To sue a doctor for medical malpractice or a lawyer for legal malpractice, one must prove certain elements in order to have a successful case.

While this is a guide to some situations or events that need to occur before one can sue a doctor or lawyer, it is imperative to remember that each case should be evaluated on its own specific facts.

Consulting with a qualified medical or legal malpractice attorney will ensure that your claim has merit and may be successful in court or settlement negotiations.

 Medical or Legal Malpractice

Proving Medical Malpractice

Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider fails to adhere to the standard of care when providing treatment. Examples of medical malpractice include:

  • Wrongfully diagnosing a disease or condition
  • Failing to provide treatment
  • Unreasonable delay in treating a diagnosed condition
  • Failing to warn a patient of the known risks of a treatment.

To prove that medical malpractice occurred, the plaintiff, or individual bringing the case, must show that:

  • A physician-patient relationship existed. This means that the patient hired the doctor, and the doctor agreed to provide care.
  • The doctor was negligent. Being unhappy with your care is not negligence. It must be shown that a doctor caused harm in a way that a competent doctor, under the same circumstances, would not have.
  • The doctor’s negligence caused the injury. This is a “more likely than not standard” – that the doctor’s conduct more likely than not directly caused the injury.
  • The injury led to specific damages. These can be economic or non-economic – for instance, pain and suffering.

Proving Legal Malpractice

Legal malpractice is deemed to have occurred when a lawyer failed to use the ordinary skill and care that would be used by other lawyers in handling a similar case under similar circumstances.

For a legal malpractice case to exist, the plaintiff, or person bringing the case, must prove the following:

  • That the attorney owed the client a duty to act properly;
  • That the attorney was negligent in that duty;
  • That the negligence harmed the client;
  • And that the client suffered financial loss as a result of the negligence.

Simply losing a case is not grounds for a legal malpractice suit.

Jon Friedman, from the Law Offices of Jon Friedman, is experienced in handling medical malpractice and legal malpractice cases. If you, or a loved one, have been the victim of medical or legal malpractice, we welcome your call to our Portland area office at (503) 242-1440.

Get in Touch with Us


  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Copyright© 2025. Law Offices of Jon Friedman. | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Sitemap

https://www.jonathanmfriedman.com/