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Using the computer to level the playing
field
Robert LeRoux Hernandez
The
combination of computer software and access to the Internet allows sole
practitioners to
prepare cases as thoroughly as lawyers at large firms.
Not
long ago, a sole practitioner could feel virtually blown out of the
water when taking on a
defendant represented by a large firm or a government entity that could
call on the resources
of an entire legal department. Now, with the introduction of the
personal computer (PC) and
user-friendly software applications, a well-organized lawyer in a small
office may even get a
leg up on larger organizations.
The key
is to understand that the PC is like an extension of the brain. When
properly used, it
can enhance everything the lawyer does best and improve weak areas. The
PC is a great
equalizer, providing efficient access to information, organization, and
communication. The
computer can replace large chunks of associate, paralegal, and clerical
time-lowering
overhead, freeing up resources, and becoming the lawyer's most valuable
assistant.
Although
I have used WordPerfect 6.1 for Windows for several years, only
recently have I
come to appreciate the full impact of some of its features. The
computer screen is now my
desktop, and through this word-processing program I have speedy access
to nearly all the
files, features, and programs I need to do my work. Following are some
recommendations
for maximizing use of your PC.
Customize
your toolbar. A customized toolbar provides immediate access to the
features
you use most often. For example, with a click of the mouse you can pull
down an address
book or card file, a list of cases with key telephone numbers, a
spreadsheet and bookkeeping
program, or a timekeeping system. While working on a case, you can
connect to a court
through the Pacer System to check on a docket entry or download the
entire docket.1 While
working on a motion or brief, you can click into LEXIS-NEXIS to conduct
immediate
research on a legal issue, then paste relevant parts directly into the
work.
You can
undertake an Internet search by using the ARF program,2 retrieve e-mail
online, or
print out news from today's New York Times3 (for a fee) while
continuing to work on the
matter at hand. You can stamp a signature on a document, insert a
certificate of service,
spell-check it, and fax the document to opposing counsel in a matter of
minutes. The
customized toolbar lets you do what you have to do quickly when you
want to do it.
Set up
trial notebooks. ATLA's 1996 Annual Convention Reference Materials
included a
particularly useful outline of a trial notebook.4 Using the CD-ROM
provided with the
convention materials, I pasted that outline into my word-processing
program and turned it
into a template.
Every
entry in the outline was bookmarked and hyperlinked (more information
about these
functions is provided later) to the table of contents, and a footer was
created throughout the
document with a link to key sections, such as Telephones, Contents, To
Do, and Calendar.
Opening and closing arguments are hyperlinked to exemplary openings and
closings
collected in a file in my computer.
Other
key sections are hyperlinked to documents generated during the course
of litigation.
For example, Plaintiff's Lay Witnesses is linked to automatic
disclosures required under
Rule 26, so there is no need to leaf through paper files to identify
who to call at trial. Case
materials are well organized, instantly accessible, and easily
convertible into paper pages
that can be inserted into the notebook used at trial.
Using
this system, I can retrieve information from any case in litigation,
track events more
efficiently, and better plan the case in the context of my overall
schedule. Trial preparation
is more comprehensive and less burdensome.
Learn
to use templates. Paul Bernstein, a frequent contributor to TRIAL's
"Law Office
Technology" column, has suggested that use of templates can double your
productivity.5
Over time, that may be an understatement.
Templates
are merely reusable forms or documents. For example, once you have
drafted an
agreement, a complaint, or a motion, there is no reason to have to
redraft another from
scratch in a similar case. The key is to convert any document you use
more than once into a
template.
Because
courts are increasingly standardizing filings through the rules of
procedure and
local rules, a lawyer can anticipate filings and use a template to
generate them at correct
times. For example, I do §1983 litigation. Apart from specific facts,
there are many standard
paragraphs and claims in this litigation.
Using a
template, I can create the case caption by typing the name of the
plaintiff and
defendants, and the text can be filled out in minutes. I can generate
the request for waiver of
service, local rule certifications relating to attempts to settle,
consideration of alternative
dispute resolution, automatic disclosures, joint scheduling proposals,
and appropriate cover
letters to counsel and the clerks of courts. A case can proceed from
preparation of complaint
through trial or settlement with little duplication of effort.
Learn
to use hyperlinking and bookmarking. One of the greatest features of
Windows
integrated into word-processing programs is the ability to link related
documents and files.
By selecting text and clicking on the appropriate icon on the toolbar
or menu, you can mark
text for hyperlink. Then, by placing the cursor on the text and
clicking the mouse, the
program will jump to a related document or file.
