Local lawyer bringing some appeal to appellate law
By Mary Worrell, Inside Business - Hampton Roads, May 29, 2006
“I’m going to jail on Thursday…just visiting,
of course,” said L. Steven Emmert of the Virginia Beach
law firm Sykes, Bourdon, Ahern and Levy.
It is with this easy-going humor and style that Emmert writes
analyses for his Web site www.virginia-appeals.com. Emmert created
the site so area lawyers could get quick updates on decisions
from the Supreme Court and appeals courts of Virginia that may
impact their cases.
“What I wanted to do was pay back the legal community
that has given me so much,” Emmert said. “I saw an
opportunity for lawyers to become heroes to their clients.”
Analyses of decisions are posted to the site within hours. A
lawyer can inform a client about an applicable case quickly,
which can show the client the lawyer is on top of things, Emmert
said.
Appellate law, said Emmert, is a tricky
business with an entirely different set of rules and time lines
from trial law. Many clients
don’t want to bring new lawyers into the case at the point
of appeal.
“A lot of businesses just go with the trial lawyers for
the appeal, because it’s a perceived cost-saving thing,” Emmert
said. “They don’t want to bring the appeal lawyer
up to speed on the case.”
But many trial lawyers have little to
no experience in the appeal process and the margin for error
at the appellate court level
in Virginia is very high, Emmert said. He points to the informal
one-strike rule in the Court of Appeals of Virginia that differs
from the three-strike rule in the Supreme Court of Virginia – a
no-tolerance policy. If a lawyer makes a procedural mistake in
a Virginia appellate court, he or she can be referred to the
Virginia State Bar for discipline.
This is just one of the facts Emmert
uses in his essays and analyses to stress the importance of
understanding the appeal
process to his colleagues. In a presentation he gives called “The
Ten Commandments of Appellate Law, New Testament Version,” Emmert
admonishes lawyers, “Thou shalt not dabble.”
Emmert said getting good at the appeal
process takes practice, but lawyers don’t get many opportunities
to practice.
“Don’t take it as a sideline – something you
can do seven or eight hours out of the year and be good at it,” Emmert
said. “It’s something you have to cultivate after
law school.”
Paul Samakow is a lawyer in Northern
Virginia who hired Emmert to handle the appeal of a big case.
Samakow said he’d never
had a case that needed to be appealed in the 25 years he has
been practicing, so he went looking for an experienced appellate
lawyer and Emmert’s name kept coming up.
“No one is prepared after law school – especially
not for the appeal process,” Samakow said. “There
are a lot of places you can falter, so why risk it? The stakes
are too high.”
Emmert said trial lawyers often make
the mistake in appellate courts of arguing like they’re
in a trial.
“If lawyers use the trial approach in appellate court,
it won’t work,” Emmert said. “You don’t
have witnesses to bail you out or make you look good. You have
to think differently.”
Emmert is quickly gaining notoriety
among lawyers for his Web site and appellate expertise, but
he recently caught the attention
of hockey fans while defending a player from the Norfolk Admirals
in a workers’ compensation case.
The player injured his shoulder in a
fight on the ice and sought workers’ compensation. Emmert successfully argued “fighting
is an integral part of hockey” and secured the claim for
the player.
Emmert is a self-proclaimed hockey fan and works as a freelance
writer in his spare time for the Web site www.rotowire.com.
He said he enjoys appellate law, because of the chance it gives
him to influence Virginia law.
“If I handle a trial, I can remedy only one injustice
at a time, but in an appeal I can remedy a thousand injustices,
because the decision becomes part of the legal doctrine,” Emmert
said. “There’s a thrill in knowing what I say will
matter to 7 million people.”
Many lawyers don’t see the splash
of appellate law, Emmert said, but he is trying to remedy that
by holding symposia and
seminars on the topic.
Sandra Rohrstaff is a lawyer from Fairfax
and vice president of the Virginia Trial Lawyers Association.
Rohrstaff said she
considers Emmert’s Web site a valuable resource.
“These laws are very different and very exact,” Rohrstaff
said. “Steve has the ability to make something unclear
clear.”
Rohrstaff also said that Emmert’s presentation “The
Top Ten Ways to Lose Your Appeal” attracted a full house
at a recent seminar, a sign that lawyers are eager to understand
the appeal process even if they only use it a couple times in
their careers.
The nonprofit organization Virginia Continuing Legal Education
holds numerous workshops and seminars each year, but discontinued
its seminar on appellate law due to a lack of demand, Emmert
said.
“People told me that I couldn’t just do appellate
law – that I’d starve,” Emmert said. “I’m
not going to listen to conventional wisdom.”
Interestingly, Emmert’s generosity with his knowledge
about appellate law hasn’t cost him anything and has only
added to his case load. In trying to help his colleagues better
understand a blurry line of the law, he in turn created a positive
reputation for himself.
Rather than say, “I’ll give you my advice, but you
have to pay,” Emmert said he gives it away.
“I don’t know what the next year will be,” he
said, “but at least I’m doing something I like.”
|