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Sep 11, 2024 | Season 1 Episode 21
Presented by
In this episode of "Celebrating Justice," trial lawyer Craig Murphy of Murphy & Murphy Law Offices shares his inspiring journey to becoming a successful trial lawyer despite having no initial connections to the legal world.
He recounts how his determination and strong underdog mentality set him on a path to law. Initially practicing family law and then insurance defense (working as the Major Case Unit Trial Attorney for the State of Nevada for the Travelers Insurance), Craig’s diverse experience on the opposing end gave him a comprehensive understanding on how to build a personal injury case. Craig recalls two of his most memorable cases, including a slip and fall case against Walmart, where meticulous, persistent documentation earned him the nickname “Mr. Supplement.” His other case involves a chef whose serious injuries from an accident nearly left him homeless, and Craig shares how he leveraged a chance incident on the defensive to win a substantial settlement for his client.
In his “Closing Argument,” Craig reflects on his firm’s motto: “Winning is no accident.” He believes that the key to success is putting in hard work and being willing to take time to build a solid foundation for a case, practicing relentless dedication to the client’s cause.
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[Theme Song Plays]
Craig Murphy: This part is, at least for me, kind of interesting because for some reason when I was very young, I just decided that I would be an attorney. And I have no idea how I decided that I was going to be an attorney, especially at a young age. No one in my family was an attorney. I didn’t know any attorneys. Didn’t have any relatives or friends that were attorneys. My dad was an electrician, but I just decided that for some reason I would be an attorney. One of the other things that kind of led me, at least I believe, to become an attorney is that I had sort of this underdog mentality that I was always for the underdog because when I grew up, I was always this little skinny puny kid. I didn’t have any talent. I was very uncoordinated. But back in the day, if you wanted to have friends and do things, you had to play sports. Being uncoordinated and a puny little kid really didn’t get me into being in the sport. So what I did is I practiced. I practiced for hours and hours and hours, not to be good, but just to be able to get out there on the field and hang with everybody. People would say, “He’s an overachiever” because I did things that they didn’t expect. But they didn’t know the hours and hours of practice that I did just to get out there. But that kind of was my mentality and it built my work ethic. After graduating from college, I went to work and I worked for almost 10 years. And I just finally got to the point where I sort of said to myself, “If I don’t go to law school and try to be an attorney, I don’t want to get into my adult life and face either myself or my kids and say, you know, ‘I always wanted to be an attorney, but I never tried to do it,’” and to have that disappointment. So I just decided if I went to law school and I didn’t like being an attorney, I could do anything. You know, back then we didn’t have Uber or Lyft. I could be a taxi driver, I could dig ditches, or I could be a lawyer. But if I was digging ditches or being a taxi driver and all of a sudden I decided I wanted to be a lawyer, there’d be no way to do it. Back then, I was either very naive or just really stupid because I just signed up for the LSAT and I took it. I didn’t do any prep course. I didn’t do any studying. I just went and took it. Today, I would know that if I was going to do that again, I would be taking courses and doing all this prep. But my grades were good enough that I got accepted into numerous law schools and eventually went to law school and became an attorney because really I just didn’t want to give up and have to admit someday that I didn’t do what was necessary to do what I thought I wanted to do.
Chad Sands: It wasn’t until like your early 30s that you decided, “I’m doing this and I’m going to law school.”
Chad Sands: Do you ever think back to those years or that moment where you made the jump into becoming a trial lawyer and in some alternate universe, what if you didn’t? And what if you stayed what you were doing, where you’d be at?
Craig Murphy: I haven’t thought that much because I really didn’t have any direction when I was working when I was young. But I’ll tell you, there was one instance that I think back on and I tell people about it all of the time is that the best job I ever had in my life was the worst job that I ever had. When I first went to college, my dad, again, an electrician, he told me, “You got to go into business. You got to study economics. You know, those are the people that make the money.” I went to college and I was taking accounting and calculus and economics, and I was horrible at math. That was not my thing. And I was basically flunking out of college and it was no big deal. And I got a job that first summer working in a bus factory as a United Auto Worker building school buses. I worked what was called the “third trick.” Basically, I went in at six or seven o ‘clock at night and got off at three o ‘clock in the morning. I was making really good money. I was making as much money back then just being a 19 year old kid as adults were making as a UAW worker. And I hated that job so bad that I decided I was going to go back to college and I wasn’t going to quit. And my dad was so thrilled. He was like, “Take whatever courses you want. I don’t care if it’s business. You just take whatever you want. You just gotta get that sheepskin.” That’s what he called it. And so I went back and I kind of took a liberal arts major, you know, I at least graduated from college. But the thing that I look back on is that that job, just, it wasn’t suited for me. And I found that going to college and getting out and working and eventually going to law school was much more suited to my temperament than being a manual laborer.
Chad Sands: You first got into law school and were an attorney, you worked on the defense side. Tell me a little bit about that.
Craig Murphy: I started off in Las Vegas. I went to work with a firm. You start off, you go in and you meet all of the partners and they say, “What do want to do?” I said, “I want to be a trial lawyer. I want to be in court.” That’s what I always thought a lawyer did, is they were in court. And they said, “That’s great. We got the perfect position for you. We’ve got two partners. And if you want to get into court, we will get you into court.” And so these two partners did primarily family law. So all of a sudden I was a family law lawyer and it was interesting. I was sworn in to the bar on a Friday. They had a swearing in ceremony. The next Monday morning, they sent me to court. So I got into court all of the time. It just was that family law after a while was not what I really wanted to do. The biggest problem that I ever had in my life back then, because I was single and I had three dogs, was I would get home and they had dug up all my sprinkler system in the backyard and built this big mud pool. So I’d have to wash them all off every day. And then, you know, I would get in and have all of these people’s marital problems and family problems. And just after a while, I was like, it was wearing me down. And I told the partners and they kind of gave me some other cases to do, but I’d built up my practice in that regard. So they either needed me to help them with their cases or I was getting cases coming in on my own. And finally, I thought that the only way to get out of it was I basically jumped ship and I went to work for an insurance defense firm and I worked with them for a number of years and kind of learned really the personal injury side of the practice from the insurance defense side. I really got a good insight of how they evaluate the cases, what they do to build them, just the whole practice. And eventually I went to work for the Travelers, was appointed as the major case unit trial attorney for the state of Nevada.
