From the daily archives:

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Jun
9

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams.  Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or, on Facebook at Ferber Bar Review – Student Resource Group.

“Truly successful decision making relies on a balance between deliberate and instinctive thinking.”  Malcolm Gladwell: Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking

Four previous blog entries have outlined steps to create an instinctively good impression of your essay answer on the part of the grader.

Step One is to structure your topic headings in direct response to the call of the question.

Step Two is state your sub-headings articulately and responsively, following the linear flow of the question and looking for the “issues within issues” that essay questions often include.

Step Three is to write the applicable rules of law completely and precisely, whenever possible stating the rule verbatim.

Each method requires more of you than the last: the ability to structure your answer: the ability to identify the legal issues, the ability to articulate clearly the applicable rules of law. Creating a positive instinctive reaction on the part of your grader requires not only that you have these abilities but that you expertly depict them on the page.

Structuring your “discussion” – your analysis of why the facts in the question support the application of a particular rule of law, is the most difficult, but is a key to a superior grade.  It’s not only what you say – but how you say it – that can trigger a grader’s “Blink reaction.”

Remembering these techniques can help:

-           Be Persuasive.   Take a side!  Persuasiveness requires you to express unequivocal judgments about the facts.  For example, by labeling a fact “the most important,” or “the one that the court will most likely rely on,” you will make your conclusion clear. Being persuasive requires you to:

-           Be Confident. Confidence is not shown by the all-too-common construction:  “P will argue…. D will counter-argue.”  You can show greater mastery by constructing your sentence(s) to acknowledge the opposing argument this way. “D’s argument that [summarize argument] will be unsuccessful because….”

-           Make use of transitions.  Transitional words and phrases implicitly or explicitly summarize information that you have already presented and help the grader anticipate what you are about to say.

-           Be Succinct.  Make your sentences factually dense. Your grader knows thoroughly the contents of the question you are answering .  There is no need to quote the question.

Contrast the discussions of the answers, “1” and “2” that have been referred to throughout all previous entries on this topic.

Answer 1 discusses the application of the parol evidence this way:

Analysis:  Builder will further argue that the contract was Fully Integrated because the contract stated in relevant part, “This written contract is a complete and final statement of the agreement between the parties hereto.”  Developer will counter argue that an Oral Condition Precedent to the formation is a valid exception to the parol evidence rule.  However, Builder will argue that in pre contract negotiations when Developer told him he would not be able to proceed with the contract he affirmed this statement by acknowledging that he understood such a condition to be implicit in section 14(d).

Answer 2 discusses the application of the parol evidence rule this way:

Here, the agreement between Developer and Builder has been reduced to writing. … [A] court will look at the contract and determine whether the parties likely intended it to be the final and/or complete expression of the agreement given the detailed or specific nature of the terms. In this case, the contract provides for the construction of 10 single family homes and has several sections … describing aspects of the venture. Importantly, the writing contains a merger clause …Courts typically find that the parol evidence bar to extrinsic evidence presumptively applies where the writing contains a merger clause.  Accordingly, a court will likely find that the parol evidence rule applies.

Answer 1 is not persuasive. It equivocates. It conveys very little information that is useful in making a grading decision. It portrays the applicant who wrote it in a bad light. What do you think of the answer?

Answer 2 is powerful and persuasive.  By reciting what “a court will look to..” the answer presages what facts will be most important to the “ultimate decision maker,” (who can also be described as “the jury,” “the finder of fact” etc.).  The applicant then recites those facts succinctly.  “Importantly;” “Courts typical find that…” and “a court will likely find” all confer persuasiveness on the applicants use of the facts.   What do you think of the answer?

Copyright 2010 Adam Ferber and www.ferberbarreview.com.  Reprinted by permission.

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Jun
9

A woman, while driving, was stopped by a police officer because her inspection sticker had expired. While the officer was writing a civil citation for this offense, which carried a twenty-five dollar fine, he used the computer in his police car to run a check on the woman. Computer records showed a default warrant out for the woman’s arrest because she failed to respond to a speeding complaint six months earlier. The police officer ordered the woman out of the car and arrested her. The officer found a small packet of cocaine on her person. When he searched the car after he arrested her, he found marijuana cigarettes in the glove compartment and charged her with illegal possession of cocaine and marijuana. The default warrant which appeared on the police officer’s computer search occurred because the woman’s original speeding complaint was sent to the wrong address by the court. When properly notified to appear on the speeding complaint, the woman appeared in court, pleaded guilty, paid a fine and the arrest warrant was ordered to be expunged by the judge. The clerk who had the duty to carry out the order to expunge the warrant from the computer, negligently failed to do so, and the woman’s arrest by the police officer was invalid.

The woman brought a pre-trial motion to suppress the cocaine found on the woman’s person and the marijuana found in the woman’s car.

How should the judge rule on the motion?

A. Suppress the cocaine, but not the marijuana.

B. Suppress the marijuana, but not the cocaine.

C. Suppress both the marijuana and the cocaine.

D. Suppress neither the marijuana nor the cocaine.

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