法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng)歡迎您訪問(wèn)!法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng)力圖打造最專業(yè)的律師在線咨詢網(wǎng)站.涉外法律顧問(wèn)\知識(shí)產(chǎn)權(quán)法律顧問(wèn)\商務(wù)法律顧問(wèn) 法律顧問(wèn)、委托電話:13930139603,投稿、加盟、合作電話:13932197810 網(wǎng)站客服:點(diǎn)擊這里聯(lián)系客服   法律文書 | 在線咨詢 | 聯(lián)系我們 | 設(shè)為首頁(yè) | 加入收藏
關(guān)鍵字:

律師咨詢電話13930139603

首 頁(yè) | 法治新聞 | 民法顧問(wèn) | 刑法顧問(wèn) | 普法常識(shí) | 法律援助 | 社團(tuán)顧問(wèn) | 商法顧問(wèn) | 律師動(dòng)態(tài) | 公益訟訴 | 執(zhí)行顧問(wèn) | 經(jīng)典案例 | 法律法規(guī)

國(guó)際貿(mào)易

知識(shí)產(chǎn)權(quán)

稅收籌劃

公司事務(wù)

土地房產(chǎn)

建筑工程

合同糾紛

債權(quán)債務(wù)


勞動(dòng)爭(zhēng)議


醫(yī)療糾紛


交通事故


婚姻家庭
商法顧問(wèn) 國(guó)際貿(mào)易 | 銀行保險(xiǎn) | 證券期貨 | 公司法律 | 司法鑒定 | 合同糾紛 | 網(wǎng)絡(luò)法律 | 經(jīng)濟(jì)犯罪 | 知識(shí)產(chǎn)權(quán) | 債權(quán)債務(wù) | 房地產(chǎn)  
法律英語(yǔ)  
律師法律意見(jiàn)書
出處:法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng)·涉外coinwram.com     時(shí)間:2011/6/23 16:22:00

WRITING AN OFFICE MEMORANDUM
 
If you work as a paralegal or law clerk after your first or second year of law school, you will most likely spend some of your time researching and writing objective memoranda, or interoffice memos.  Typically, an attorney asks you to provide a realistic analysis of the law as it applies to the facts of a client’s case.   The purpose is to inform – not persuade.   Although you should remember which conclusion favors your client, also keep in mind that you will represent the client most effectively by being objective and realistic.
The memo might be read many times – possibly, over a period of months or years by several different attorneys, including the writer, who may use it as a resource long after it is drafted.  The attorney will use the information contained in the memo to advise the client and may use it to prepare a document that will ultimately be filed in court.  For example, a partner may be asking you whether a particular client has a valid legal claim.  If you conclude that the answer is “yes,” then this will probably turn into a lawsuit.  At that point, some parts of the memo may be incorporated when the complaint is drafted.  The memo might me consulted a third time when the attorney responds to a motion to dismiss; a fourth time while drafting interrogatories; a fifth time before making a motion for summary judgment; a sixth time before trial; and a seventh during an appeal; and so on. 
 

PARTS OF MEMO[1]

 
1.                 A memorandum heading 
2.                 The Issue (sometimes called Question Presented) states the question(s) that the memorandum resolves.  The Issue also itemizes the few facts that you predict to be crucial to the answer.  (Such as travel expenses to out-of-state, keeping child out of danger, and commission of crime).  The reader should understand the question without having to refer to the facts.
3.                 Brief Answer (sometimes called Conclusion) states the writer’s prediction and summarizes concisely why it is likely to happen.  Some writers begin with a direct response such as “yes” or “probably not.”  Our book says that they do not prefer this.  Sometimes this is client or partner driven.  Also, some questions lend themselves to answers such as “yes” or “no.”  Allusion to determinative facts and rules.   Do not omit key facts.  Begin by just re-stating your issue as a declarative sentence.  Do not omit the reasoning.  Do not include citation to authority or application of relevant law.  Many attorneys only read this part. 
4.                 Facts set out the facts on which the prediction is based.
5.                 Discussion is the largest and most complex part of memo.  It proves the conclusion set out in brief answer.  If the discussion is highly detailed or analyzes several issues, it should be broken down into subheadings. 
 
 
Here is what the memo will look like and more information on each section.
 
