pierson v post thinking like a lawyer civil procedure
TRANSCRIPT
Introduction to American Law
Pierson v. PostCivil ProcedureandThinking Like a Lawyer
Criminal v. Civil
Names of the Parties
Number of People Involved
Penalty/Remedy
Burden of Proof
NOTE there are vast differences between the two when it comes to procedure.
Names of the PartiesCriminal State/Crown
Civil Plaintiff
Defendant is same in both
Number of People InvolvedCriminal usually government vs. one individual
Civil can be many on either sideMultiple Plaintiffs = class action
Defendants can be individual, corporation, government, etc.
Penalty v. RemedyCriminal results in sentence or fine
Civil results in award of money or injunction
Burden of ProofCriminal beyond a reasonable doubt
Civil Normally preponderance of the evidence (U.S.)balance of probabilities (England)
Pierson v. Post
What are the basic:FACTS
ISSUEphrase as a question
ANSWER TO THE ISSUE
STEP 1 What are the basic facts, issue, and answer to the issue. FACTS: Post, hunting w/ dogs, spies fox; in hot pursuit, closing in on the kill when Pierson, seeing Post & knowing Post's intentions, shoots & kills fox
ISSUE: Who gets the fox?
ANSWER: Pierson
Pierson v. Post
What are the basic:FACTSPost, hunting w/ dogs, spies fox; in hot pursuit, closing in on the kill when Pierson, seeing Post & knowing Post's intentions, shoots & kills fox
ISSUEwho gets the fox?
ANSWER TO THE ISSUEPierson
Debate
Ignore the ruling.
Who should have won and why? Make arguments from both side.
STEP 2 Ignore the ruling. What should have been the outcome? Give reasons for both sidesAsk students then show next slide.
Potential Arguments
Post, because he put in all that time hunting the fox.
Post, because it would be unfair to let Pierson have it after Post was the one who made it run towards Pierson.
Post, because it was his business.
Pierson, because he shot it.
Pierson, because we don't know for sure if Post would have ever caught the fox.
Pierson, because he got it first.
How Did The Court Analyze This?
Why doesn't the court's opinion look more like our treatment of the case, our comments on the board?
Why is the court's opinion so different from our discussion of the case?
What is a case?
What is an opinion?
STEP 3 Compare our analysis to the one made by the courtWhy doesn't the court's opinion look more like our treatment of the case, our comments on the board?
Why is the court's opinion so different from our discussion of the case?
Pierson v. Post Timeline
How did the case begin?
How does the factual dispute become a case?
What is the role of the attorney?
What is the cause of action?
QUESTION: How did the case begin? recite the facts
have students re-enact the conservation that took place between Pierson and Post. tell other students to pay close attention to arguments being made by each side.
QUESTION: How does the factual dispute become a case?Plaintiff Post consults with an attorney.
QUESTION: What is the role of the attorney?What's the role of the attorney?
What does the attorney do?
What does the attorney contribute to the evolution of the case?
ANSWER: investigate the facts, research the law, and advise the client.
QUESTION: What does researches the law. Why does the attorney research the law?
What is the lawyer looking for? ANSWER: a legal doctrine or rule of law which supports the party's position.
EXPLANATION: Tell students about Cause of Actiona legal doctrine that, if established, entitles the party to relief.
QUESTION: What cause of action did Post's attorney rely upon? ANSWER - trespass on the case.
QUESTION: What's trespass on the case? See dictionary.com trespass.unlawfully interfering with the property of another
QUESTION: How does the cause of action relate to the case? What is Post's argument that he is entitled to relief under trespass on the case.ANSWER: by killing the fox, Pierson unlawfully interfered with Post's property--the fox.
Statute of Limitations
Laws stating by when a case must be filed.
Purpose is to ensure that evidence is fresh, which theoretically ensures fairness.
