|
Originally published in Student
Lawyer magazine, May 2004 (Vol. 32, No. 9). All rights reserved.
Get Real About Research and Writing
Do you share the myths students often have about the role
of research and writing in legal practice? If so, you’ll want
to take your skills more seriously
by Mark Cooney
Mark Cooney (cooneym@cooley.edu)
is an assistant professor at Thomas M. Cooley Law School.
When I was a lawyer in private practice, I supervised student clerks
at my litigation firm and taught research and writing as an adjunct
professor. My conversations with students often turned to the role
of legal research and writing in the “real world” of
lawyering. Their comments often betrayed a number of common misunderstandings
about everyday practice
Students expressed these mistaken beliefs time and again, so it’s
a good bet you share at least some of them. If you leave these myths
unchecked, brace yourself for a rude awakening once you start working
at a firm.
To help you ease the transition from the classroom to the law
office, I’ve developed a list of the top 10 myths law students
believe about research and writing in the practice of law. Each
is followed by a more realistic perspective. If you reject these
myths, you’ll be well on your way to becoming a more valuable
clerk or associate at your firm.
Myth 1: You can choose a practice area where you won’t
need strong research and writing skills.
Despite what you’ve seen on TV and in movies, lawyering is
primarily researching the law and writing about it. Every area of
the law requires sound research and writing skills. Whether you’re
a tax lawyer, commercial litigator, corporate lawyer, criminal defense
lawyer, or trust specialist, you’ll spend hours on research.
Statutes, codes, and regulations change and are interpreted in new
opinions. Your clients will have questions that require you to understand
the current state of the law and to communicate it in writing.
Whether it’s opinion letters, memos, or briefs, you will
be writing. Even trial lawyers draft briefs of all kinds, including
mediation summaries, trial briefs, and briefs for dispositive motions
and motions in limine. Trial lawyers also draft contractual documents,
such as releases and settlement agreements. You can’t hide
from the fact that lawyers must know how to do legal research and
write about the law. You’ll be a better lawyer by working
on these skills throughout law school and after.
Myth 2: In legal writing classes, students learn only how
to write.
Legal writing classes teach more than just how to write. They
teach how to read, analyze, and form substantive legal arguments.
First-year research and writing classes teach students how to analyze
unabridged case opinions and statutes. Students also are introduced
to the rules of statutory construction and contract interpretation.
Advanced writing classes give new focus to the concepts of vagueness
and ambiguity.
Learning to spot ambiguity in a contract or to break down a statute
will translate into spotting legal arguments that may control the
outcome of future cases. For instance, criminal defense lawyers
always scrutinize the statutes and ordinances under which their
clients are charged to see if they truly apply and if any ambiguity
or excessive vagueness will enable their clients to avoid prosecution.
In a contract dispute or insurance coverage case, the litigation
often focuses on interpreting contractual language and making careless
drafters pay for their lack of clarity. Students in research and
writing classes learn how to spot and exploit poor writing to help
their future clients.
Myth 3: New lawyers impress their bosses the most with
oral advocacy skills.
It’s important for students to learn oral advocacy skills
in law school and to continue developing them in practice. But,
for new lawyers, good research and writing is the fastest and surest
way to impress supervisors. Most new associates spend the bulk of
their early years preparing memos and briefs. If that’s the
case, your value as an employee will hinge largely on the quality
of your research and written work.
What about those lucky new associates who are quickly sent to
motion calls, mediations, depositions, and the like? Their supervisors
are still likely to evaluate them primarily from their written work,
because that’s probably all their supervisors will ever see.
Bear in mind that supervising lawyers typically ask new associates
to cover court hearings and depositions for a reason--the supervisors
have scheduling conflicts and need to be elsewhere. Except in rare
cases, no supervising lawyer will watch a new associate present
an argument in court or cross-examine a deponent. But these same
supervisors will carefully read the memos and briefs they’ve
asked an associate to write for them. Thorough research reflected
in a polished memo or brief is the single best way for a new lawyer
to prove his or her mettle.
Myth 4: Research and writing doesn’t win cases--oral
advocacy does.
Students often believe that briefs are just “primers”
for judges, giving them background information on the case and the
issues before the decisive oral argument of a motion or appeal takes
place. Obviously, oral advocacy carries the day at trial, and law
students and lawyers should strive to develop good oral advocacy
skills. But when courts are presented with complex or dispositive
legal arguments at the trial or appellate level, oral argument usually
is far less important to the outcome than are the briefs and the
research that went into them.
It's common for state and federal trial judges to issue opinions
on dispositive motions without even hearing arguments. And more
and more appeals are being decided without any oral argument at
all. State appellate courts often use “summary” panels
to decide appeals without argument. Federal appellate courts often
issue memorandum opinions without hearing arguments. These no-argument
cases obviously are decided on the briefs alone.
What about the cases where the court hears arguments? Law students
are surprised to learn that judges' research clerks often prepare
memos recommending an outcome, or even draft opinions, before the
lawyers offer a single word of argument. Trial judges often admonish
lawyers to limit their arguments to points that aren’t already
briefed (or listen impatiently while lawyers orally rehash their
briefs) and then read prewritten opinions onto the record. In appeals
where arguments are allowed, there often is a 15-minute time limit.
Appellate judges often comment privately that oral arguments rarely
change the outcome of an appeal.
Myth 5: Your primary reader will always be a judge with
a good working knowledge of the area of law you’re writing
about.