 
MEMORANDUM
 
 
TO:           Senior Partner [Please block-indent so that the information lines up, as demonstrated]
FROM:     Your Name
DATE:     (date assignment is submitted)
RE:             (A concise label for the issue considered: mention the parties; your firm will file your Memo by names and cause of action--and, perhaps, by jurisdiction)
 
 
 
The proper format is always double-spaced.  Do not double-double space between sections.  Plain old, regular double-space is sufficient. 
                                                        FACTS
      Here, recite all material facts, usually in chronological order.  A "material" fact is a "dispositive" fact, or one upon which the outcome will depend.  It is a fact that will affect the outcome in one way or another.  Please include all material procedural facts as well as all material substantive facts.  This means that it is essential to include all relevant times, dates, and places.  You should begin with an "overview" sentence that sets the full context and begins to describe the problem presented.  Please review your reading and as many samples as possible to understand both the range and scope of what is acceptable as professional practice.
 Remember your role
Watch for the tendency to try to “prove” something by the way you tell the story.  NO LEGAL ANALYSIS!
1)    USE NEUTRAL LANGUAGE AND OBJECTIVE CHARACTERIZATIONS.  Rather than writing “the D was speeding through the school zone,” write “the D was traveling 50 MPH through the school zone.” Rather than writing “The D brutally beat the victim,” write “The D struck the P on the head, resulting in a cut over his left eye.”
 
2)    Include unfavorable and favorable facts. 
 
QUESTION PRESENTED
          Phrased as a question and ending with a question mark, state the specific issue or issues you will address.  One method is to use the technique: under? (describe the law); does? (state the issue); what? (give the legally relevant or "dispositive" facts).
Some memoranda use the commonly seen style of:  “Whether . . . .”
     
      As always, discuss with your professor to see which he or she prefers. 
 
But whatever the method, the following advice applies:
 
·        Should be concise single sentences that include relevant facts and general propositions of law. 
 
·        Don’t say, “Whether a niece can recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress,” when you can say, “Whether, under Iowa law, a niece who witnesses the aftermath of an automobile accident involving her uncle from a block away can recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress when she observes his severe injuries upon arrival at the scene.”
 
                                                BRIEF ANSWER
You phrased (or asked) a question in the section above.  Answer it here: "Yes."  "No."  "Probably not."   Use a period.  Your Brief Answer follows the same formula and sequence as your Question Presented.  It answers the questions "under?  does?  what?" except, the Brief Answer should include a brief statement of your reasons beginning with the word "because."
                                                   DISCUSSION
The heart of a Memorandum, this section asks you to explain the law and explain the facts.  Getting it "right" will take time.  Be patient.  Your goal is to "synthesize" the cases and extract a common rule of law.  To do this, you will need to identify the common elements that allow you to analyze and discuss several cases at once.  A common mistake, legal writers frequently engage in "listing behavior."  They treat each case independently and sequentially, beginning each paragraph with "In"--for example, "In Callow v. Thomas" or "In Brown v. Brown."  Looking down a written page, the lawyer will see a ladder-like effect, the "in-ladder," where each succeeding paragraph begins with the word "in" followed by a case title.  Often "listing behavior" culminates in "dump-trucking" when the lawyer saves up and "dumps" all the legal analysis into the last paragraph.  In addition, lawyers will frequently "front-load," squeezing all the legal rules of law into the very first paragraph.
To avoid these pitfalls, begin your discussion with a general overview in a thesis or “roadmap” paragraph.  Your thesis paragraph is the first paragraph in the Memorandum – and the first paragraph in a Discussion section.  Always begin your thesis paragraph with a sentence to anticipate--and announce--your ultimate conclusion.  Tell the reader where you are headed and be a tour-guide to your argument or analysis.
Then, taking one point at a time, write a thesis sentence that answers the questions of "what-is-your-point?" of this particular paragraph.  Next, set forth the legal Rule that applies.  Include the proper citation.  Next, Analyze (explain) what the law or legal rule means.  Next, Analyze (explain) how the relevant facts fit (or do not fit) the legal or factual standard.  Finally, Conclude each paragraph with a summarizing statement and each sub-issue with a specific sub-issue summary.
Sometimes, this method is referred to as a variation of the acronym: IRAC.  Other legal writing professors have some other acronym such as REAAC or FIRAC.  Still, others simply refer to it as the 5-step process.  Keep in mind that these are all “formulas” that legal writing professionals are using to introduce you to presenting a legal argument.  Ultimately, you will use a style or formula that works best for your particular argument.  But virtually every aspect of every legal argument must contain a 1) Statement of Rule or Applicable Law; 2) Analysis of the law and how it Applies to your relevant facts; and 3) a Conclusion on each of these sub-issues.  Similarly, when a discussion requires several paragraphs, the writer may not reproduce the exact IRAC structure within each and every paragraph, but may require several paragraphs to develop fully the full set.
As always, know your audience and talk about the method of legal analysis that your professor, or in the future, your employer, prefers.  And remember that learning how to synthesize statutes, cases, and secondary sources and then presenting them in a clear, concise, and logical manner takes time and practice.

