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CHAPTER 1: LEGAL WRITING CHAPTER 3: STAGES OF WRITING

The things that lawyers write to win others over to their point of Two Stages of Legal Writing
view. 1. Pre-work
a. This is the beginning of your writing assignment. Here you
are looking at the facts and evidence of the case. (The
CHAPTER 2: THE LEGAL DISPUTE materials would be raw, if you are dealing with a new case;
or, it could be a transcript of the testimonies of the
There is a legal dispute when one party complains of a violation of witnesses and the documentary exhibits, if it is a case that
his right (must be a legal right recognized by law) by another who, on the has undergone trial)
other hand, denies such a violation. This is akin to a cause of action in a civil b. Pre-work is a process.
suit c. 5 level of efforts that would make your pre-work adequate:
i. Establishing where the legal dispute lies in the case
Significance of knowing the legal dispute ii. Discovering its relevant facts
Since a legal dispute involves a violation of a right protected by law iii. Knowing the laws or rules that apply to it
or which violation the law punishes, nothing less than the resolution iv. Identifying the issue or issues that you would address
of such could properly end it. v. Roughing out the arguments that you would use
A legal dispute is at the heart of every case. 2. Write-up
Failure to identify and address the legal dispute would result in a. Transforming the sketches and outlines you produced during
running around circles, contributing nothing to its final termination. pre-work into a full draft of the paper required of you.
b. What completes the write-up stage
Legal Dispute and the Principal Issue i. Editing
The legal dispute, recast in the format of an issue, provides the ii. Rewriting
principal issue in every case.
Example: WON the tenant who fails to pay the monthly rents must Value of Pre-work
leave the apartment unit; WON the debtor unjustly refuses to pay his The need for pre-work is true for all kinds of presentations that are
debt under a promissory note that he issued in favor of the creditor; aimed to convince others to a certain point of view.
WON the accused defrauded the complainant by selling a fake Rolex Legal writing is a sort of presentation. A lawyers needs to be able to
watch to him for the price of a genuine one. make a convincing presentation of his case in the limited time that
he ab e h d h eade a e . He eed e-work to do
Importance of Principal Issue this.
Your cases will be decided for or against you base on that issue. A frequent excuse in not doing pre-work is lack of time. Lack of time
You judge the significance of every argument that you want to use is not a valid justification for dispensing with pre-work.
by its relevance to the principal issue. (Any argument not related to Submitting your work not based on pre-work, submitting it for the
the principal issue would be useless and a waste of time) sake of meeting a deadline means you do not care about its result.
This attitude is the reason behind many failed legal writings and
career.

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CHAPTER 4: GETTING AT THE FACTS OF THE CASE You can uses these strengths and weaknesses in developing your
arguments.
Facts of a Case
Do not leave the facts of the case until you have come to a complete Facts Set in Sequence
understanding of what the case is about from every angle. Put the events in the order of their occurrence to avoid confusion.
Spot the point where the story logically begins. Then, arrange after
Random Notes vs. Summary it the other events in the order of their occurrence.
Purely random notes do not give you a complete picture. They are Benefits of arranging the facts in proper order or sequence:
uncorrelated and are useful only for work done in one sitting. When o Facts are easier to understand. They follow a natural order
you set aside and return to it after a long duration, random notes or flow. The human mind is more at ease with such a manner
would have lost their correct meaning and you will have to start all of storytelling.
over again. Random notes can never be used as permanent catalogue o It is clear how each fact relates to or connects with others.
of the facts that you want to go back to repeatedly at various stages Sometimes when you isolate facts they are not significant.
of the proceedings in a case. Only when you view them along with related facts do some
Summary is a systematically prepared notes that adequately capture facts acquire significance.
the entire factual terrain of the case, with the important points o It is clear where the respective versions agree and disagree.
properly marked out. Summary serves as a detailed map in your You will get a balanced appreciation of each opposing claim.
hand, able to guide you in negotiating your way through the dispute o It prepares you for the work of writing up the facts of the
involved. case.
Another benefit is it enables you to create a compact index to the
Facts seen through the Issue facts of the case. You do not have re-read your voluminous materials
When handling a new case, you need to go over the materials very each time you want to be reminded of the important details of the
quickly and determine preliminarily the principal issue or issues case.
involved in the case. When you have an idea of what the principal
issue is, that is when you could make a good job of extracting the
relevant facts from your materials.
Take out the non-essential facts from your written materials.

