last semester: purpose grades final drafts. overview of spring semester the appellate brief and moot...

20
Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts

Upload: roger-dixon

Post on 12-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Last Semester:PurposeGradesFinal Drafts

Page 2: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Overview ofSpring Semester

The Appellate Brief and

Moot Court

Page 3: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Moot Court Introduction

Moot court requires you to analyze, brief and argue a single appellate case.

Your two drafts of a brief on appeal will be followed by practice oral arguments, and will culminate in a final argument before a bench of your legal writing professor and third year moot court board members.

Page 4: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Moot Court PurposesThere are several purposes for moot court:

1) It is the first real experience of acting as an attorney, and as such you will manipulate the law to the facts in a way that you have not done so until now.

Page 5: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Moot Court Purposes

2) Moot court gives legal principles a specific context by way of the facts of your case and causes you to integrate both the procedural and substantive aspects of your case.

Page 6: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Moot Court Purposes

3) Finally moot court causes you to spend enough research time on a single legal issue to learn to appreciate the nuances of the law in a specified area and be able to argue the issue orally.

Page 7: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Moot Court Details

1) On Tuesday, January 21, you will be given the case which you will have to argue on appeal. You should read over the problem carefully.

2) You and a partner will have an opportunity to sign up as Appellants or Appellees.

3) In your brief, you will argue both issues on appeal but in your oral arguments, you will argue one issue and your partner will argue the other. Two other students will the other side of these issues.

Page 8: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

01/13/03 Receive Research Exam

01/21/03 Receive Appellate Problem

01/27/03 Research Exam Due

02/6/03 Source List and Outline Due

02/24/03 First Draft of Brief Due

03/13/03 First Drafts Returned

Law Week 03/27/03 Final Drafts Due

03/31/03 Practice Oral Arguments

Spring Break 04/14/03 Final Oral Rounds Begin

Page 9: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Odds and Ends Reading Material in the Bookstore

Research Classes and Exam (MLK day)

Lexis Training and Court Watching (Appellate Argument in March)

Internet site: http://bama.ua.edu/~dcpowell

Page 10: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Persuasive vs. Predictive Writing

Last semester we concentrated on predictive writing in the development of legal memoranda.

This semester we will concentrate on persuasive writing in the development of a court brief.

This semester you will write as an advocate of a legal position

Page 11: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Compare Memos with Briefs Memorandum Brief

Tone Professional/ Uses suggestive Objective word choices

Audience Supervising Judge deciding

attorney case

Purpose To inform To persuade

OrganizeAround rule Strongest first

Facts Orderly presentation Play up good facts

Page 12: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Adverse Facts and Authority

Memorandum Brief

Adverse Disclose and discuss Neutralize Facts adverse facts

highlight favorable

Adverse Explain and discuss Determine if you Authority must disclose. If

so, distinguish.

Use of law IRAC IRAC but shape cases and

counter-arguments more

in your favor.

Page 13: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Writing Legal Letters

Audience

Purpose To counsel To persuade To inform

Strategy

Persona Tone* Law & Facts Organization

Page 14: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Writing Legal Letters Opinion or Advice Letters

Letters to an Adversary

Letters to Third Parties

Transmittal/C.Y.A./Cover Letters

Page 15: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Adversary/Demand Letters

Typically demand letters are written by the plaintiff’s attorney when ?

at the very beginning of a dispute before a complaint has been filed.

Generally they are written to avoid the costs of brining a suit in low profile cases.

Or as a means of making reasonable attempts to settle.

Page 16: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

The Form of Demand Letters

Firm Letterhead Date Method of delivery (Certified/Return

Receipt) Recipient’s address block “Dear”* Body of Letter (single spaced) Closings* Enclosure CC:List any others receiving a copy

Page 17: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

The Body of Demand Letters

The parts an office memo may be helpful in remembering the form for a demand letter

The body of the letter starts with an introductory paragraph where you introduce

yourself and state the purpose of the letter. Stating the purpose of the letter is like the Question Presented section of the legal memo.

Next give a brief summary of the facts but don’t lock yourself in. This is like the Statement of Facts in the legal memo.

Page 18: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

The Body of Demand Letters

State your position and an explanation of your position. This is similar to the Legal Discussion or application section of the legal memo.

You may include case law with case discussions and citations if necessary. If so give the law before applying it to your facts- (consistent with IRAC)

Conclude with any warnings, limitations or explanations of the next step.

Page 19: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Demand Letter Assignment

1) Write a demand letter on an issue of your own addressed to a person of you own choosing.

OR2) Write a demand letter for a cousin Peter Miller who recently had problems with his new home (see hand-out).

This assignment must be typed and completed in 1 to 2 pages (single spaced). It is due in class Thursday, January 16, 2003.

Page 20: Last Semester: Purpose Grades Final Drafts. Overview of Spring Semester The Appellate Brief and Moot Court

Student Interviews

Cover Letters* and

Thank You Letters**