A FEW IDEAS ABOUT WRITING — MEMORANDA[2]
 
Many students, approaching memo writing for the first time, are often unsure of how to proceed.  We have put together a few tips for first (and second and third) time memo writers that we hope will be helpful. 
Note: No single set of guidelines could possibly address all the matters related to memo writing.  If you have questions about a particular assignment, be sure to check with your professor.
 
1.                 Find the test(s).  In assigning a memorandum, professors are generally evaluating you on parsing a particular statute or test.  In other words, they want you to use other cases to explain how your case either does or does not satisfy a test laid out in a case or a statute.
      For example, let’s say your case involves a niece (Mary) who witnessed her uncle (Jack) being injured in an automobile accident.  Mary wants to bring suit for negligent infliction of emotional distress as a result of witnessing that accident.  In Burger v. McDonald, the Supreme Court of Iowa laid out a three part test to determine whether a bystander’s injury was reasonably foreseeable and, thus, legally actionable:
      1.   Whether the bystander was located near the accident.
      2.   Whether the injury resulted from sensory and contemporaneous observance of the accident, as opposed to hearing about it from others after its occurrence.
      3.   Whether the bystander and the victim were closely related.
 
NOTE:  If the memo involves more than one issue, your memorandum may involve more than one test.
2.   Use the test as your outline.  Tests come in two parts, or three (as above), often with subsections.  Ideal for an outline.  Use the major parts of the test as your major points, the subparts as sub-sections.
      Paragraph Structure
3.   Begin paragraphs with affirmative propositions that parallel the test.  In the above example, your first sentence should say something like: “Mary was located near the scene of her uncle’s accident, satisfying the first part of the Burger test.”
4.   Support your affirmative propositions.  All propositions of a legal nature must have legal support.  Where is your authority for your proposition?  Cite it.  For example: “See Burger, 606 N.W.2d at 321 (bystander must be located near accident to recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress).”
5.   Discuss the facts of your support.  What happened in the case you just cited?  Explain in a concise and relevant way.  For example:  “In Burger, the court held that a mother who witnessed an accident on the street from the front door of her house was located near the scene of an accident.”
6.   Discuss the relevant facts of your case.  Point to the facts that are similar to the facts of the authority you’ve just discussed.  For example, you could continue from above as follows: “Mary was standing a block from the accident, heard the crash, and saw her uncle being pulled, bleeding, from the car.”
7.   Analogize/Conclude.  What conclusions do you think the court will draw from the similarity between your facts and the facts of your authority?  For example: “Although Mary did not see the accident, she was close enough to hear it and witness her uncle being pulled from the car.  Thus, a court will likely conclude that she was located near the accident.”
Alternative Paragraph Structure
8.   Discuss other relevant authority.  Once you’ve opened the previous paragraph with your affirmative proposition, your subsequent paragraphs can discuss the facts of other relevant cases without repeating the proposition as your opening sentence.  For example, you could begin the next paragraph: “In Cameron v. Jones, the Court of Appeals held that a mother who was twenty-five feet away from her child when she heard a metal sculpture fall on him was located near the scene of the accident.
9.   Discuss contrary authority.  Are there cases that go against your position (or the position the partner/judge/etc. would like you to hold)?  Another subsequent paragraph could open with: “But, in Alfred v. Stern, the court held that a father did not have a valid cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress.”  Then follow steps 5, 6, and 7, above, except this time, when concluding, tell the reader why the court won’t follow or give much weight to this contrary authority (e.g., the facts are different).
10. Move on to the next part of the test.  Follow steps 3-9 above for the next section of your test.
      Remember, a memorandum also includes issues presented, a brief answer (which usually follows the issues presented), and a statement of facts.  These are often best written after you’ve written the body of the memorandum, since you’ll have a better idea of the issues once you’ve tackled the problem (though a tentative draft might help to get you started).

Here is a checklist for those introductory sections of an office memorandum:
 

Heading

1.     Have you included the name of the requesting attorney (or professor), your name, the date, the client’s name, and a phrase identifying the particular legal matter or issue?
 

Facts

2.     Have you included all legally significant facts?
3.     Have you included sufficient factual context?
4.     Have you included any major emotional facts?
5.     Have you avoided including discussion of legal authority?
6.     Have you avoided “arguing” the facts or drawing legal conclusions?
7.     Have you identified the client and the client’s situation at the beginning of the Fact Statement?
8.     Have you selected an appropriate organization (chronological, topical) for the facts?
9.     Have you maintained neutral language and objective characterizations?
10.    Have you included both favorable and unfavorable facts?
 

