Do I need an attorney?
I have a 90 year-old friend of nearly 50 years, who recently took out a large loan to refurbish her house. One of the things that needs replacing/repaired is her heating and cooling system. Since I had my home remodeled a few years ago, she asked me to recommend someone to perform that service. I gave her the name of the company who replaced our old heating/cooling unit, who had always given excellent service. Evidently she hired them, and they did the work she asked them to do which included her request that it be as inexpensively as possible. She called yesterday, and screamed that she was going to call her state representative, the Better Business Bureau, and her lawyer to sue the company because they didn't replace her duct work, which would have been an added expense. She is also going to sue me for recommending them. I told her to read the contract she had signed, and see what it said. (It said she didn't want her duct work replaced due to added cost). She said that didn't matter, because they "took advantage of an old woman". She told me to expect a letter from her attorney telling me she is suing me for recommending "those crooks". Knowing her past behaviors toward businesses, I'm quite sure she is deadly serious. My question is, do I need to hire an attorney to defend myself, or will the contract she signed be sufficient evidence of her ineptness? Her attorney is known to be an "ambulance chaser" type who will file frivolous lawsuits to get publicity.