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Legal questionscurious-marten-080

Sent my attorney the wrong version of a financial doc — trial is coming up soon, freaking out

Okay so I need to calm down and think through this but I'm kind of spiraling right now and figured I'd post here while I wait to get my attorney on the phone.

Background: I was hit by a commercial van about two and a half years ago while I was self-employed. Pretty serious impact — I had to stop taking clients for a long stretch during recovery, so lost income is a huge part of my claim. Trial is actually scheduled for early next year, which feels both forever away and terrifyingly close.

Here's the problem I just discovered. My accountant had to revise one of my income statements from a couple years back — there were calculation errors in the original version that needed to be corrected. I gave my attorney a packet of financial records a while back and I thought I included the corrected version. I was going through my own files last night and I'm now pretty sure I sent the original flawed version, not the amended one.

This document has been sitting in my case file for over a year, possibly longer. I don't know if it's been shared in discovery already or what.

  • Does this kind of thing actually derail cases, or is correcting a document swap pretty routine?
  • Would the other side try to use the discrepancy against me somehow?
  • Should I be reaching out to my accountant now to get everything in writing before I even talk to my attorney?

I know I need to tell my attorney immediately — and I will, first thing Monday. I just wanted to hear if anyone else has been through something similar before I lose my entire weekend to anxiety. Any experience here would genuinely help.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 13
    wise-swan-672

    Oh man, I felt my stomach drop reading this because I had a similar paperwork mix-up during my own case. I accidentally submitted an older version of a medical bill summary and didn't catch it for months. When I finally told my attorney she was honestly pretty calm about it — she said these things happen more than people realize and that what matters is catching it and correcting it as soon as possible. Tell your attorney Monday, don't wait. Mine was able to get the corrected document into the record without it becoming a huge ordeal.

    • 21
      hearty-crane-717

      So without knowing exactly where things stand in discovery, here's how I'd think about it: if the document has already been produced to the other side, your attorney will likely need to serve a corrected or supplemental disclosure. Courts generally allow this, especially when the error is a document version issue rather than something that looks intentional. The key is that you flag it to your attorney immediately so they control the narrative. The longer it sits, the worse it looks — not because you did anything wrong, but because opposing counsel will frame any delay as suspicious. Monday morning, first call of the day.

    • 7
      weathered-late-shift431

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 13
    kind-stoat-329

    The defense side is going to look for any inconsistency in your financials to cast doubt on your lost income claim. If they already have the flawed version and later see the corrected one, they will absolutely try to spin it as you inflating numbers or changing your story. Your attorney needs to get ahead of this with a clear paper trail showing the accountant's correction was made for legitimate reasons and when. Make sure you have documentation from your accountant explaining exactly why the revision was made.

    • 16
      bright-kestrel-700

      Stop spiraling. Call your accountant today or tomorrow, get the corrected document with a written note explaining the revision. Then call your attorney Monday with both in hand. You're two and a half years into this case — don't let a fixable paperwork issue become unfixable because you sat on it out of fear.

  • 10
    cool-grouse-079

    Honestly? Document version mix-ups happen in litigation constantly. When I was on the other side, we'd see amended tax docs and revised financials come through supplemental disclosures pretty regularly. What defense teams actually get excited about is when a party tries to hide the discrepancy or can't explain why a number changed. If you have a clean paper trail — accountant made an error, filed a correction, here's the corrected version — that's really not a big deal. It's the cover-up that kills cases, not honest corrections. Just be transparent with your attorney.

  • 13
    careful-wolf-131

    Not legal advice, but: document supplement issues like this are generally correctable and courts see them routinely. The critical thing is that your attorney knows now so they can take the appropriate procedural steps before trial. What you don't want is for this to surface for the first time during cross-examination on your damages. Get your accountant to prepare a brief written explanation of why the original was revised — that kind of paper trail is your friend here.

    • 3
      mellow-mile-marker648

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 22
    patient-wren-887

    I know this isn't a medical question but I just want to say — the anxiety of a long case like this is genuinely exhausting, and the last thing you need is to spiral all weekend. You caught this yourself, you're being proactive, that matters. Try to write down everything you know about the document discrepancy tonight so you're organized when you call Monday, and then genuinely try to step away from it until then. Stressing about something you can't act on until the work week doesn't help your recovery either.

    • 8
      calm-rider968

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 7
    steady-wolf-890

    Quick question — do you actually know for certain the wrong version was shared with opposing counsel, or are you assuming it was? There's a difference between a document sitting in your attorney's file and one that's been formally produced in discovery. Might be worth clarifying that before you assume the worst.