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The Lawyers's Lawyer
Article by James Romesko
Milwaukee Magazine
THE STATISTICS PROVE IT: More and more people need lawyers these
days. They're splitting from their spouses, getting scalded in
industrial accidents, going after shysters of all sorts and just
trying to see justice done.
In just one year, the number of cases in Milwaukee County Family
Court skyrocketed 24.4 percent - from 15,169 divorce, paternity
and custody cases in 1988 to 18,869 last year, according to
records in the Clerk of Courts Office.
Civil cases, too (which include large and small claims, personal
injury suits and garnishments), jumped 7 percent in Milwaukee
County last year - to 81,212 cases.
With these numbers, the chance of your needing an attorney
sometime in your life are very good. But where do you go for
good legal advice?
Milwaukee Magazine's second best lawyers survey (we did our
first in 1985) is designed to recognize legal talent and serve
as a guide for readers seeking an attorney. We recognize that
there are numerous excellent attorneys in the Yellow Pages who
don't appear on these pages; the following men and women were
most often cited for their exemplary performances.
David Erne, president of the Milwaukee Bar Association, suggests
that people in need of an attorney seek out other lawyers for
advice. To whom would that attorney go if he needed legal advice
outside his specialty?
Erne also suggests that people consult the Martindale-Hubbell
Law Directory, which rates lawyers on an A-B-C scale and offers
biographical sketches of attorneys. (The directory is available
at the Central Library.)
The Milwaukee Magazine survey results are based on a polling of
several hundred Milwaukee-area attorneys as well as numerous
follow-up interviews. As might be expected, we got many of the
same names that surfaced in our 1985 poll, but dozens of new
ones were brought to our attention - men and women who've gained
the respect of their peers in recent years.
PERSONAL INJURY
(FOR THE PLAINTIFF)
Several well-known attorneys received nearly the same number of
votes from their peers, although William Cannon (Cannon &
Dunphy) landed on top. A former partner with the Habush firm,
Cannon and his partner, Patrick Dunphy, recently made headlines
for the $17.2 million judgment they won for three Manitowoc burn
victims.
The 42 year old Cannon, whose first four years as a lawyer were
spent representing insurance companies in personal injury cases,
won the largest malpractice award against the United States in
1982 when he "uncovered and unraveled the mess" of a former Air
Force surgeon who came to Milwaukee and left a women in a coma
after he reversed the lines on a heart-lung machine. The case
was featured on 60 minutes.
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