Answer FileConsumer Protection
How do I evaluate a consumer protection attorney in California?
Verify the license in the State Bar of California's public records, then probe fit: consumer practice is statute-specific, so ask how much of the caseload involves your statute — lemon law, credit reporting, debt collection — and how the fee works, since these statutes shift fees to the defendant when the consumer prevails.
The screening is specific. Confirm through the State Bar of California's public records that the attorney is licensed, active, and free of discipline — the practice of law requires it under Business and Professions Code section 6125. Then test subject-matter fit, because consumer law is a bundle of distinct statutes with different procedures: an office built on Song–Beverly lemon cases may rarely touch credit reporting or Rosenthal Act collection claims. Ask what share of the caseload involves your exact problem, whether cases are resolved by demand or filed suit, and who handles the file. The fee conversation is a substance test in itself: because statutes like Civil Code sections 1794 and 1780 award fees against a losing defendant, many offices charge no upfront fee in strong cases — and the attorney should explain clearly how costs work if the case fails, in the signed written agreement Business and Professions Code sections 6147 and 6148 require. Arrive with the paper: contracts, repair orders, collection letters, dispute correspondence.
Authority: Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6125
Legal information, not legal advice.
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