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I am an attorney. I represent clients for a living. That means I have to do this in order to earn money to feed my family. But if that were the only reason I did it, I would lead an empty life indeed.
Being an attorney is not merely my job. It is my vocation. From the Latin vocare, which means "to call or summon," a vocation is a calling, something we do because it fulfills a higher purpose. That is fundamentally different from a job, which as we understand it in modern society is something of a utilitarian venture. A job is something you do because you have to. A vocation is something you do because you believe doing it furthers the greater good.
My role in society is to help those who have been harmed, defend those who have been accused, and guide those who are mired in our often byzantine legal system, so that they can come out on the other side of that experience better off. Attorneys get a bad reputation in society. Personal injury attorney are often subjected to slurs like "ambulance chaser." Criminal defense attorneys are often accused of using legal technicalities to allow guilty criminals to continue to roam the streets unchecked. Neither of these is true. It is true that a very small number of personal injury attorneys are a detriment to society, bringing claims that lack merit to force settlements that are undeserved. It is also true that a very small number of criminal defense attorneys are a detriment to society, trying to find loopholes to ensure the guilty are not punished, and even blaming the innocent for being the victim of a crime. But neither of those things is true of the vast majority of us.
Imagine instead a world where, having been injured through the fault of another person, you are at the mercy of an insurance company, which has a profit motive to pay as little as possible for your injuries. Imagine your valid claims are denied, your medical treatment delayed, or your income benefits withheld simply because the insurance company wants to minimize its exposure. Now imagine that insurance company has a mechanism to avoid its own risk by setting its premiums in such a way to pass on the majority of that risk to its insureds. And in auto accident and worker's compensation cases, further imagine that people are actually required by law to purchase the very insurance product that provides you little risk and much control over what may be charged. Would it surprise you that this is actually the world we live in?
Or imagine a world where you have been accused of a crime. Perhaps you did something, but not what you are charged with. Or perhaps you did nothing wrong. Imagine the police have the right to put you in jail, take away your freedom, suspend your driving privileges, cause your insurance rates to go up, solely on the basis that the officer believes you committed a crime. I'd wager every person reading this has at least one story to tell about the cop that pulled you over and was not fair with you, accused you of things you didn't do, and cited you for crimes you did not commit. Imagine further that the Constitution provides you certain protections, but unlike those contained in a Miranda warning, they do not have to tell you about those protections. For example, imagine they can authoritatively ask permission to search your car, and if you acquiesce, even if you only do so because you are intimidated or they threaten to hold you up while obtaining a warrant, you cannot challenge the Constitutionality of the search. Or imagine the police can actually lie to you in order to get your confession to certain things, and then use those things against you (for example, perhaps they suggest your passenger has already told them you've been drinking). Would it surprise you to know that's also the world we live in?
I don't write these things to suggest the world is so unfair and we should alter it to ensure that people who are injured have no need of demonstrating their injuries or the cause of them, or that criminals cannot be prosecuted for crimes they actually commit. This is not a lament so much as an observation. We live in a world that is unfair. The government and large corporations and insurers have more money than you and I do, and they spend that money to achieve their preferred ends. I also do not mean demean insurers or those who work for them. Insurance agents, claims personnel and others are just doing their job. But make no mistake, they are not looking out for those who file claims. Their loyalty is to the company they work for. They are good people who represent one side in a dispute. The same is true of police and prosecutors. They are not out to get you for the most part, and while they make mistakes, they are also not actively trying to ruin the lives of people who are charged with crimes. In most cases, they would love nothing more than to see you return to society better off than you were when they pulled you over to begin with. They, too, have a vocation.
I do write it to suggest that the next time someone tells you how awful lawyers are, perhaps consider the good we do. The old joke is "everyone hates lawyers until they need one." Maybe as a society we could begin to work to soften the first part of that joke. Most of us are doing no more than fulfilling our calling. And I am grateful to be able to do it.
In the Parable of the Good Samaritan, a transcendent lesson is taught. Famously, and in my case perhaps ironically, the "teacher of the law" asked "who is my neighbor?" The lesson was abundantly clear. Three men found a man lying on the side of the road that day, a priest, a Levite and a Samaritan, and only one, the Samaritan, the enemy, the one who was at enmity with the man lying in the roadway, was the one who cared for his neighbor. The one who, in the words of the "teacher of the law" "showed mercy to him." This is what vocation is about, and why I consider myself blessed to have the one I do. Many of my clients come to me with negative views of lawyers. I hope I am able to serve them in such a way as to soften their heart. Many more come to me with problems that leave others with negative feelings about them. Maybe they have been charged with a DUI, or been injured at work and are being viewed as someone who is faking or exaggerating an injury for profit, or were in a car wreck and are trying to recover damages and viewed as someone who wants to profit from an injury. Whatever the case, I always treat my clients with compassion and empathy.
We are in this together. When you need me, even if you don't like people like me very much, or especially if others don't like you very much, I am here to help. It is part of my calling. And it is one I am extraordinarily fortunate to be able to fulfill.
Garner Law Office P.C. Proudly Serves The Following Areas and All of Metro Atlanta and West Georgia
Contact Information
Fax: (770) 693-1751
Office Hours
Dallas Office:
215 Main St Dallas, Georgia 30132-4261
Hiram Office (by appointment only):
5888 Wendy Bagwell Pkwy, Suite C, Hiram GA 30141