Question Presented

11.    Have you stated the legal question and the significant facts?
12.    Have you edited to achieve one readable sentence?
13.    Have you maintained an objective perspective?
 

Brief Answer

14.    Have you stated the answer in the first several words?
15.    Have you included a statement of the rule?
16.    Have you stated a summary of the reasoning leading to the answer?
17.    Have you kept the BA to a maximum of one-third to one-half a double-spaced page?
18.    Have you taken a position, even if you are not sure?


[1] Be sure to keep in mind that an office memo is an internal document for law firms; therefore, each particular firm is likely to have a preferred format.  For example, the firm may use different words for different sections title, may order sections differently than described here, or it may include other sections not described in this manual.  If your reader (whether it be your professor or your employer) has a preferred format, obviously use it.  If you are not sure if your reader has a particular preference, then ask!
[2] Many of these tips were originally created by Writing Resource Center, University of Iowa College of Law.
 

(聲明:本站所使用圖片及文章如無(wú)注明本站原創(chuàng)均為網(wǎng)上轉(zhuǎn)載而來(lái),本站刊載內(nèi)容以共享和研究為目的,如對(duì)刊載內(nèi)容有異議,請(qǐng)聯(lián)系本站站長(zhǎng)。本站文章標(biāo)有原創(chuàng)文章字樣或者署名本站律師姓名者,轉(zhuǎn)載時(shí)請(qǐng)務(wù)必注明出處和作者,否則將追究其法律責(zé)任。)
上一篇:外貿(mào)英語(yǔ)函電27種書信文體大全
下一篇:美國(guó)教授教你寫法律意見(jiàn)書
在線咨詢

姓 名 * 電 話
類 別 郵 箱
內(nèi) 容 *

聯(lián)系我們
電話:13930139603 13651281807
QQ號(hào):373036737
郵箱:373036737@qq.com
 
點(diǎn)擊排行      
· 法律英語(yǔ)詞匯學(xué)習(xí)
· Intellectual pro...
· 英語(yǔ)口語(yǔ)20000句
· 當(dāng)代國(guó)際環(huán)保法律問(wèn)題研究Cont...
· 英文版劍橋美國(guó)法律史 一
· 獨(dú)家:劍橋美國(guó)法律史 二
· 環(huán)保稅法ENVIRONMENTA...
· 民事調(diào)解書(英文)
· Legal English Ho...
· 轉(zhuǎn)讓協(xié)議(Assignment ...
· 獨(dú)家:劍橋美國(guó)法律史三
· Interduction of ...
· 英文合同導(dǎo)讀
· 授權(quán)書條例POWERS OF A...
· 2000年國(guó)際貿(mào)易術(shù)語(yǔ)解釋通則3
· [英文案例]Yick Wo v....
· 法律英語(yǔ)詞典:legal ter...
· 海牙規(guī)則中英文對(duì)照
· 申請(qǐng)離婚登記聲明書 (中英文
· 法律英語(yǔ)翻譯---自由職業(yè)者的高...
· 舉證通知書 (English V...
· detrimental reli...
律師團(tuán)隊(duì)     更多>>
法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng).涉外

法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng).涉外
13930139603
趙麗娜律師

趙麗娜律師
13930139603
趙光律師15605513311--法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng).涉外特邀環(huán)資能法律專家、碳交易師

趙光律師15605513311--法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng).涉外特邀環(huán)資能法律專家、碳交易師
法律專家:楊學(xué)臣18686843658

法律專家:楊學(xué)臣18686843658
湖南長(zhǎng)沙單曉嵐律師

湖南長(zhǎng)沙單曉嵐律師
13975888466
醫(yī)學(xué)專家頡彥華博士

醫(yī)學(xué)專家頡彥華博士
精英律師團(tuán)隊(duì)






法律網(wǎng)站 政府網(wǎng)站 合作網(wǎng)站 友情鏈接  
關(guān)于我們 | 聯(lián)系我們 | 法律聲明 | 收費(fèi)標(biāo)準(zhǔn)
Copyright 2010-2011 coinwram.com 版權(quán)所有 法律顧問(wèn)網(wǎng) - 中國(guó)第一法律門戶網(wǎng)站 未經(jīng)授權(quán)請(qǐng)勿轉(zhuǎn)載
電話:13930139603 13651281807 QQ:373036737 郵箱:373036737@qq.com
冀ICP備08100415號(hào)-2
點(diǎn)擊這里和QQ聊天 法律咨詢
點(diǎn)擊這里和QQ聊天 網(wǎng)站客服
留言咨詢
聯(lián)系我們
律師熱線:
13930139603
13651281807
律師助理:
13932197810