Leading Florida Commercial Litigation Law Firm
The lawyers of Kurzban Kurzban Weinger Tetzeli and Pratt, P.A. have had outstanding success in large-scale litigation throughout the United States. In the past decades of practice, our attorneys have established many legal precedents and have won some of the largest settlements in the history of the United States. In one commercial litigation case, we secured a $1.2 million verdict against the trustees of a union trust fund for fraud in the management of the fund. Contact us to learn how we can help you.
Experienced Commercial Litigation Counsel
Our commercial litigation encompasses a wide variety of issues, including breach of contract, employment litigation, business torts and land disputes before judges in Federal and State courts and arbitration panels. Past successful cases have involved:
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Our attorneys have a mastery of the wide range of legal issues involved in business and use that knowledge to aggressively protect for our clients' interests. (Visit our verdicts & settlements and appellate decisions pages to learn more about some of our successes as litigation attorneys.) Unlike many larger law firms, our clients have full access to our lawyers; we never pass our clients on to paralegals and secretaries.
Contact Us
If you need an experienced team of legal professionals to advise and represent you in your complex civil litigation matter, contact us today for a free initial consultation. Kurzban Kurzban Weinger Tetzeli & Pratt P.A. serves Jacksonville and the Miami Florida area, including Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach, The Florida Keys, Dade County, Broward County, Palm Beach County and Monroe County.
PROFESSIONAL ETHICS OF THE FLORIDA BAR
OPINION 07-3January 16, 2009
A person seeking legal services who sends information unilaterally to a lawyer has no reasonable expectation of confidentiality regarding that information. A lawyer who receives information unilaterally from a person seeking legal services who is not a prospective client within Rule 4-1.18, has no conflict of interest if already representing or is later asked to represent an adversary, and may use or disclose the information. If the lawyer agrees to consider representing the person or discussed the possibility of representation with the person, the person is a prospective client under Rule 4-1.18, and the lawyer does owe a duty of confidentiality which may create a conflict of interest for the lawyer. Lawyers should post a statement on their websites that the lawyer does not intend to treat as confidential information sent to the lawyer via the website, and that such information could be used against the person by the lawyer in the future.