Chad Sands: So a lot of personal injury attorneys in Las Vegas and a lot of glamour and a lot of dazzle, right? I love Vegas to stand out. How do you stand out in Vegas? What makes you unique in that town?
Chad Sands: After those 35 years, Could you share a story about a case that really had an impact on you?
Chad Sands: Mr. Supplement.
Craig Murphy: Yeah, they can still call me Mr. Supplement all they want. But when you get the last laugh, justice was served for my client in that case. There’s one other that stands out and I represented this really nice guy. He had a very significant injury. The defense had offered $200,000 to him, and we rejected it because his medical bills were well over $300,000. If he were to accept that, he would be in the hole. Like I said, the guy was a super nice guy. He was a cook and a chef. He eventually got his dream job in this restaurant as the head chef, but his injuries were so bad that he ended up not being able to do the job and they terminated him. And he was basically homeless at the time that we went to trial. The defense attorney was convinced that they were gonna win this case in trial. He would tell me every time there would be a break, “You’re going down, you know, it’s like, it’s not going well for you.” One point he comes over and my client and I are sitting at the table during the break and he comes up and he says, “I want you to know that the carrier has said that they are still willing to pay that $200,000.” And he goes, “You know, you wanna take it.” And my client, I told him that at some point in time, they would probably come and offer us more money. I thought it would be more than the $200,000, but we decided if it wasn’t at a certain amount, we would tell him no. And this was clearly well below what we had said. So we turn it down. And so he turns to my client and he says, “I want you to know when we win this trial, we are going to garnish your wages and we’re going to get an award of our attorney’s fees and costs and we will go after you and blah, blah.” And I finally said, “Look, dude, don’t you ever talk to my client again. You have anything to say, you say it to me in private and we’ll say it out in the hall, but don’t ever talk to him again.” And one of the main things that they did is they tried to basically paint my client as the serial litigator. You know, they never come out and say it, but there’s all this innuendo that’s going on. During my client’s career as a cook and a chef, he had had three workers comp claims. One time he slipped and fell inside of a walk-in freezer. One time he had cut his finger or his hand and needed to get five stitches. And the other time he cut his finger. Each time he had to report it and they filled out a form and it was basically a work comp thing. Well, during the closing argument, the defense attorney had this big chart, this big fancy pants chart and he had this plastic cover over it that he had to put these clips on. And one of the clips, when he was putting it on, slipped somehow and it snipped his finger and he started bleeding. So he goes over to his trial bag and he puts a bandaid on it and comes back and he makes all this argument that basically my client shouldn’t be awarded anything and goes and has a seat. So my rebuttal, the first thing I got up, I was like, “Did you see that? Did you see that right there? He just went and put a bandaid on his finger. If my client, if he would have done that at his job, his job required him to report that. And that would have been another work comp claim. And they’re trying to make it right. You saw a work comp claim there right in front of you. And that’s just as serious as my client’s claims were.” So it was one of those perfect things that somehow, you know, I could defuse the whole thing. And the jury was sort of laughing about that. So I believe they were on our side and they came back with a verdict that was way more than the $200,000 that they offered. And the defense attorney was just shocked that he didn’t win. But the interesting thing was after the verdict was read, my client looks at me and he says, “What happened? What did they say?” He said, “My heart was beating so loud I couldn’t hear anything.” He goes, “Did we win?” Those are two that just kind of stand out in my mind because they were just interesting how different the defense looked at the case than the way that I did.
Chad Sands: It’s almost a scene from a movie. You couldn’t script it better where this defense attorney is on your ass all the time. And then in this moment where he thinks he’s going to get the win, you know, cuts himself and actually gives an opening. What a scene.
Craig Murphy: Well, one of the other things that he did is he thought that the jury wasn’t going to award anything. First, he said they shouldn’t award anything at all, but if they did, it should be around $16,000. First, I was talking about him cutting myself and I said, “And look at this chart.” I went up and I ripped it off of this board and I wound it up into this ball and I threw it into the trash can. And I basically said, “Look at what they’ve done.” It was basically, if you believe what they’ve told you in this case, then yes, just kick it like a soccer ball. You know, just give them the $16,000. But I said, “If you believe and the evidence absolutely proves what the injuries were and what the damages are, you have to award 100% of this because you can’t let them come in here and say all these things about this man and not compensate him fully and fairly.” They basically came back with almost exactly what we asked. Once it was over, the next couple of days were like, man, I wish I would have gotten that chart out and brought it home instead of throwing it away. I would have loved to have framed it and given it to my client. But what I did is I framed the jury verdict for it, and that was even better.
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Now here is this episode’s closing argument.
Narrator: You’ve been listening to “Celebrating Justice,” presented by CloudLex and the Trial Lawyers Journal. Remember, the stories don’t end here. Visit triallawye2stg.wpenginepowered.com to become part of our community and keep the conversation going. And for a deeper dive into the tools that empower personal injury law firms, visit www.cloudlex.com/tlj to learn more.