Title: Legal Memo Writing
1 Legal MemoWriting
- Legal Research Writing II
- Mike Brigner, J.D.
2Different Purposes of Memos
- Trial Brief
- Post-trial Memo
- Persuasive Memo
- Advocacy Memo
- Argument
- 50 points (Writing only)
- Rough Draft Due
- 2nd Week of Quarter
- Final Draft Due 4th Week
- Information Memo
- Interoffice Memo
- Long Memo
- Objectivity
- 100 pts (Research and Writing required)
- Rough Drafts Memos Due end of Quarter (see
Master Calendar)
3Trial Brief
- Use your advocacy (argument) skills
- Trials over - now persuade the judge that your
client should prevail, based upon the proof (case
summary) the law (6-7 cases) - Re-read Text, Chap 17 and ALWD Citation Manual,
Chap 29 Parts 5 6 - Use all the tips your learned in R W I
- Use the caption you received in assignment
- Use citation style you received in assignment
- Use ONLY the 6 cases you received
4Interoffice Memorandum
- Back to objectivity skills
- Re-Read Text, Chap 16
- Read fact scenario (coming mid-term)
- Identify issue(s) and key words to research
- Start research with A.L.R. article.
- This will lead you to cases to find and read
- Format Interoffice Memo
- Correct citations required from ALWD
5Getting Started
- Read each case
- Outline relevant part of each case
- Put outline in order you want to discuss
- Prep heading in proper Memo Format
- Write
- Re-write, edit
- Re-write
6Advocacy Memo Format
- Use exactly the format given you in the
assignment - This is how court pleadings start
- The advocacy memo is a court pleading, a
memorandum to the court on an issue of law
7Info Memo Format
- To Mike Brigner, Supervising Attorney
- From Perceptive L. Paralegal
- Date December 6, 2003
- Re Potential liability of our client Clyde
Crankcase for driving a golf cart into his
neighbors swimming pool - ISSUE Do DUI laws apply when. . . .
8Q - S - F - A - CAdvocacy Memo
- Question -- What is legal issue/question?
- Short Answer One or two sentences summarizing
law answering Question - Facts -- Summary (mostly favoring our client)
- Argument -- Discuss EACH case, how it applies
to your facts, favors our client - Conclusion -- Briefly stated, why should the
court decide in our clients favor?
9Q - S - F - A - CInformation Memo
- Question -- What is legal issue/question?
- Short Answer -- One or two sentences summarizing
law answering Question - Facts -- Summary, favorable unfavorable
- Analysis -- Analyze EACH case facts, ruling
how it helps/hurts our clients position - Conclusion -- Briefly stated, what advice can
firm give client, per your research?
10Try This Order of Writing
- Question 1st What is Q? (Do this before any
reading, research, or writing!!!) - Facts 2nd Easiest
- Analysis/Argument is 3rd Do 1-2-page outline of
each case - Conclusion 4th Sums up all of A in 1 or 2
paragraphs - Short Answer 5th Boils C down to 1 or 2
sentences
11Q S F A C
- Q Question (Issue) Presented
- Write Q so it can be understood even by a reader
who doesnt know facts of the case - (Parties are described generally facts are
described specifically) - Do DUI laws apply when an individual is
operating a golf cart on private property? - NOT Is Mr. C legally liable for his action?
12Q S F A C
- Q Question (Issue) Presented
- Make question a readable length
- Use short concrete subject and active verb
- Avoid passive subjects that are nouns made out of
verbs or gerunds (made by adding ing) - NO Whether the failure to appear is contempt
- YES Does an attorney commit contempt when he
fails to appear at a court hearing? - NO Does refusing to stop constitute eluding?
- YES Does a driver elude police if he
refuses
13Q S F A C
- S Short Answer to Question
- Give a brief summary of how the law you have
found answers the question raised - Not just Yes or No. Give a summary of the
law, in a few sentences - Be conclusory. Give answer and reason w/o the
pros cons or strengths weaknesses
14Q S F A C
- S Short Answer to Question
- No discussions of authority in this section
- (QUESTION was Do DUI laws apply when an
individual is operating a golf cart on private
property?) EXAMPLE OF SHORT ANSWER - An individual can be charged with DUI for
driving a golf cart while intoxicated, because a
golf cart fits the legal definition of motor
vehicle in the statute. A person charged with
DUI cannot claim a defense that he was on private
property at the time because the statute applies
anywhere in the state, not just on public roads.
15Q S F A C
- F Facts
- Purpose of Facts section is to briefly state the
facts of our case and tell what happened - Omit irrelevant facts, conclusions, citations of
law, procedural matters - If you are asked for a memo on a legal issue only
(Does Ohio have a law that forbids cruelty to
wild animals?) you can omit the Facts section
16Q S F A C
- F Facts
- Use only relevant facts those that are used to
prove or disprove the legal conclusion - Every fact that is mentioned in other sections,
or gives necessary background information should
be included - Do not omit unfavorable facts. Those are as
important to a legal evaluation as favorable
facts are.
