A View from Inside the Appellate Court
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 at 2:24PM
Donna Bader in Blogroll
I recently attended a seminar presented by two attorneys from our local Court of Appeal. So, here's the inside scoop:
- Statement of Issues: The attorneys said that in over half the briefs they received, it wasn't clear what the appellant was appealing. They asked, "Are you appealing or just complaining?"
- Introductions: Only a page or two. Give them a clue and remember they don't know the facts.
- Edit, edit, edit.
- Citing cases that are against your position can enhance your credibility.
- They really do check our citations.
- Wondering whether to include citations to the record in the argument, rather than just the Statement of Facts? Yes, please do.
- Let a non-attorney read your draft. If he or he can't understand it, then edit some more.
- Avoid words such as "clearly," "uncontroverted," and "certainly."
- Don't bunch up your cites to the record at the end of the paragraph; add them in sentence by sentence.
- Don't bury one point in another.
- Credibility above all else.
- The attorneys don't have a computer record to conduct searches so make it easy for them to find the citations.
- Thinking of filing an e-brief? The court will love you. It's hard to miscite the record when it is available at the click of a button.
- Don't argue in your Statement of Facts.
- Support your points and make sure they match your Table of Contents.
- Don't sandbag your opponent by bringing up new matter in your Closing Brief, so they can't respond to those points.
- Prioritize issues according to strength and based on the stronger standard of review.
- Pick your issues carefully and eliminate unnecessary facts.
Article originally appeared on AN APPEAL TO REASON (http://www.anappealtoreason.com/).
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