opening my own firm. She’s planning to get her Master’s and/or PhD at one of the local universities. We both share a dislike foir the real world and jokingly made plans to run off to the Caribbean once we pay off our student loans.
I got a frustrating kiss on the cheek at the end of the date but by the time I got back to my place I had a facebook message saying, “I SHOULD HAVE REALLY KISSED YOU, NEXT TIME?”
And Val, if you read this, die.
An unrelenting cough recently forced my grandmother to have a chest x-ray, a procedure revealed the physician’s worst fears – fully metastasized cancer. One of her first acts upon the discovery of this illness was to call her attorney grandson (that would be me) and ask for a will. After a few conversations, I drafted a living trust that should preserve both my grandmother’s assets and her post-life wishes.
Though the experience was necessarily tear-inducing, I would be lying if I said that I didn’t enjoy the work. I enjoyed my Wills and Trusts class in law school but I’ve never seriously considered doing probate work as a career. I’ve begun to toy around with the idea of opening my own probate shop once I get my commission for the big case.
A few of you have emailed in asking what happens if I get fired or quit before the conclusion of the case. Every attorney at the firm has a clause in their contract that provides for a very slightly reduced commission on any case that remains with the firm. I know of one jr. attorney that attempted to take his cases with him to another personal injury firm but the last time I spoke with him, he told me that it wasn’t worth the hassle.
Another recurring email involves whether or not I could have taken the case to another firm. Unfortunately, the answer is undoubtedly yes – and I’ve spent more than a few nights thinking about “what could have been.” In the heat of the moment I never even considered it. I have little doubt that another firm would have let me keep 10-20% of the case simply for the referral.
All of that said, things are going well at work. There was a moment last week where it seemed like the big case was going to settle ($5M+), but the insurance company backed out less than 24 hours before the scheduled paper-signing meeting. The firm is confident that the insurance company is simply posturing and the settlement is only a few months away.
The client (father + husband) in the big case has been in the office with some frequency, which is actually pretty difficult to deal with as he is still deep in his mourning. He seems to have been truly in love with his family and as terrible as it sounds, this is something I use to reassure myself anytime I start to doubt the recent breakup with Val. I’m confident that, if Val was to die tomorrow, I would be completely over it pretty quickly.
This post is pretty scattered, and for that I apologize. I have a two more topical posts planned for this week – one about the girl I went out with over the weekend, and the other about an associate at the firm. Check back soon.
Things I have been able to do since losing the girlfriend:
Eat at Hooters. Wing snobs get all pissy whenever I say that Hooters has my favorite wings, but I love those little deep-fried sauce-covered bastards. My ex got so pissy and insecure when I ventured over there that I had completely removed Hooters from my rotation.
Watch porn. The ex was a bit of a prude in this department. I used to ‘take care of myself’ in the shower while I thought about random sexy things. Now my imagination has taken a vacation…
Randomly go to a bar. The ex had grown to expect my arrival 30-50 minutes after I was off and would get lonely and insecure if i was more than a handful of minutes late. Now, if the mood strikes, I grab a beer or two after work. Say what you will about bar-folk, the crowd at my nearby bar is collegial and fun. I’ve even had some success at the nightly dart tournaments (first prize being a $50 tab).
Let my bedroom get messy. Who really minds a few days worth of dry cleaning sitting on the floor? The ex was insane about having a perfectly clean bedroom before going to bed. Drove me mad.
Waste time. I don’t mean going to the bar or anything similar – I mean lying around on a Saturday morning watching Nickelodeon. The ‘big’ thing I did this Saturday was spend three hours ‘pwning some noobs’ at Team Fortress 2. (I also ordered a large pizza.)
Not have to constantly worry about someone else’s feelings. I hated having to deal with my ex’s hurt feelings whenever I would do something like “sound angry” or watch one of ‘our’ tv shows without her.
I don’t mean this post to sound as though I had no feelings for Val. We had a great run and a ton of fun. I won’t say that any guy would be lucky to have her as she is/was a royal pain in the ass. I would lay great odds that she is going to find some successful, minuscule guy that doesn’t mind her being a rancid, self-absorbed bitch and marry him.
7:00 AM
There was no occasion to be celebrated on the day yet Val woke me up with eggs and toast. I can’t even describe how awesome it made me feel. In fact it made me feel so great, I found the ring I have been storing in my closet for the past few months, and I proposed. She said yes, we made love, shared the last few pieces of bacon, and I headed to work.
9:00 AM
I don’t know what made me think that it would be a good idea to go to work. My mind was on my pending nuptials and not on signing up clients. The more I worked, the larger the knot in my stomach grew.
It wasn’t that I didn’t love Val, it was that I didn’t want to love Val. Less than five hours after I proposed, I was ready to break it off.