17Q S F A C
- F Facts
- Start with who the client is, what the client
wants, and what the problem is about - Then explain who the other parties are
- Give necessary descriptions
- Often chronologically is best approach
- Sometimes topically is best
- Group like facts. Dont be random.
18Q S F A C
- A Argument or Analysis
- Briefly give facts of FOUND case
- Then tell what that court did and WHY
- The WHY is the critical Legal Reasoning. This
IS The Law - Apply the law to the facts
- Analyze by applying the relevant legal reasoning
from the FOUND case to the facts of OUR case
19Q S F A C
- A Argument or Analysis
- Also examine the facts of the FOUND case
- to compare those facts with your facts,
- to examine the logic for that courts ruling
- The purpose is to determine whether the facts of
the FOUND case are - sufficiently similar to make that case and its
legal principle applicable to our case - OR sufficiently different to make the FOUND case
distinguishable from our case
20Q S F A C
- A Argument or Analysis
- For EVERY case discussed, before moving on to
next case, APPLY THE LAW - Reach a conclusion about the legal principle of
the FOUND case and predict how it will affect the
outcome of OUR case - EXAMPLE The courts ruling that a golf cart is
a motor vehicle under the DUI statute is
significant to the Crankcase situation, because.
. .
21Q S F A C
- A Argument or Analysis
- Within the A Section, try the FRA approach
- F Facts Briefly state facts of found case
- R Rule of Law What the court did concerning
the issue we seek, - and WHY, WHY, WHY
- A Apply How is our case decided if our judge
relies exclusively on this Rule of Law?
22Q S F A C
- C Conclusion
- Summarize here the Analysis apply the law
sections from all of your cases - Apply the controlling law to your problem
- Reach an overall conclusion about the controlling
legal principles from all your research, and
predict how they will affect the outcome of our
case - Clearly and accurately answer the Question
Presented
23Q S F A C
- C Conclusion
- Again, reach a conclusion. DONT SAY
- Its all up to the court.
- The court will have to decide. . .
- It depends on whether the jury believes. . .
- If the court can be persuaded that. . .
- These are just ways of not answering the Q
- Give your conclusion. What do you think the court
should do? (Adv) Will do? (Info)
24Rough Drafts
- TRIAL BRIEF Turn in Draft Sept 18
- I grade return Sept 20
- Final Draft due Sept 27
- Purpose is partly evaluation (to give you a grade
20), and partly assessment (to give you
direction guidance) - Ill suggest strengths, areas for improvement
- With my advice, you will need to reorganize
rewrite the draft into final memo - INFO MEMO Bring two (2) copies of your completed
memorandum to Rough Draft Meeting Nov 13
25Take a Break
26Rough Draft Meeting Rules
- Completed means completed typed
- Do not turn in or bring a stack of notes, index
cards, copies of cases, partial memo - An outline does NOT a rough draft
- Number all pages
- No complete rough draft, or no rough draft
meeting you lose 10 points start out with a
B - Be on time for your Info Memo appointment
27Strategies for Effective Writing
- Techniques to achieve the five hallmarks of
effective legal writing - Precision
- Clarity
- Readability
- Brevity
- Order
28Plain Language Initiative
- Writing should be reader-oriented, clearly
showing the author is writing to the customers of
the agencies, not to other government employees - Writing should use natural expressions, using
commonly known and used words and - Documents should be visually appealing.
29Guidelines for Plain English
- Use short sentences.
- Use definite, concrete, everyday language.
- Use the active voice rather than the passive
voice. - Use tables and lists to present complex
information. - Avoid legal and financial jargon and highly
technical business terms.
30Guidelines for Plain English
- Avoid multiple negatives.
- Avoid weak verbs, abstract terms, and superfluous
words. - Enhance readability through attractive design and
layout.
31Ten Pointers for Effective Brief Writing
- Know the rules of the court to which the brief
will be submitted. - Do more than summarize the cases.
- Write from the clients perspective.
- Avoid a rote or routine method of writing.
- Avoid string-citing unless there is a definite
need to do so. - Avoid sarcasm, humor, or irony.
32Ten Pointers for Effective Brief Writing
- Avoid the overuse of quotations.
- Keep the focus on your argument.
- Do not distort or overstate your position.
- Use prominent placement to emphasize the
strongest arguments.
33Reviewing and RevisingStage One
- Your initial review should be to ensure that the
writing accurately conveys all the information
needed. - Focus on content and organization.
