Legal Intake Glossary
Essential terms for personal injury firms navigating AI-powered client intake, case management, and digital form automation.
A
- AI Form Generator
- Software that uses AI to auto-populate legal forms based on client-provided information, reducing manual data entry and intake time.
- Authorization to Release
- Signed consent form permitting medical providers or employers to release records to the law firm for case use.
B
- Bad Faith Claim
- Legal action against an insurer that unreasonably denied or delayed payment of a valid claim, potentially exposing them to full damages plus penalties.
C
- Client Intake
- The process of collecting initial information from a prospective client, verifying case viability, and establishing the attorney-client relationship.
- Contingency Fee
- Payment structure where the attorney receives a percentage of the recovery only if the case wins or settles, with no fee if there's no payout.
- Causation
- The causal link between a defendant's breach of duty and the client's injuries, requiring both cause-in-fact and proximate cause.
- Case Management
- Organized system for tracking case deadlines, documents, communications, and tasks throughout the litigation process.
- Conflicts Check
- Search for prior or current relationships between the firm and parties involved that might create ethical disqualification of representation.
- Comparative Negligence
- Legal principle reducing recovery by the percentage the plaintiff contributed to their own injuries through fault or carelessness.
D
- Demand Letter
- Formal written request sent to an insurer outlining the client's injuries, liability evidence, and requested settlement amount before litigation.
- Damages
- Monetary compensation sought for losses including medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and property damage.
- Document Automation
- Software that automatically populates template documents with client data, reducing manual typing and formatting errors.
E
- Evidence Preservation
- Steps to maintain physical and digital evidence integrity from the incident through case resolution, including photos, surveillance, and records.
F
- Fee Disclosure
- Ethical requirement to clearly explain attorney fees, costs, and payment structures to clients before and during representation.
H
- HIPAA Compliance
- Federal regulations governing how protected health information is handled, requiring secure storage, transmission, and access controls.
I
- Insurance Adjuster
- Insurance company representative who investigates claims, evaluates liability and damages, and makes settlement recommendations or offers.
- Intake Forms
- Structured documents collecting client biographical data, accident details, injuries, medical treatment, and insurance information at case onset.
L
- Liability
- Legal responsibility for causing harm. In PI cases, establishing liability requires proof the defendant breached a duty of care.
- Lien
- Legal claim against settlement proceeds by a creditor (medical provider, insurer, government) who provided services and hasn't been fully paid.
- Letter of Protection
- Agreement between attorney and medical provider to defer payment until case settlement, with the provider's fees paid from the recovery.
- Litigation Hold
- Directive to preserve all potentially relevant documents and data when litigation is reasonably anticipated, avoiding spoliation penalties.
M
- Medical Records Request
- Formal request for a client's health records from providers, essential for documenting injuries and building the damages case.
- Mediation
- Voluntary settlement conference with a neutral third-party mediator helping both sides find common ground and resolve the dispute.
P
- Personal Injury Law
- Civil law covering compensation for bodily harm caused by negligence or intentional wrongdoing, including auto accidents, medical malpractice, and premises liability.
- Policy Limits
- Maximum amount an insurance company will pay under a given policy, often determining the upper bound of recoverable settlement.
- Pre-Litigation
- The settlement-focused phase before a lawsuit is filed, where attorneys negotiate with insurers and gather evidence to demand fair compensation.
R
- Retainer Agreement
- The signed contract establishing the attorney-client relationship, outlining fee structures, scope of representation, and mutual obligations.
S
- Statute of Limitations
- Legal deadline by which a lawsuit must be filed. Missing this deadline typically bars the claim permanently regardless of its merit.
- Settlement Negotiation
- Back-and-forth discussions between plaintiff and defendant/insurer to reach a mutually acceptable resolution without trial.
- Scope of Representation
- The defined boundaries of legal services the attorney agrees to provide, specified in the retainer agreement to manage expectations.
- Settlement Statement
- Itemized accounting of gross settlement funds showing attorney fees, costs, liens, and net client recovery amount.
U
- Umbrella Coverage
- Additional liability insurance layer above auto and home policies, providing extra protection for high-value claims beyond standard policy limits.