Whether in a trial or appellate court, the first person to read
your brief is likely to be a research attorney who’s less
than three years removed from law school. This lawyer’s job
is to carefully evaluate the briefs, check the research, and recommend
the correct outcome--often in the form of a draft opinion. Don’t
presume the reader has any level of experience or expertise in the
area of the law you’re writing about. Because a relatively
inexperienced lawyer probably will play a large role in the court’s
decision, you must write briefs that clearly communicate the law,
with a step-by-step approach that yields a logical flow of analysis.
Therefore, always aim to educate your readers.
Adopt the same philosophy even if you’re confident that
only the judge or judges will read your brief. Even the most experienced
judges are required to be jacks-of-all-trades, often presiding over
diverse criminal, civil, and family law cases. For example, a fine
judge with decades of experience may never have presided over a
Fair Credit Reporting Act case. Or that judge may have gone five
years without seeing a Uniform Commercial Code case dealing with
the specific issue that controls your case. Effective lawyers concentrate
on educating even experienced judges with their briefs.
Myth 6: Using simple words is not lawyerly and means you’re
dumbing it down.
Have you ever heard anyone complain that a brief, statute, ordinance,
or contract was too easy to read and understand? Have you ever heard
anyone criticize a lawyer because he or she used plain language
in a brief? Of course not. If you avoid the inflated language and
poor habits so often associated with lawyers, no one will think
that a plumber broke into your law office, stole your letterhead,
and decided to write a brief on implied contractual indemnity. In
short, no one will think you’re a nonlawyer--or an unsophisticated
lawyer--simply because they easily understood what you wrote. In
fact, they’ll think you’re a good lawyer. You don’t
lose credibility by writing "Mr. Jones sued Mr. Smith"
instead of "Mr. Jones initiated a cause of action against Mr.
Smith."
Simple, uninflated language sounds confident. Legalese and inflated
language are the trappings of insecure writers, writers who feel
compelled to cry out to the world, "Believe me, I’m a
lawyer!"
Myth 7: It’s the reader’s fault if he or she
misunderstands what you wrote.
When you start your first job as a summer clerk or lawyer, your
bosses and co-workers will edit your work and suggest changes. You
may feel a sting of disappointment, take offense, silently reject
the criticism, or get defensive. You may try to explain to the reader
that what you wrote really was clear. Don’t.
Adopt the attitude that the customer is always right--and your
reader is your customer. Accept and embrace feedback at work.
Remember that if what you wrote was truly clear and seamless,
the reader wouldn’t have felt the urge to suggest a change.
A reader rarely will pick up the red pen unless something needs
attention. If your reader can’t follow what you’re saying,
you didn’t write it well enough--period. So even if you don’t
agree with a specific edit, you’re on notice that you need
to do something to clean up your document. And you’ll learn
from the feedback.
Even the world’s best writers have editors. Don’t
reject edits. Address the problem and learn from the feedback. And
when you’re editing your own writing on the job, always strive
to keep your future customer happy. After all, your reader will
be deciding your case or issuing your paycheck.
Myth 8: Grammar, style, organization, and other details
don’t matter because they’ll go unnoticed.
It’s true that readers won’t consciously notice that
you’ve paid careful attention to style and mechanics while
writing a legal document. No judge will read a brief and then announce
to her clerk, "Hey, I liked that active-voice phrasing and
those strong verbs!" But, if you’re diligent, the same
readers who don’t consciously notice your editorial decisions
will notice that your document was easy to read and understand.
And they’re likely to read your document more carefully because
it’s easy for them to do so. This will enhance your chances
of persuading your reader and winning your argument.
Myth 9: All the research tools and resources readily available
in law school will be readily available in practice.
Students are spoiled during law school: free Westlaw and Lexis,
and a library with every resource a lawyer could ever want. But
it’s often very different in practice.
Law students often are shocked when they learn the typical per-minute
charges for using Westlaw and Lexis. Not all firms subscribe to
these services. And, even if they do, not all clients will pay those
per-minute charges. For example, associates at insurance defense
firms may be subject to a client’s "litigation guidelines,"
which often prohibit using computer databases outright or require
special authorization to use them. And not all firms can afford,
or want to pay, the flat-rate plans that can cost four figures a
month and add substantially to a firm’s overhead. Add to this
the uneven supply of hard volumes found in most law office libraries,
and you’ll quickly realize you need to become much more resourceful
than you had to be in law school.
Myth 10: You won’t need to research the controlling
cases and statutory law.
Law students often get caught up in a canned-outline mentality.
Whether it’s studying for a first-year contracts exam or reviewing
for the bar exam, all the rules are served on a silver platter.
If you’re like many students, you’ve purchased commercial
outlines or found something from a student bar association outline
bank. Just memorize and comprehend these easy-to-digest rules and
all will be fine, right?
In practice, it rarely will be this easy. The general rules found
in outlines will be a given, and you’ll need to dig deeper.
New associates often have to hunt for cases on point, and at times
it will take some work to find them. You’ll encounter new
areas of law and new issues in familiar areas of law for which you’ll
find no brief or outline to guide you. And you’ll often need
to find cases that apply familiar rules in unique factual situations.
In these situations, the thoroughness of your research can mean
the difference between winning and losing a case.
When your state’s law is sparse on an issue, finding persuasive
case law from other states or instructive secondary authority can
give a judge who otherwise would be grasping at straws the confidence
to accept your position. This extra research can take time, and
it won’t be as easy as turning to a law school outline. But
it may make all the difference to your client.
Don’t be lulled into a false sense of security just because
the general rules of law always have been readily available to you
in outlines. Take your research and writing classes seriously. What
you learn in these classes will help you dig far deeper and excel
as a law clerk or new associate.
Return to top of page
Student
Lawyer home page
|