I
accrue information on my computer from many sources: the Internet,
LEXIS-NEXIS,
Pacer, and a scanner. It is important to organize information so it can
be easily retrieved and
related to specific cases. Within any large document, selected sections
can be bookmarked
for quick access. Key items can be linked to documents related to a
case, whether the items
consist of legal research, news about similar cases, or notes from
prior cases.
Bookmarking
and hyperlinking are also useful in creating directories of related
cases,
putting together briefs that draw from various information bases, or
connecting word-processing documents with spreadsheets. Use of these
features allows a lawyer to fly
through tedious tasks.
Use
macros to speed your work. Any repetitive task-inserting a signature,
converting a font,
creating a standardized table, faxing a document-can and should be
reduced to a macro that
you execute with a keystroke or click of a mouse. I confess that I have
not yet learned how
to create a macro from the keyboard, but I have had plenty of success
using the mouse as
part of the word-processing program.
In
addition, hundreds of timesaving macros can be obtained by purchase,6
by subscription,7
free over the Internet,8 or through a listserv or user group.9
Use
desktop publishing features. With high-quality laser printers available
at reasonable
prices, there is no good reason not to save money by generating
stationery, envelopes,
brochures, and even business cards through a word-processing program.
Although you may
want to use embossed stationery and printed envelopes for certain
purposes, most daily
correspondence can come right out of the computer with a highly
professional appearance
and low production cost.
A
handsome brochure describing your practice and background can be
generated
inexpensively. Scan in a photograph, use fancy borders, look around for
some eye-catching
clip art, and you can impress potential clients in the waiting room.
Consider producing
brochures that describe fee structures, tell clients how to prepare for
depositions, explain the
litigation process, or identify your specialty areas.
Fire up your modem
A
lawyer depends on information to analyze and effectively argue a case.
The computer
equipped with a modem is a powerful means of finding and retrieving
relevant information.
Here are some ways to use your modem effectively.
Subscribe
to a legal database. Perhaps no information is more important than the
legal
database of case law and statutes. The lawyer who masters the law can
dominate any
argument.
Traditionally
that has meant the expenditure of time and resources for law library
research.
Under the pressure of heavy caseloads, it is all too easy to forgo
research, rely on old
research, or conduct superficial research from secondary sources.
Now,
with the LEXIS-NEXIS Attorney's Advantage program, there is no excuse
for failing
to be entirely on top of the law.10 For a relatively low monthly fee, a
lawyer can have
unlimited access to the legal databases relevant to specified areas of
practice.
Research
methods are easy to use. With a few key words, you can quickly
identify,
download, and print cases on point. Relevant parts of cases can be
pasted directly into a
brief or legal memorandum. WESTLAW now offers a similar service.11
Plug
into the Internet. Legal databases are now proliferating on the
Internet. Having tried
many of them, I find that none is sufficiently comprehensive to compete
with LEXIS-NEXIS or WESTLAW, and these other databases pose a
significant citation problem. Over
time, the Internet will probably be a feasible means to conduct legal
research, but not yet.12
On the
other hand, the Internet does provide ready access to the Library of
Congress, federal
regulations, many state regulations, and the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure and the
Federal Rules of Evidence. Bookmarking these sources can provide rapid
access to needed
information.
The
Internet is also a virtually limitless source of information on medical
issues, product
issues, and experts. It may even provide an inexpensive source for
demonstrative aids at
trial.13
Through
various forums and listserv and user groups, the Internet can provide
access to
expertise that might not otherwise be readily available. Every trial
attorney, for example,
should use ATLA NET.14 The association's online service has
subject-specific forums
where users can ask questions and learn from other lawyers. I regularly
use the Civil Rights
and Employment Law forums and often consult the Minority Caucus forum.
Through
this type of networking, help is at hand to collaborate on and address
legal
problems in a way that only large firms could in the past. The Internet
and the World Wide
Web-through forums and user groups, as well as through links among Web
sites-hold out the
possibility of "virtual law firms" spanning the continent and the globe.
On a
less grandiose scale, the Web provides a ready source of news, not only
of a general
nature but also case-specific news in areas of practice.15 Access to
various local bar
organizations can provide tips on current practice trends or local
legal issues.16
The
Internet also offers significant opportunities for low-cost
communications through e-mail, Internet faxing, and telephony.17
Videoconferencing by way of the Internet raises the
possibility of conducting inexpensive long-distance video depositions.18
Also
consider developing your own Web site. You can use some of the same
materials used
to create your brochures to design a home page on the Internet.19 For
as little as $30 a
month you can have a home page that is listed with various search
engines and will bring
you clients.20
Home-page-developing
software is readily available for free over the Internet. The software
is provided on the honor system for testing or for demonstration.
