- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26363
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=10971)
The correct answer choice is (B)
This Specific Reference/Purpose question asks us to identify what the author means by the remark that LRCWA’s restriction involving uplift agreements is intended to prevent lawyers from “gaining disproportionately from awards of damages” (lines 18-19). Such questions almost always require a more thorough understanding of the context in which the quoted reference appears, and their answers should generally be prephrased. The remark refers to the fact that lawyers would gain “disproportionately” if their fees were contingent on the amount of damages awarded in the case: their compensation would be too high in proportion to the services they gave. This prephrase agrees with answer choice (B), which is correct.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because the phrase in question refers to a proportional benefit, not to the actual amount of the benefit. The author does not claim that lawyers would receive more money than is justified by the value of the services they rendered. If their services are valued in relation to the damages received in the case, then their compensation would be consistent with that valuation.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. See prephrase above.
Answer choice (C): The author does not comment on what payment the client would consider to be fair.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice describes the nature of contingency fees in general: lawyers make more if the case is successful than if it is unsuccessful. This, by itself, is not what the LRCWA is trying to prevent. After all, uplift agreements work in the same way: clients pay the lawyer’s normal fee plus an agreed-upon additional percentage of that fee. The “disproportionate” gain here refers specifically to contingency-fee agreements where lawyers’ compensation is based on a percentage of the damages awarded in the case.
Answer choice (E): The passage provides no information to help us determine what proportion of the damages the jury intended for the lawyers to receive.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=10971)
The correct answer choice is (B)
This Specific Reference/Purpose question asks us to identify what the author means by the remark that LRCWA’s restriction involving uplift agreements is intended to prevent lawyers from “gaining disproportionately from awards of damages” (lines 18-19). Such questions almost always require a more thorough understanding of the context in which the quoted reference appears, and their answers should generally be prephrased. The remark refers to the fact that lawyers would gain “disproportionately” if their fees were contingent on the amount of damages awarded in the case: their compensation would be too high in proportion to the services they gave. This prephrase agrees with answer choice (B), which is correct.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because the phrase in question refers to a proportional benefit, not to the actual amount of the benefit. The author does not claim that lawyers would receive more money than is justified by the value of the services they rendered. If their services are valued in relation to the damages received in the case, then their compensation would be consistent with that valuation.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. See prephrase above.
Answer choice (C): The author does not comment on what payment the client would consider to be fair.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice describes the nature of contingency fees in general: lawyers make more if the case is successful than if it is unsuccessful. This, by itself, is not what the LRCWA is trying to prevent. After all, uplift agreements work in the same way: clients pay the lawyer’s normal fee plus an agreed-upon additional percentage of that fee. The “disproportionate” gain here refers specifically to contingency-fee agreements where lawyers’ compensation is based on a percentage of the damages awarded in the case.
Answer choice (E): The passage provides no information to help us determine what proportion of the damages the jury intended for the lawyers to receive.