Cluttered Facts
These are facts that contain much that is not connected to the
principal issue.

Relevant Facts Extracted


First, try to identify the legal dispute. Second, rewrite the legal
dispute in the format of an issue. Using the issue as guide, peel away
the facts that are not connected to the issue.
Sorting out the relevant facts from the irrelevant facts reveals some
of the strengths and weaknesses of the documents.

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CHAPTER 5: KNOWING THE APPLICABLE LAW OR RULE CHAPTER 6: GETTING INTO THE ISSUES

Sources of Law or Rule Pinpoint the specific issues that the conflicting claims of the parties
2 General Sources of Laws and Rules: present. Put them in writing.
o Statute law laws and rules enacted by duly constituted General rule: Legal dispute, recast in the format of an issue,
rule-making authorities provides the principal issue in every case.
o Case law decisions of courts and persons or agencies
performing judicial functions; legal precedents that when Issues in Multiple Legal Disputes
invariable affirmed and used, become part of the law itself If there are multiple legal disputes, there will be multiple principal
2 Steps suggested in locating the right law and legal precedents issues (especially true in civil cases). In these cases, you should
o Identify the general nature of the legal dispute involved address each of the principal issues that the legal disputes present.
o Having become familiar with the facts of the case, search for Occasionally, multiple legal disputes could converge into one
legal precedents that have more or less parallel facts. controlling issue. (Example in the book is WON, Solis or Gomez,
Nothing is new in this world. There is hardly any new case created the song. Spot the controlling issue, the resolution of which
that would have no similarity to a previous case that a court serves as the key to resolving multiple legal disputes.
has once decided. (Diligence is key)
You also have rules derive from the wisdom of the common Subordinate Controlling Issues
experience. Examples: The resolution of the principal issue in a case depends on how a
o E e he f e e ca e e a e subordinate issue raised in connection with it is resolved
mistakes but such innocent lapses do not necessarily affect Example: X bought facial cream called Maxim. She had allergies.
their credib . Maxim claims that there are small prints on the label of the cream
o I c e c c ce g a a e d e affec container that warned against possible allergy.
he c ed b fc a a e . o P c a I e: WON Ma a ed X gh be d
safe products
Facts Reexamined o Subordinate Controlling Issue: WON Maxim has the right to
After having discovered the laws or rules that apply to your case, market cosmetics that could cause harmful allergy to some,
review your summary of facts and add some to the pool of relevant provided that the product label discloses this risk.
facts and omit others who appear to be irrelevant to the applicable
laws, rules, and legal precedents. Relevant and Irrelevant Issues
Not all issues raised in a case merit discussion and resolution. Only
relevant issues matter. Only issues that when resolved determine the
outcome of the legal dispute are relevant.
o Example of relevant issue: WON Ronald and Julia are
sweethearts.
Irrelevant issues have no value in a case even if they are debated
and resolved since they are of no consequence to the outcome of the
legal dispute.
o Example of an irrelevant issue: WON Ronald is a good son
(Good and bad sons commit rape)
You have to distinguish between relevant and irrelevant issues.
Discussion of irrelevant issues would produce no advantage and may

