Grades 4-6: Due Process Freedoms
Seeking Facts to Solve Mysteries
by Dale Greenawald
Using role play techniques, students will distinguish between facts and opinions and
discuss why courts rely upon facts more than opinion. This exercise should help students
develop critical thinking skills. This exercise will take about 45 minutes.
Getting Started
- Brainstorm with the class what a fact is. List all of the responses and discuss them.
Develop an acceptable definition of what is a fact.
- Brainstorm with the class what an opinion is. List all of the responses and discuss
them. Develop an acceptable definition of opinion
- Have student volunteers assume the various roles and conduct a mock trial of James
Phillips v. the Radio Shop. After each person has testified, review the testimony,
distinguish between facts and opinion, and list each under a separate heading on the
board.
- After all of the testimony is given, review all of the facts. Review all of the opinions
and discuss how important and influential each may be. Discuss why facts are more reliable
than opinion. After examining the facts and opinions, discuss the legal issues raised and
what arguments might be presented for each.
- As either a class or in small groups discuss what you would decide and why. After the
class discusses how it would decide the case, the resource person can explain how a real
judge would probably decide the case and why.
Mock Trial: James Phillips v. the Radio Shop
Facts. In this case James Phillips purchased an inexpensive radio from the Radio Shop and
later attempted to exchange it because it did not work. The date of the sale was November
14; the return was made ten days later. The sales slip has the following language typed at
the bottom: "This product is fully guaranteed for five days from the date of the
purchase. If defective, return it in the original box for credit toward another
purchase."
The store refused to make the exchange and James brings this action in small claims
court. Evidence. James has (1) the sales slip for twenty-five dollars paid to the Radio
Shop and (2) the broken radio. He claims to have thrown away the box the radio originally
came in.
Witnesses
For the plaintiff: 1. James Phillips, 2. Ruby Phillips, James' sister.
For the defendant: 1. Al Jackson, the salesman, 2. Hattie Babcock, store manager.
Procedure
The judge should provide an opportunity for James to make his case and should give the
representatives of the store a chance to tell the court why the money should not be
returned. Both sides should call their witnesses.
At the end the judge should decide the case and provide reasons for the decision.
James Phillips: I went into the Radio Shop to buy a transistor radio. I looked
at a few different radios but the salesman talked me into buying the Super Electro Model
X-15. I paid him the twenty-five dollar price and he gave me the radio in a cardboard box.
When I got home to listen to the radio, I found that it didn't work. I went back to the
store to get my money back, but the salesman wouldn't return it. He said I should have
brought it back right away. I explained to him that my mother had been sick and I'd been
busy. Here's the broken radio and the receipt as proof. I want my money back!
Ruby Phillips: All I know is that when James got home the other day he was all
excited and wanted to show me something. He called me into the kitchen to show me his new
radio. I said, "Let's hear how it works." He turned it on and nothing came out
but static. He moved the dials around but couldn't get it to play. Was he ever mad! I told
him that he ought to take it back to the store and demand his money back.
Al Jackson: I sold the kid the radio, but as far as I know it worked OK. All the
table models worked well enough, so why shouldn't the one boxed and straight from the
factory? I'll bet what really happened is that he dropped the radio on his way home. Or
maybe he broke it during the ten days he had it. That's not my fault, is it?
Hattie Babcock: As Jackson said, all the other X-15's have worked fine. We've
never had a single complaint about them. We have a store policy not to make refunds unless
the merchandise is returned within five days in the box we sold it in. Also, the guarantee
on the radio says that the radio must be returned in the original box. That's the reason
Jackson didn't give the kid his money back. Otherwise, we'd have been more than happy to
give him credit toward a new purchase. After all, pleasing our customers is very important
to us. Personally, I agree with Jackson. The kid probably didn't bring back the box
because it was all messed up after he dropped it.
Dale Greenawald is an educator in Boulder, Colorado. This strategy first appeared in
the ABA magazine Update on Law-Related Education.
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