Varies by jurisdiction
Cal. Code Civ. Proc. 335.1. Within two years: An action for assault, battery, or injury to, or for the death of, an individual caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another.
First Stage: Pleadings
Definition allegations of law and fact.
Plaintiff Files complaint, petition or claimssets forth elements of claims
Defendant Files answer, response, demurrerCan also file Motion to Dismiss at this point
Different forms depending on jurisdictiongeneral v. specific denials.
Affirmative defenses can be raised
Pleadings the First StageLawsuit initiated by filing of a Complaint, Petition, Claim (varies by jurisdiction)Pleader must know elements of the claim
Party must plead those matters upon which that party must produce proof at trial.
Defense then files: Answer, Response, DemurrerDefense can first file Motion to Dismiss based upon failure of P to state a claim.
General Denial - consists of one sentence simply stating that "defendant denies each and every allegation of plaintiff's complaint."
Specific Denial - specific denial involves a sentence-by-sentence or paragraph-by-paragraph analysis of the complaint, denying only those allegations that defendant intends to contest.
Affirmative Defenses - Even if all plaintiff's allegations are true, defendant may be able to present additional facts establishing a defense.
Pierson v. PostQUESTION - What would Post's complaint say?Pierson interfered with Post's property.
QUESTION - What would Pierson's answer say?Pierson did not interfere with Post's property because Post never acquired a property interest in the fox
Cause of Action
Trespass on the caseunlawfully interfering with the property of another
So what is the issue of the case?
Old Issue of the CaseWho gets the fox
Revised Issue of the CaseHow does one obtain a property interest in a fox.
Discovery
Exchange and investigation of evidence between parties.
Purpose:Expedite litigation
Encourage settlement
Discovery exchange and investigation of evidence between partiesThe Discovery Process Serves the Purposes of:Expediting the litigation by:Identifying and narrowing issues.
Uncovering facts
Preserving evidence for trial.
Expediting trial preparation by committing parties or witnesses to particular versions of facts, and
Encouraging Settlement by:Educating the parties as to the strengths and weaknesses of their respective cases
Exposing doubtful claims or defenses.
Providing information for informed case evaluation.
Scope of Discovery
information which "appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence."Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Not Work Product!
Scope of Discovery - Broader Than What Would Be Relevant Evidence at TrialUnder federal rules, can request information which "appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence."
Information Protected From DiscoveryWork Product PrivilegeThere is an absolute privilege for writings that reflect the attorney's impressions, conclusions, opinions, legal research, or theories. Such information is not discoverable under any circumstances. (Cal.Code.Civ.Proc. 2018(c).)
Discovery Devices
Deposition
Interrogatories
Demand to Inspect/Produce Documents
Request for Admission
Physical/Mental Examinations
Deposition
Examination under oath of an expected party or witness for discovery or as evidence.
Advantages
Testimony may be used by
Disadvantages
Against Whom?
Depositions - Self-executing procedure for examination under oath of an expected party or witness for discovery or as evidence.Advantages: Permits evaluation of demeanor and potential courtroom impact of deponent;
probing follow-up of responses;
deponent spontaneity;
minimization of role of opposing counsel;
discovery on 10 days notice.
Testimony may be used by any party against deponent to impeach or contradict;
as substantive evidence if deponent is unavailable or exceptional circumstances exist or if another party has already introduced a portion of the deposition.
By adverse party for any purpose against party or related witness.
Disadvantages: Expensive,
time consuming,
elicits only facts within deponent's personal knowledge,
inquiry into deponent's legal contentions not permitted,
may perpetuate damaging testimony.
Against Whom Available: Any person. (Not limited to parties)
Interrogatories
written questions to party to be answered under oath
Advantages
Use
Disadvantages
Against Whom?
Interrogatories - Self-executing procedure for submission of written questions to party to be answered under oath.Advantages: Comparatively inexpensive;
inquires into all knowledge available to answering party
inquires into legal contentions and bases for them;
answers (always by party) may be more specific and therefore bind more than general answers at deposition;
less complex and expensive to elicit further answers.
