Legal fees and attorney's fees!

The attorney's fee is usually borne by the client. Generally speaking, whoever asks a lawyer pays, because this is an entrustment contract, you and the lawyer are both parties to the contract and only bind you both. However, in some cases, if the parties to the contract have an agreement on the subject matter of attorney fees, or in some intellectual property cases such as trademark rights and patent rights, if the plaintiff asks the defendant to bear the attorney fees arising from the investigation and stop the infringement in the complaint, the court may decide that the attorney fees shall be borne by the losing party. According to the principle of freedom of contract, as long as both parties agree in the contract that the lawyer's fee shall be borne by the losing party, the lawsuit request about lawyer's fee will generally be supported in prosecution or arbitration. Therefore, when drawing up a contract, both parties to the contract can list the lawyer's fees as compensation for breach of contract, and even specify the way and standard of bearing the lawyer's fees in detail. When drafting such a breach of contract clause, we must pay special attention to clearly stating "lawyer's fees". The plaintiff must submit the entrustment contract signed with the law firm and the lawyer's fee invoice issued by the law firm as evidence to pay the lawyer's fee. But how much specific support depends on the judge's discretion. According to the nature of the case, the court will usually support the "reasonable" lawyer's fee, not the full fee.