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even weaken your position, while, dropping a relevant issue might be o Example: WON the accused killed the deceased in self-
f fe g ha e c e . defense
(3) Statement of the issue must be fair not slanted in favor of any
A List of All the Issues party
There is an issue when the contending parties do not agree on a o Not fair: Whether Ronald used force and intimidation in
given point. raping Julia (This already assumes that he raped her)
List all the issues the opposing claims of the parties present. Take (4) Statement of the issues must be comprehensive, leaving no
note of what the parties agree on relevant point outside its embrace.
o Comprehensive: WON Ronald raped Julia
Factual and Legal Issues (5) Statement of the issues must be clear and specific
An issue is factual when the contending parties cannot agree that a o Too ambiguous: WON the law is invalid
thing exists or has actually happened. o Clearer: WON the Bouncing Checks Law violates the
o E a e : WON he acc ed a d c e ed c ce constitutional right against being imprisoned for non-
phone; WON the traffic officer demanded a bribe; WON the payment of debt.
food served by the restaurant was spoiled (6) Statement of the issue must capture the gist or essence of the
An issue is legal when the contending parties assume a thing exists or specific violation of right that the defendant committed.
has actually happened but disagree on its legal significance or effect o Insufficient: WON the debtor is liable to the creditor
on their rights. o Sufficient: WON the debtor unjustly refused to pay his debt
o Examples: WON there is rape when the male organ merely under a promissory note that he issued in favor of the
touched the surface of the female organ, WON respondent creditor
committed grave misconduct in falsifying his timecard to o Insufficient: WON the respondent violated Section 3b of RA
collect overtime pay; WON cigarette companies are liable for 3019
deaths caused by smoking their products. o Sufficient: WON the respondent in issuing to the owner an
occupancy permit despite the lack of fire exits in the
Correct Statement of the Issues e b d g a e Sec 3b f RA 3019
(1) Every issue should be correctly phrased.
o We use WON as introductory words because by doing so, we Threshold Issues
automatically incorporate the opposing views. It makes for a Those that could slam the door to any judicial consideration of the
fair statement of that issue. case in its merits.
(2) Issues should be in terms of what the plaintiff claims the fact to Usually brought out by a motion to dismiss, motion to quash
be (WON Ronald was her suitor) Resolution of threshold issues takes precedence over the main legal
o Rationale: Plaintiff or the accuser in a case always bears the disputes.
burden of proving the affirmative of his or her claims o Example: WON the court has authority or jurisdiction to try
General rule: Issues to be tried and decided are best defined in and decide the rape case.
terms of those affirmative claims
o Example: WON the defendant was negligent in driving his
car; or, WON the defendant was careful in driving his car.
Exception: When the defendant, admits the facts constituting the
claim against him BUT raises a defense that exempts him from
liability under it.

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CHAPTER 7: ROUGHING OUT THE ARGUMENT Every sound legal argument is a combination of the right rule and the
right fact.
This is like drawing up your plans before actually constructing your o Rule statement: Jaywalking is punishable by law.
building. This would give you an overall picture of your presentation and o Case fact statement: X jaywalked.
provide purposes and direction to your writing. o Conclusion statement: X should be punished.
3 Kinds of Statements:
Balanced Presentation o The rule statement: the statement of a rule that applies to a
Structure of a balanced thesis presentation given fact or set of facts
o A clear statement of your thesis (where you stand on the o The case fact statement: statement of the fact of a
issue to be resolved particular case that opens up such case or closes it to the
o Arguments against your position but with an explanation that application of the rule
those arguments do not doom such position o The conclusion statement: conclusion that the rule applies or
o Arguments in favor of your position does not apply to the particular case
o Appeal to the good sense of the person or persons who will
resolve the issue The Key Fact in Rules
How do you guard yourself against the mindless approach that The e a e e Ja a g hab e b a has a fact
characterized many legal writings? c e h ch a a g
o ANSWER: Complete your pre-work. Plan and rough out a The fact component of the rule statement is the key fact. It is a key
balanced approach to your arguments before writing them fact because its presence in the case of X opens up such case to the
up. application of the rule.
Use a balanced sheet format: so you could see a broad picture of Absence of the key fact will make the rule statement inapplicable to
how they look when you are finished the case.
o Thesis statement at the top (represents the goal you set for
your arguments) The Case Fact
o Arguments against you on the left column, and how these It is the fact of the case which determines what rule will govern it.
arguments do not doom your case.
o Arguments in your favor on the right column. Mea i g f R e
o Closing statement underneath the arguments, an appeal to The key fact of the rule will determine the conclusion. Sources of
the good sense of the reader these rules:
o Constitutional provisions: just compensation in eminent
Anatomy of Legal Argument domain
An argument is a reason you offer to prove your thesis or o Statutory provisions: ignorance of the law excuses no one
proposition. o Rules of Court: an offer of compromised as an implied
o Example: If Ronald really raped Julio how come Mario who admission of guilt
ed ea b d d hea J a c Rule also includes case laws or legal precedents. They are the most
A great bulk of legal arguments are in the mold of CLASSIC convenient source of argument. In real life, no problem is new.
CATEGORICAL SYLLOGISM Rule also includes widely accepted truths that derive from logic,
o Major premise, minor premise, conclusion common sense, or even common experience.
o Arguing from common experience: People who lie cannot be
believed. X lied in his testimony. X cannot be believed. Roughed Out Arguments

