Sue
Before You File Anything
The decision to sue someone is easier to make than it is to unmake. Once a lawsuit is filed, the relationship with the other party changes permanently. The costs begin accumulating immediately. The time commitment extends across months or years. The outcome is uncertain regardless of how strong the case appears from the inside.
None of this means you should not sue. Sometimes suing is the only mechanism available to enforce a legitimate right, recover a genuine loss, or stop ongoing harm. But the decision deserves more deliberation than it usually receives, because the question is not just whether you have a valid legal claim — you may well have one — but whether pursuing it through the court system is the best available path to the outcome you actually want.
This skill helps you make that evaluation honestly before any filing, and navigate the process effectively if you decide to proceed.
Do You Have a Case
A legal claim requires more than being wronged. It requires a wrong that the law recognizes, evidence that the wrong occurred, a defendant who is legally responsible, and damages that can be quantified. Many situations that feel like clear injustices do not meet all four requirements. Many situations that seem complicated do.
The skill helps you evaluate your potential claim against these requirements. What legal theory applies to your situation — breach of contract, negligence, fraud, discrimination, defamation, property damage — and what each theory requires you to prove. What evidence you have and what evidence you would need that you may not have. Whether the defendant has the resources to pay a judgment if you win, because a judgment against someone with no assets is a piece of paper. Whether your damages are large enough to justify the cost of pursuing them.
This evaluation is not pessimism. It is the analysis that determines whether litigation is likely to produce a net positive outcome or a net negative one, and that information belongs at the beginning of the decision rather than the end of the process.
The Cost-Benefit of Litigation
Litigation is expensive in money, time, and psychological energy. Attorney fees in a contested civil matter can reach tens of thousands of dollars before trial. The process routinely takes one to three years from filing to resolution. The discovery process requires producing documents, answering written questions under oath, and sitting for depositions. The stress of active litigation affects relationships, work performance, and health in ways that are real and often underestimated.
Against these costs, the potential recovery needs to be honestly assessed. Not the best-case recovery, but the probability-weighted recovery — the range of possible outcomes multiplied by their likelihood, minus the costs of achieving them. A claim worth $50,000 that has a sixty percent chance of succeeding and will cost $25,000 in legal fees has an expected value of $5,000. The same claim settled before significant legal fees are incurred for $30,000 has a higher expected value than winning.
The skill helps you build this analysis before committing to a litigation path.
The Litigation Process
A lawsuit moves through a defined sequence of stages, each with its own requirements, deadlines, and strategic considerations.
Filing begins with a complaint that states the legal claims and the relief requested. Service delivers the complaint to the defendant, who then has a specified period to respond. The pleading stage establishes what is disputed and what is not. Discovery is the extended period of evidence exchange — documents, written questions, depositions — that produces the factual record the case will be decided on. Motions allow parties to ask the court to rule on legal questions before trial. Settlement negotiations occur throughout, most intensively as trial approaches. Trial resolves the remaining disputes if settlement is not reached. Appeal follows if the losing party has grounds to challenge the outcome.
Most cases settle before trial. Understanding why — and understanding what drives settlement timing and value — is as important as understanding the trial process itself.
Building Your Case
The strength of a lawsuit is determined by evidence, not by the righteousness of the position. Courts decide based on what can be proven, not on what is true. The party with better evidence, better organized, better presented, wins more often than the party with the stronger underlying position who cannot prove it.
The skill helps you identify, preserve, and organize the evidence that supports your claim. The documents that establish the agreement, the breach, the harm. The communications that show what each party knew and when. The witnesses who can testify to relevant facts. The expert opinions that may be required to establish causation or damages. The timeline that connects the defendant's conduct to your harm in a way a fact-finder can follow.
Evidence that is lost, destroyed, or disorganized is evidence that cannot help you. Building the evidentiary foundation of a case is work that begins the moment litigation becomes a possibility.
Settlement as Strategy
Most civil disputes settle before trial. Settlement is not failure — it is the resolution mechanism that works for the majority of cases, for good reasons. It provides certainty in an uncertain process. It ends the cost and distraction of litigation. It allows both parties to move on. It avoids the risk of a trial outcome that is worse than the settlement that was available.
The skill helps you approach settlement strategically rather than reactively. Understanding your best alternative to a negotiated settlement — what happens if you do not settle — and the other party's best alternative. The timing of settlement discussions and why offers made at different stages of litigation carry different signals. The difference between a settlement number that reflects realistic litigation economics and one that reflects wishful thinking about trial outcomes. The terms beyond money that sometimes matter as much as the dollar figure.
Small Claims as an Alternative
For disputes within the jurisdictional limit — typically $5,000 to $10,000 depending on the state — small claims court provides a faster, cheaper, and less procedurally complex alternative to civil court. Attorneys are often not permitted or not cost-effective. The process is designed to be navigable without legal training. The timeline from filing to hearing is typically weeks rather than years.
The skill covers small claims procedure completely for self-represented litigants: what claims qualify, how to file, how to serve the defendant, what to bring to the hearing, how to present your case to a judge who will ask the questions, and how to collect if you win.