Searchers merely
download home page designs and insert content.21
The
nation, indeed the world, is going online. It was recently reported
that use of the
Internet in the United States and Canada more than doubled in little
more than a year and
that nearly 50.6 million people hooked up to the Net at least once
during December 1996.22
Online
shopping is increasing. Nielsen Media Research and CommerceNet, an
Internet site
dedicated to international trading opportunities, reported that the
number of people using the
Internet for shopping, including people shopping for legal services,
more than doubled in 18
months.23
Naturally,
the the popularity of this technology raises new issues concerning the
ethics of
advertising legal services online.24
Plug in
the fax. Have a fax program, such as WINFAX PRO, installed on your
computer.25
It provides for instant action (or reaction, as the case may be) when
you need to
communicate quickly. Although most jurisdictions do not yet formally
recognize the
sufficiency of service by fax, it is increasingly used and constitutes
notice that can be
documented. Furthermore, short of e-mail (which is even less
universally used), fax is the
most efficient means of sending out mailings quickly.
Closing tips
As you
make the personal computer your technology of choice in the law office,
keep the
following tips in mind:
· Spend no less than 10 percent of your
professional time developing and improving
technical savvy. Learn to make full use of the programs you have, find
out about new
ones, and test them. Read the technology sections of legal periodicals,
and seek out
new ways to automate your work.
· For example, the American Bar Association's
Committee on Solo and Small Firms is
distributing a videotape entitled What's Hot and What's Not in Small
Law Office
Technology, containing 60 minutes of practical advice on technology.26
· Protect your investment. Regularly back up
your work and get a virus shield. I
learned this the hard way when I purchased a program from what I
assumed was a
reliable company. The program had a virus that wiped out a lot of good
work on two
PCs. A free virus program from McCaffrey would have stopped the virus
before it
was downloaded.27
· Try out freeware, shareware, and time-limited
trial programs. For little or no money,
you may find programs suited to your needs. The Internet is replete
with shareware
and freeware, and there are a number of excellent programs that save
time and
money.
· You can also discover some great programs by
asking for demonstration disks. For
example, the Bureau of National Affairs offers a free 30-day
promotional CD-ROM
for its Employment Law Library and other libraries.28 Jury Verdict
Research will let
you try its program that generates reports predicting probable verdicts
for any kind
of injury, taking into account the venue of the litigation and numerous
variations of
fact patterns. Although the package is expensive, it can help in
justifying a demand
to an insurance adjuster or opposing counsel.29
· Get a scanner. It will cut down on typing
costs and permit you to keep all your case
documents in your computer, where they can be retrieved quickly. Away
from the
office, you can receive scanned documents via e-mail.
· Consider timekeeping software. It is
inexpensive and easily accessed as you work at
your desktop PC, and it can quickly provide information for billing,
fee petitions, or
time management.30
· Consider remote-access software to give your
law office portability. For a little more
than $100, you can turn your home computer into an office computer via
the
telephone.31
· Plan ahead. Get plenty of memory and speed
when you purchase hardware. The
demands on your computer will only grow in the next few years.
The personal computer is an essential tool
for practicing law. The technology is developing
so rapidly that successful competition in the near future will almost
certainly be driven by
the PC.
Learn
to adapt this technology to your practice. Customize it to fit your
strengths,
weaknesses, and needs. Package programs can be time-savers, but the
optimal use of the
computer is as an extension of your own brain.
Notes
1. A
subscription to the nationwide Pacer system enables lawyers to obtain
and download
information from most federal courts, including opinions and docket
entries. For
information, contact Pacer Service Center, P.O.Box 740026, Atlanta, GA
30374-0026, (210)
530-6283.
2. For
more information about ARF, visit http://dwave.net/~bitsafe/arf or
e-mail
bitsafe@dwave.net.
3.
Located at http://nytimesfax.com/.
4.
Thomas J. Vesper, The Second Edition Trial Notebook: Are You Properly
Prepared for
Trial? in 1, 1996 ANNUAL CONVENTION REFERENCE MATERIALS 79 (ATLA).
5. Paul
Bernstein, Double Your Productivity, TRIAL, June 1996, at 72. To create
reusable
templates of familiar forms and documents, Bernstein recommends the
HotDocs program
produced by Capsoft Development Corp., 732 East Utah Valley Dr., Ste.
400, American
Fork, UT 84003, (801) 354-8000.
6. See,
e.g., ADKINS ET AL., WORDPERFECT LAW OFFICE SOLUTIONS FOR
WINDOWS (updated annually) (James Pub. Co., (714) 755-5450); see also
KEN
CHESTEK, WORDPERFECT IN THE LAW OFFICE (1996).
7.
WordPerfect for Windows Magazine has a Disk of the Month Club that
provides macros
each month to subscribers. Call (800) 228-9626 for information.