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Arguments Against You: Vaginal lacerations usually found in rape o I beca e J a b he d ha e ed R a d f he
victims were found in Julia e J a h e e a
Arguments in Your Favor: As a virgin Julia could have lacerations Argument is baseless
during consented sex. The lacerations found in her do not necessarily o There is no fact to support their claim
indicate rape Argument is contrary to common experience
Appeal to Your Good Sense: It is but fair that testimony inconsistent o It goes against ordinary human experience. It is bizarre and
with common experience is not believed. cannot be believed.
Argument is inconsistent with undeniable facts
Creative Thinking o Facts that cannot lie defeat mere assertions
Let your subconscious mind take over the problem. Steps: Argument is inconsistent with a prior claim
o Be sure that your mind gets all the data and inputs about the o Persons who say one thing now and another thing later
case cannot be relied on to tell the truth
o Pose the problem to your mind
o Forget about the case. Let your subconscious mind do the Pre-work Reviewed
work. Go to sleep. Steps:
o Ascertain the legal dispute
Arguments That Build Up o Make an outline of the relevant facts
Favorable testimony comes from a credible witness o Identify the issues
o Testimonies of relatives are regarded as partisan. Those with o Rough out your argument
no bias and motive to testify falsely are excellent witnesses.
(Medico-legal expert, Mario the farm owner)
The a s version is inherently credible and consistent with
common experience
o Compatibility with common experience
All the elements or requisites of a valid claim or defense have been
proved
o Establishing all the elements of the crime of rape to warrant
conviction

Arguments That Destroy


Pointing out that the adverse party invoked the wrong rule or that
they failed to prove the case fact component of their argument.
Arguments raised is irrelevant
o Irrelevant when it does not help resolve the issue
o Ronald is irresponsible. Being irresponsible does not make a
man a rapist
Argument has little weight given the other considerations in the case
o Your opponent has made a valid argument but you hasten to
state that other considerations outweigh that argument
o R a d s failure to explain immediately

