The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionscalm-mole-060

My lawyer has gone completely silent for months — should I be panicking?

So I'm about 16 months out from my accident and I genuinely cannot tell if my case is moving forward or just... rotting somewhere in a filing cabinet.

Quick background: I got rear-ended pretty badly at a highway on-ramp. Ambulance ride, ER visit, months of physical therapy, the whole ordeal. I have a herniated disc that my doctor says was likely made significantly worse by the crash — I already had some minor pre-existing back issues, which I disclosed upfront to everyone.

I hired a PI attorney pretty early on. First few months, communication was fine. Then it just... stopped. I've called the office probably a dozen times since spring. I get the occasional "we'll have someone call you back" and then nothing. I sent a certified letter two months ago asking for a case status update. Got a one-paragraph non-answer.

I live in a different state now than where the accident happened, which makes everything feel more complicated.

Here's what's eating at me:

  • The statute of limitations is not that far off and I don't even know where we are in the process
  • I've read a little about how pre-existing conditions can actually support a higher damages claim in some situations — something about how insurers have to "take you as they find you" — but I don't know if my attorney is even working that angle
  • I'm wondering if I should try to find new representation or just take over myself at this point

Has anyone been in a situation where they had to fire their attorney mid-case or switch firms? What happened? Did you lose time or momentum? I feel like I'm doing all the worrying and none of the work is actually getting done.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 16
    clever-badger-603

    I went through almost exactly this. My attorney was completely unreachable for like five months and I was spiraling. I ended up sending a formal written request for my complete case file — just told them I was evaluating my options. Suddenly I got a call back within 48 hours. Sometimes you have to rattle the cage a little. Don't just wait.

    • 14
      mellow-fox-046

      Not legal advice, but a couple things worth knowing: you have the right to fire your attorney at any time and hire new counsel — a new firm will typically sort out the fee split with the old one, that's not your problem to solve. Also, the 'take your victim as you find them' concept you mentioned is real — it's called the eggshell plaintiff doctrine and it can absolutely work in your favor with pre-existing conditions if someone is arguing it properly. Whether that's happening in your case, I obviously can't say. But radio silence this close to a deadline is a legitimate red flag.

    • 15
      hearty-crane-021

      The silence might not even be your attorney's fault entirely — sometimes firms get cozy with certain insurers and drag cases out in ways that benefit everyone except you. I'm not saying that's what's happening, but the fact that you can't get a straight answer about WHERE your case stands is not okay. You deserve basic transparency.

    • 7
      keen-newt-625

      You can request a full accounting of everything done on your file — every letter sent, every call made, every filing. It's your case and you're entitled to that information. If the firm gets weird about providing it, that tells you something. Also, look up your state bar association; they often have resources for clients who feel abandoned by counsel. Some even have fee arbitration if there's ever a dispute when you switch.

  • 9
    humble-tern-198

    Send a certified letter today — not an email, not a voicemail — stating that you require a written case status update within 10 business days or you'll be seeking new representation. Keep a copy. That's it. Stop waiting for them to come to you.

    • 10
      careful-marmot-823

      The stress of all this uncertainty is genuinely bad for your recovery, by the way. I see it with patients all the time — the legal limbo keeps people in a kind of chronic stress state that makes pain worse and healing slower. Do what you need to do to get some clarity, because your physical health is tied to your mental state more than people realize.

    • 0
      thankful-overpass435

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 8
    humble-heron-332

    I don't want to be harsh but — did you sign a retainer agreement? What does it say about communication timelines and case updates? Sometimes people assume attorneys owe them constant updates when the contract doesn't actually specify that. I'm not saying your frustration isn't valid, just that it helps to know what you agreed to before deciding what leverage you actually have.

    • 7
      grounded-road-soul105

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 7
    bright-heron-364

    From the other side of things — when a case goes quiet for a long time and then suddenly gets active close to a deadline, adjusters notice. It can signal disorganization on the plaintiff's side and some will try to use that as leverage in negotiations. Getting a more engaged attorney sooner rather than later actually protects your position. Just being honest with you.

    • 1
      gentle-passenger195

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 6
    bright-grouse-804

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of everything else you've been through. You've already had to deal with the accident, the injury, the recovery — you shouldn't have to chase down the person who's supposed to be fighting for you. Trust your gut. If something feels wrong, it probably is.