8.
Several excellent sites include the following:WordPerfect for Win
(Leshiy's) at
http://raf.rutgers.edu/dmitriy/WordPerfect/wp.htm; Kenneth Hobson's
Home Page at
http://www.telepath.com/khobson/; Maxx Services at
http://www.afss.com/sis/macros.htm;
WPWIN-L archives at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=wpwin-l; WordPerfect
Universe at http://wpwin.com/; WordPerfect 6.x or Windows Tips at
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/macdonnell/page3.htm; and
WordPerfect 6.1
Macros and Templates at http://gmccomb.com/wp/.
9. Tips
about macros and other shortcuts are available through a free
subscription to the
WordPerfect List. Send an e-mail with SUBSCRIBE-WPWIN-L command to
listserv@listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu.
10. See
Paul Bernstein, Getting the Most Out of the Best, TRIAL, Sept. 1996, at
88. For
more information about the Attorney's Advantage program, contact
LEXIS-NEXIS at (800)
356-6548.
11. For
information about WESTLAW PRO, call (800) 223-9378.
12. But
see Peter C. Quinn, Websurfing for case law on a shoestring budget,
TRIAL, Jan.
1997, at 74.
13. See
Howard S. Richman & Francisco J. Rodriguez, Using the Internet to
Win Your Next
Medical Negligence Case, 11 PROF. NEGL. LIABILITY REP. 137-39 (1996),
for a large
number of useful URL addresses.
14. For
registration information, see http://www.atlanet.org.
15. For
example, the National Law Journal is available on Law Journal EXTRA! at
http://www.
ljx.com/.
16. For
example, the Web site of the Boston Bar Association is located at
http://bostonbar.org/.
17. For
example, PhoneMiser, a PC add-on product from Boston-based MediaCom,
purports
to slash 66 percent from long-distance bills. With a price tag of $100,
this item consists of
hardware about the
size of
a modem and a CD-ROM. After loading the software, the hardware unit,
into which
the phone line is plugged, is attached to the computer's printer port.
More information is
available at http://www.phonemiser.com or by calling Connection, (800)
800-0022.
18.
PictureTel Corp., Andover, MA, offers software based on Windows 95 and
hardware-including camera, microphone, and speakers-for $1,495. Contact
http://www.picturetel.com
or call (800) 716-6000. Connectix QuickCam offers a less expensive
system for $299 with
alternative software packages available. Contact
http://www.conectix.com or call (800) 950-5880.
19.
Check out the author's home page at http://www.civiljustice.com.
20.
Phyllis Weiss Haserot & Mark Pruner, Sailing into Cyberspace,
TRIAL, Mar. 1997, at
58; Paul Bernstein, Making Connections on the Internet, TRIAL, Jan.
1995, at 76.; M. Ethan
Katsh, Is Cyberspace Lawyer-Friendly?, TRIAL, Dec. 1995, at 34.
21.
Popular sites are FilePile at http://www.filepile.com/nc/start;
Freeware Now at
http://www.freewarenow.com/cgi-bin/search.cgi; ZDNet Software Library
at
http://www.hotfiles.com/index.html; C.net's Download.com at
http://www.download.com/PC/Search/Options/. Searchers can find home
page design
programs at any of these sites by identifying "home page" or "html
editor" as the subject of a
search.
22.
Julia Angwin, Internet Usage Doubles in a Year, S. F. CHRON., Mar. 13,
1997, at B1.
23.
Naill McKay, Survey Finds Net Shopping Boom, Mar. 13, 1997, at
http://www.sfgate.com/ (IDG News Service).
24. See
William E. Hornsby Jr., The Ethical Boundaries of Selling Legal
Services in
Cyberspace, NAT'L L.J., Jan. 29, 1996, at C1, reprinted by the American
Bar Association at
http://www.computerbar.org/netethics/abawill.htm.
25.
WINFAX PRO, produced by Symantec, can be downloaded in a trial version
at
http://www.symantec.com/trialware. For information, call (800) 554-4403.
26.
Copies can be obtained for $29.90. Call Linda Wilson at (312) 988-6666
or e-mail
lwilson3@staff.
abanet.org.
27. For
information about McCaffey antivirus software and a demonstration
program,
contact http://www.Mcafee.com
28. For
information, call BNA Consumer Services, (800) 372-1033.
29. For
information, call Jury Verdict Research, (800) 341-7874, ext. 307.
30.
John G. Iezzi, Reaping the Benefits of Keeping Time, TRIAL, Mar. 1997,
at 64.
31. See
Keith B. McLennan, Tips, SOLO AND SMALL FIRM PRACTICE SECTION
NEWS, Feb. 1997, at 3 (Pennsylvania Bar Association).
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