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CHAPTER 8: INTRODUCING THE ISSUES Simply mention the basic legal disputes that the
claims of the parties produced
Write-up stage: You cannot submit your outline-argument to the Lawyers often quote criminal information as part of
court. It will not make any sense to the judge. their statement of the case UNNECCESSARY unless
the allegations in the information are in issue.
Need for Introduction o Statement of the Facts
You cannot just hit your reader with you point of view regarding an Describes the nature of the action and the
issue without telling him the circumstances of the case that brought proceedings it had gone through
about the issue. Narrates the transaction or event that create the
Do not assume that the judge has the background facts. You cannot legal dispute and led to the filing of the suit
expect a judge to remember all the facts each time he reads a Do yourself and the court a favor of better
a ead g. understanding the issue and arguments by showing
o Attention span of human beings is limited the conflicting claims of the parties.
o Hearings are piecemeal. Judge hears the testimonies of the Issues are a product of disagreement. Only by fairly
various witnesses over some period of time. showing the conflicting claims of the parties can the
o Possibility that judge had gotten the facts wrong from past court or your reader truly understand the issues.
pleadings or during the hearing. You have to correct these Rules of Court, Rule 44, Section 13(d) requires
wrong impressions by recalling the facts parties to include their conflicting claims in their
o Justices of an appellate court need to be apprise of the facts respective statement of facts.
of the case because they did not hear the evidence. They Purpose is to merely provide a background
e he a e a e f he . TEST OF SUFFICIENCY: ability to enable the judge or
You also need to restate your understanding of facts with your client the reader to understand the issue that you want him
just to make sure that you have a shared understanding of the facts to resolve and the arguments that you adduce on
and to avoid misunderstanding. those issues WIH MINIMUM words.
If the parties have conflicting versions, extract the
Sufficiency of Introduction facts solely from the direct testimonies of the
Put only as much background facts as are needed for an witnesses from either side.
understanding of the issue that the parties present The direct testimonies of witnesses embody the
Standard of Sufficiency versions that the parties espouse.
o Statement of the Case But when the cross-examination have done some
The purpose of the Statement of the Case is to da age he e f e
provide a clear and concise statement of the nature witnesses, use these in the argument portion
of the action, a summary of the proceedings, any
challenged order or decision issued, and other Short Introductions
matters necessary to an understanding of the Introduction of incidental issues
controversy It is essential to give a brief background of the facts and the issue to
Keep it short. Do not include the service of enable the court to recall what the case is about and appreciate the
summons, the holding of the pre-trial conference, comment.
number of witnesses presented by either side, the Introduction in the reply must not repeat the elaborate introduction
allegations of the parties in the pleadings. made in the petition. It must be lean and terse serving only as a
reminder not a full repetition of what had been previously said

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CHAPTER 9: WRITING THE ARGUMENT o Mario did not here any outcry at the time of the alleged rape
One technique in presenting multiple points is to present them in
Second part of the Write up stage: Putting flesh and color to your numbered series
arguments and making your closing statement
Correct Conclusion Statement
Jump off Points Draw an inference that the fact of a particular case opens it up or
Start with an opening or a topic statement that signals or defines the closes it to the application of the rule that governs such case
direction of their argument. You can do this in two ways:
o By briefly stating the opponent's claim with the intention of Positioning Variation
defining the area that your argument will attempt to assail Conventional Sequence: rule, fact, conclusion
o By stating your thesis or proposition, then support it with the Y d a a ha e f he c e a e e ce. Y
argument that follows argument will make sense so long as you string along those three
essential statements together regardless of their position.
Three Statements of an Argument
A legal argument is made up of three statements: the rule Building Blocks of Argument
statement, the case fact statement, and the conclusion statement The building blocks of argument are the three essential statements

Persuasive Arguments Omitted Statement


The awareness of the three essential statements is important You could omit from your arguments one of its essential statements
because the effectiveness of your argument depends on how ably you WHEN that element is so evident that it goes without saying
write up each statement of your argument into a convincing part E a e: S e e ed ab he age. Y ca Fa eh d
Argument is all about convincing another to buy your point of view ca be be e ed a e a e e
Danger: Many lawyers and student presume that their rule is evident,
Convincing Rule Statement when in fact, they are misreading how their average readers think
I ead f W e d a ad be g a ed In case of doubt: include all three essential statements
e e, e e a ec c g a e e :
o I a e a f c age f a a c a d Closing Statement
testify that she has been raped. When she steps forward to Depart on a good note
confess what happened to her, she exposes herself to the Your closing argument should not appear to argue: Recall to your
humiliation of acknowledging that a man has ravished her reader the truths that underlie every good decision in identical cases
b d a d a ed he g .

Convincing Fact Statement


Build up your statement of the case fact when parties are unable to
agree whether a key fact is applicable to the facts of the case.
Several arguments can be clustered to bring home just one major
:J a e ca a dg e fc c
o Medico legal officer did not find any bruise on her body
o J a e ha he a ed h me alone is contrary to
common experience

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