Solo and Small Firm
The Practitioner 2018, Volume 24, Issue 4
Content
- Beware the Pitfalls in Calculating California State Court Deadlines
- Coach's Corner: Four Steps to Take When People are Angry at You
- Executive Committee of the Solo and Small Firm Law Section 2018-2019
- Fighting Fifth Amendment Claims: Can a Receiver Obtain Business Records When a Fifth Amendment Right Against Self-Incrimination Is Asserted?
- Helping Clients Raise Community Capital Using a Direct Public Offering
- Letter From the Editor
- Lost In Translation: Non-English Fee Agreements
- Maximizing the Outcome and Experience in Mediation with Large Firms: Insights and tips for small firms and sole practitioners
- MCLE Article: Legal Entities and Real Property: Limiting Reassessment
- Table of Contents
- Letter From the Chair
Letter From the Chair
By Renee N. G. Stackhouse
Renee Stackhouse is a San Diego trial attorney and founder of Stackhouse, APC (formerly Galente Law, APC) who focuses on plaintiff’s personal injury, military, and criminal defense. She is Chair of the CLA Solo & Small Firm Section, Immediate Past President of California Women Lawyers, President of the CWL Foundaiton, and sits on the San Diego County Bar Association. She is faculty at the prestigious Gerry Spence Trial Lawyers College and the founder of MSheLE.com. She can be reached at Renee@StackhouseAPC.com.
BEING SOLO OR SMALL FIRM DOESN’T HAVE TO MEAN YOU’RE ALONE.
Ileft midsized law-firm life in 2011 and haven’t looked back. Well, … occasionally I longingly remember the endless supply closet and what it was like to have two paralegals, but other than those moments, I have thrived with the majority of my time in practice proudly combined with the title "business owner."