Yeah, you can (just about) always fire your lawyer. The right to have the lawyer of your choosing -- or not -- is pretty fundamental. If they're working on a contingency ("I get X% of anything we recover"), you'll have to pay them a fair hourly rate for the work they've already done.
(Incidentally, this makes it pretty tough to hold lawyers to non-compete agreements, because their clients have a right to keep working with them even if they switch firms.)
Now, whether FunnyJunk likes or doesn't like the publicity this is bringing them is a separate question. You got me on that one.
(Incidentally, this makes it pretty tough to hold lawyers to non-compete agreements, because their clients have a right to keep working with them even if they switch firms.)
Now, whether FunnyJunk likes or doesn't like the publicity this is bringing them is a separate question. You got me on that one.