From the monthly archives:

July 2010

Jul
26

Congress passed a bill prohibiting the president from granting a pardon to any person who had not served at least one-third of the sentence imposed by the court which convicted that person. The President vetoed the bill claiming that it was unconstitutional. Nevertheless, Congress passed it over the President’s veto by a two-thirds vote of each house.

This act of Congress is:

A. Constitutional, because it was enacted over the President’s veto by a two-thirds vote of each house.

B. Constitutional, because it is a necessary and proper means of carrying out the powers of Congress.

C. Unconstitutional, because it interferes with the plenary power of the President to grant pardons.

D. Unconstitutional, because a presidential veto based upon constitutional grounds may be overridden only with the concurrence of three-fourths of the state legislatures.

{ 9 comments }

Jul
25

In a criminal prosecution for a robbery which took place on June 1, the defendant took the stand and denied that he had committed the crime. On cross-examination, the defendant was asked if he had assaulted a police officer on December 1.

Upon objection, the trial judge should rule the question:

A. Inadmissible, because prior bad acts can only be proven by extrinsic evidence.

B. Inadmissible, because it is not relevant on the issue of the defendant’s credibility.

C. Admissible, because the prosecution may inquire into specific instances of conduct on cross-examination.

D. Admissible, because it lays the foundation which is necessary before the act may be proven by extrinsic evidence.

{ 8 comments }

Jul
25

A driver takes his new sedan on a test drive. The new car features a car phone that records telephone conversations at the driver’s option. During the test drive, the sedan driver places and records a call to his friend, using his new car phone. As the sedan driver rounds a curve on the road, he remarks to his friend, “There is a large truck with license plate number 789123H which is about to force a jeep off the road.” Subsequently, the jeep was forced off the road by the truck, and the jeep driver was injured. The truck continued on its way without stopping.

The sedan driver assisted at the accident scene and permitted the investigating police officer to listen to the recorded telephone conversation and to make a copy of it on her portable tape recorder. The jeep driver traced the owner of the truck through the license plate number and brought suit against the truck driver for her injuries.

At the trial, the sedan driver is called as a witness by the plaintiff (the jeep driver). Although he testifies generally about the accident, he cannot remember the license plate number of the car.

The plaintiff then calls the officer, who establishes the circumstances under which she recorded the sedan driver’s conversation with his friend and then proposes to play for the jury that portion of the recording dealing with the license plate number.

The trial judge should rule that the playing of the recording is:

A. Admissible only as a past recollection recorded.

B. Admissible only as a present sense impression.

C. Admissible either as a present sense impression or a past recollection recorded.

D. Inadmissible, unless the original tape from the sedan is offered into evidence.

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July 2010 MBE Question of the Day #56

Natural gas is graded on the number of units of energy it produces upon combustion on a scale of one to 100. The higher the rating, the more heat is produced by a given quantity of gas. On November 15, a gas company agreed to sell 1,000,000 cubic feet of liquefied natural gas with a [...]

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July 2010 MBE Question of the Day #54

A fertilizer company had used bagged manure for many years to supplement the compost it prepared at its warehouse site in the suburbs for sale in its statewide retail outlets. Eventually, though, it became apparent to the fertilizer company that using bagged manure was too expensive and inefficient. Therefore, they stopped using bagged manure and [...]

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July 2010 MBE Question of the Day #53

An investor dies survived by her husband, two daughters, and two grandchildren (the children of her deceased son). She was the sole record owner of a piece of property located in a jurisdiction which has abolished the doctrine of the destructibility of contingent remainders. Her will, which was executed when all three of her children [...]

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Congratulations to Our 12th T-Shirt Winner!

Congratulations to Robert Bradley, the twelfth winner of our free t-shirt contest!  Robert won the random drawing for the week of July 16th.  Our sincere thanks goes out to all our MicroMash alumni out there who have taken time to leave praise and constructive feedback about our bar review program.  We love hearing from you! [...]

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July 2010 MBE Question of the Day #50

Company designed and built a processing plant for the manufacture of an explosive chemical. Engineer was retained by Company to design a filter system for the processing plant. She prepared an application for a permit to build the plant’s filter system and submitted it to the state’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). As required by [...]

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July 2010 MBE Question of the Day #48

A particular piece of land is described in a deed as being “that parcel of land being 80 acres which is the north half of the northwest quarter of Section 5″ with a reference to the geographical survey. There is only one median line and one base line in the relevant area. This description is: [...]

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July 2010 MBE Question of the Day #47

Young is an assistant professor at a state university law school. He has a one-year nonrenewing teaching contract. After an assistant professor has taught for five years pursuant to such one-year contracts, the policy of the university is to grant tenure. After three years, the university, without holding a hearing on the matter, decided not [...]

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