Use - Any party other than the responding party may use responses at trial to the extent they are otherwise admissible in evidence.
Disadvantages: Sometimes less effective than personal confrontation;
no opportunity to evaluate demeanor of deponent;
preparation of interrogatories in complex cases time consuming and expensive, since must by carefully drafted to be effective;
difficult to get a narrative response.
Against Whom Available: Party only.
Demand to Inspect Documents
Demand to Inspect A party may make inspection demands on "any other party to the action" to produce and permit the party making the request to inspect and copy, any designated documents.
Demands to Inspect or Produce DocumentsA party may make inspection demands on "any other party to the action" to produce and permit the party making the request to inspect and copy, any designated documents.
Request for Admission
Written request asking opposing party to admit genuineness of documents or truth of matters.
Party must respond or deemed to admit.
Only against parties.
Advantages v. Disadvantages
Requests for Admission - Self-executing procedure for written request that party admit genuineness of relevant documents or truth of relevant matters. If a party who receives a request to admit does nothing, the party has admitted the matter in the request.
Advantages: Disposes of undisputed issues and facilitates motion for summary judgment;
failure to admit or deny constitutes an admission;
requires admission or denial of facts known or available to answering party;
may be used in conjunction with interrogatories;
comparatively inexpensive.
Disadvantages:Does not discover new facts;
difficult to get narrative response;
difficult to follow-up quickly a response of "unable to admit or deny."
Against Whom Available: Party only.
Physical & Mental Exams
Order from Court
Upon showing of good cause
of physical or mental examination of party
when mental or physical state is in controversy.
Physical and Mental ExaminationsProcedure by motion for court order, on showing of good cause to obtain mental, or physical examination of a party or controlled person whose condition is in controversy in pending action.
Advantages: Aids preparation for and conduct of trial as well as settlement by allowing examination of parties & controlled persons whose physical or mental condition is in controversy in an action.
Disadvantages: Showing of good cause required before court order will issue.
Against Whom Available: Any party, his agent or person in his custody or legal control whose condition is in issue.
Pre-Trial Proceedings
Court will rule on pre-trial motionsmotions pertaining to discovery (although probably heard earlier)
Motion for Summary Judgmentasking the court to rule as a matter of law
whether a reasonable jury could find for the non-moving party.
Resolution Short of Trial - Motion for Summary Judgmentno genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law
basically, even if we believe facts as presented by other party, we still win as a matter of law.
In short, no need for trial!
Powerful tool normally not granted by judgeif granted, can be appealed.
Choosing thefactfinderJudge or JuryOpeningStatementsPlaintiff's CaseDefendant's CasePlaintiff's Rebuttal
Closing Arguments
Instructions to the Jury& Jury Deliberation
Verdict & Judgment
.TrialChoosing the Trier of Fact: Judge or Jury?7th Amendment - a jury trial must be available if the action involves rights and remedies of the sort typically enforced in an action at law.
Number of Jurors Required
Opening statements - Each side presents summary of case
P's case in chief - P introduces evidence, calls witnesses, etc
D's case in chief D introduces evidence, calls witnesses, etc.
Rebuttal P has opportunity to offer rebuttal evidence and call rebuttal witnesses.
Closing Arguments both parties summarize their cases
Instruction to Jury judge instructs jury on the law
Deliberation jury can take as long as needs to discuss among themselves
Verdict Verdict is read by jury ForemanNOTE a judgment by a judge sitting without a jury is NOT a verdict. Only juries give verdicts.
Judgment a judge gives a judgment, not a verdict. This is the final decision of the court, almost always following the jury's verdict.
The Civil Appeal
Losing party may appeal
Remember, generally only issue of law are reviewed on appeal.Thus, on review the appeals court is looking at mistakes of law, not mistakes of fact.