34Reviewing and RevisingStage Two
- Focus on these four specific areas
- Sentence length
- Needless words and phrases
- Legalese
- Passive voice
35Techniques for Proofreading
- Place a ruler under each line as you read a
document. - Read the project backwards, from the last page to
the first page and from right to left. - Read the document aloud with a partner who has a
copy of the document. - Read sections of the project out of order.
- Devote extra attention to the parts of the
project that were prepared last.
36Check Your Voice
- One of the secrets of clear writing
- The reader must ALWAYS be able to tell who is
speaking EVERY sentence. - Your brief states The law says the defendant
goofed. - Who SAID that?
- The trial court?
- The appeals court?
- YOU?
37Cases Fit Where?
- You cases fit into your overall Q-S-F-A-C outline
at where? Analysis/Argument -
- MEMO
- Question
- Short Answer
- Facts
- Analysis Cases go here
- Conclusion
38Outlining Each Case for A
- Narrative paragraphs. Dont label these sections.
- 1. Start with Transition (more on this later)
- 2. FACTS Facts in FOUND case, briefly
- 3. RULE Question/Issue in FOUND case
- The What Why. What did court do? Why did it say
it did that? This is The Law the courts
reasoning the most important part of each case
outline - 4. ANALYSIS Finally, apply RULE from FOUND case
(courts reasoning) to OUR facts. Then give your
conclusion about how this case affects our
clients case.
39What is Correct Order of Cases?
Insert each 1-2 page outline in the A section
- May choose chronological
- Maybe group Ohio Other States
- Maybe group federal state cases
- Maybe group positive cases negative
- Recall Use Mandatory Persuasive
- Mandatory U.S. Sup Court 6th Cir App So Dist
of Ohio Fed Trial Courts - Persuasive Other Circuits Other Fed Trial Cts
- Mandatory Oh Sup Ct 2nd Dist Ct of Apps Montg
Co Trial Cts - Persuasive Other State Sup Cts Other Ohio App
Dists Other State App Cts Ohio Trial Cts Other
State Tr Cts
40Memorandum Requirements
- Final memo must be printed, double-spaced,
follow Quality Standards - Correct spelling grammar required
- Number the pages
- Use past tense for all but latest cases
- Citations must be in proper format
- For Advocacy Memo Use format style attached to
assignment - For Information Memo Use ALWD Manual
41 Writing Techniques
- A legal memorandum is a professional piece of
writing, so - Avoid slang
- Avoid contractions informal speech
- NO theyll or shed or shouldnt
- Use 3rd person pronouns, not 1st or 2nd
- He/she/it/they will act properly
- NOT I think or You can tell
42Avoid Legalese
- Dont use stilted terms like whereas, or
herein, or the said document - Dont use convoluted sentences
- One can conjure up multiple scenarios for
fulfillment of the clients several objectives. - INSTEAD The client can fulfill her objectives
in several ways.
43Avoid Legalese
- Use the active voice, not the passive voice
- The court held. . .
- NOT It was held by the court. . .
- Dont use empty phrases
- It is clear that. . . or the fact that. . .
44But,
- This doesnt mean you should avoid all legal
words - Legal words from statutes or court opinions are
sometimes essential, even though the public
wouldnt say it that way - Theft A person shall not knowingly exert
control over the property of another with the
purpose to deprive the owner thereof. - Avoid Cease desist unless law says that!
45 Effective Paragraphs
- A paragraph is a group of sentences developing a
dominant idea, usually beginning with a topic
sentence that summarizes that paragraphs basic
idea - A should have unity and coherence
- Unity Every sentence relates to topic
- Coherence Smooth and logical flow
46 Paragraphs Transitions
- See Text, page 507
- Transitions are the glue that holds your
argument/discussion together - They help reader move from one paragraph to
another, one idea to another - Shows reader how you are building your ideas
47 Transitions Can be 1 word
- And
- Also
- Moreover
- In other words
- Furthermore
- In addition
- Equally important
- However
- Next
- Finally
- Besides
- Similarly
- Another reason
- Likewise
- Although
- Because
48 Transitions Careful!
- But DONT just stick a transition word at
beginning of each paragraph! - Think about what you are saying
- One word may be OK, but a transition
phrase/sentence is probably much better - The most important transitions are the ones that
connect your cases.
49 Transition Purposes
- Raise a new point
- Although Poe sang, he also wrote poetry.
- Keep track of issues
- The second exception to that rule is when
- Show relationship between paragraphs
- Those excuses do not explain the defendants
other actions, such as fleeing the scene - Show connection with prior paragraph
- Because of that law, the court will require
evidence that our client burps quietly.
50 Legal MemoWriting
- Concluded Thank you
- Mike Brigner, J.D.
END OF CLASS (EVERY Class) Clean up classroom
log off computers check for personal property
computer disks make sure you have signed in.