12:00 PM
I ate lunch alone (though I’m still hanging out with the douchebags). I felt incredibly stupid for proposing. In search of vindication, I stole an idea from my favorite Boy Meets World episode and made a [mental] pro/con list.
| Pros | Cons |
| I love her | I don’t like her very much. |
| She finds me intelligent and charming. | She has no education. |
| She’s attractive. | But not that attractive. |
| She doesn’t expect me to be rich. | She doesn’t approve of my job. |
| I’m attracted to other people. | |
| She isn’t very nice. | |
| She doesn’t have a career. |
Too mean? I think it all stems from the first pro/con. In high school, I never understood the ‘love’ but not ‘like’ thing but I guess it’s just something that happens when you spend a ton of time with someone. I have lots of feelings for Val (love?), but I’m growing to dislike her. Those idiosyncrasies that seemed cute in the beginning are now irritating. Spending time with her is a chore.
4:00 PM
I said I had an optometrist appointment and left early. I rushed back to the apartment, hoping to find Val and discuss the situation. Fortunately, as I hadn’t really prepared for the talk, she wasn’t at home. I spent the next four hours crafting my un-proposal.
8:00 PM
I was wasting time on the internet when she walked in. She had been over at her parents’ showing them the ring (sigh). We talked for about an hour, it wasn’t hard convincing her that I was a loser and she deserved better, she gave me back the ring. I nearly stopped her as she walked out of the door but didn’t.
So I’m single again. It doesn’t feel as great as I thought it would.
As I stated in my “normal day” post, I often eat lunch alone. It was my chance to get away from the office, read the paper; just get away for a bit and recharge. Recently though, I’ve somehow fallen in with this insufferable group of “cool kids” who insist on eating lunch together every day.
My involvement with the group began rather innocently, one of the guys asked me if I had eaten at a newly opened restaurant near the office, which I hadn’t so I joined them. Now I find myself regularly eating $20-$30 lunches – and I’m not sure how to break it off with the group.
I actually don’t dislike any of the guys individually but once together it’s “I just bought this” or “I blew this much money at the club.” And look, I love stuff as much as the next guy – I even love talking about stuff, but these guys don’t even care about the stuff they bought – only that they spent money on it.
And if I have to hear another one of these guys introduce us to the waitress as – “Oh hi, we are lawyers, our office is nearby” – I’m going to off myself. Not to hate on another SubtleDig blogger but imagine a table full of Lifeat160 guys (except for the sake of accuracy, it’s more like Lifeat60).* It’s dreadful.
So I’ve been thinking about the proper “break-up” strategy. I want to stop going out to lunch, but still maintain some kind of friendship with a few of the guys. This week, I’m going to attempt to organize smaller groups (3-4 people) to go to cheaper restaurants (fast food, subway, etc). If I fail at this, I’m going to start playing the “I’m broke” card, which will be tough given that I might be the top earner of the group (meaning that we are all pretty much broke). I don’t know why I’m concerned about offending any of these guys…
* I actually like the Lifeat160 blog quite a bit.
Things I have been able to do since landing the big case that I had yet to do at work:
Log on to Westlaw. Our cases use Pennsylvania law almost exclusively and I’ve used a smaller, less effective (and presumably cheaper) case database in the small amount of legal research I’ve done at the firm thusfar. I used Westlaw all the time in law school, but I had completely forgotten how powerful a tool Westlaw can be. I now have my own log-in name under the firm account, which for some reason, made me feel like a real lawyer.
Call/use a copy service. We’ve already amassed a few thousand pages of documents, mostly miscellaneous records from the trucking company. Last Friday, I called in a copy crew who picked up the documents, copied and organized them, and returned them in these very cool looking document boxes. Signing the copy order was the first official document I’ve signed binding the firm to anything. However slight the responsibility was, I appreciated it.
Be taken to lunch by a name partner. We went to a local, inexpensive restaurant, but I really enjoyed it. Sure, the partner was only interested in talking about the story of how I landed the case, but sharing war stories over a delicious bowl of pasta made me feel, again, like a real lawyer.
Expense reimbursement. Though I’ve filed my mileage repeatedly when I go out on various firm activities, they’ve never approved my reimbursement requests. It has actually been a point of contention at the firm, with a number of associates complaining about the firm being stingy with reimbursements. Since I landed the case though, every trip I’ve made has yielded and awesome $.55 per mile!
Less bullshit. I, occasionally, surf the internet while at work. Maybe five minutes of every hour. Used to, when a supervisor or boss would walk by and catch me, I would receive a stern, written warning in my box the next day. The last few times this has happened, no warning. In fact, I had a discussion with a supervisor about how much I love gmail when he saw me checking my personal email.
I’ll be doing this feature sporadically over the next year as the case progresses. Right now, we have set the initial case schedule and are somewhere in the middle of discovery. We have depositions coming up in the next month, which will hopefully yield a post or two.