What is the specific issue of law in Pierson v. Post being reviewed by the court?
Pierson v. PostQUESTION is this a decision from a trail court or an appeals court?appeals court
QUESTIONSWho prevailed at the trial court level? Post.
What mistake of law does Pierson allege was made at the trial court level? What's the issue on appeal? NOT How does one acquire a property interest in a fox?
LOOK CLOSER - the court expressly said that the parties were in agreement that to acquire a property interest in a wild animal, there must be occupancy.
That answer, however, merely begs the question: what constitutes occupancy? After some hesitation, the students agree that this is the issue on appeal.
New Issue
Started with: Who gets the fox
Moved to: How does one acquire a property interest in a fox?
Ended with: What constitutes occupancy?Is this a question of law or question of fact?
How does the court describe this question?
This is a question of law.
The court describes this as a novel question of law.QUESTION what does this mean?the Court has never directly dealt with this question. IT IS ABOUT TO MAKE LAW!
Civil Procedure
More About the Trial
Evidence Defined
matters that tend to prove the existence or non-existence of some fact (Oxford Dict. of Law)
those matters actually admitted into evidence by the judge presiding, as in 'the evidence before the court'
body of rules that govern what can and what cannot be brought before a court in any particular case, and the weight that it should have, as in the law of evidence (Collins Dict. of the Law).
'"Evidence" means testimony, writings, material objects, or other things presented to the senses that are offered to prove the existence or nonexistence of a fact. Cal. Evid. Code 140
Relevance
To be admissible court, evidence must be relevant and materialCompare to definition for discovery.
Relevant evidence means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.Federal Rule 401
Hearsay
Evidence of a statement that was made other than by a witness while testifying at the hearing and that is offered to prove the truth of the matter stated (Cal. Evid. Code 1200; Rule 33.1, Civ. Proc. Rules for Engl. and Wales) may be inadmissible as 'hearsay evidence'
There are numerous exceptions to this rule.
Best Evidence Rule
The best evidence rule nowadays requires that the original of a document must be produced in court in order to prove the document's contents, unless the proposing party offers an adequate explanation for her failure to produce the original (Oxford Dict. of Law)
Privilege
In the law of evidence certain persons in certain situations enjoy a privilege not to testifyPrivilege against self-incriminationwhich accords witnesses a right not to testify or otherwise reveal evidence that might expose themselves to criminal prosecution
The legal professional or 'attorney-client' privilege protects confidential communications between lawyers and their clients.
Jury Instructions
1201. Strict LiabilityManufacturing DefectEssential Factual Elements[Name of plaintiff] claims that the [product] contained a manufacturing defect. To establish this claim, [name of plaintiff] must prove all of the following: 1.That [name of defendant] [manufactured/distributed/sold] the [product];2.That the [product] contained a manufacturing defect when it left [name of defendant]s possession;3.That the [product] was used [or misused] in a way that was reasonably foreseeable to [name of defendant];4.That [name of plaintiff] was harmed; and5.That the [product]s defect was a substantial factor in causing [name of plaintiff]s harm.
Judicial Control of Juries
Directed Verdictmotion made at end of opposing party's case arguing that there is insufficient evidence to send the case the jury.
Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdictmade after jury renders verdict
reversal of a jury's verdict by the trial judge when the judge believes there was no factual basis for the verdict or it was contrary to law.
Judicial Control of Jury Action - Controlling Juries by Directed VerdictDirected verdicts and judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) are two mechanisms by which the judge controls the jury. Directed verdict motions may be made by either party at the close of their opponent's evidence. For the motion to be granted the court must find that there is insufficient evidence to go to the jury or
that the evidence is so compelling that only one result could follow.
A JNOV motion may be viewed as a delayed directed verdict because it is made after the verdict is rendered and seeks a judgment contrary to the verdict on the ground that there was insufficient evidence for the jury to find as it did.The test for granting a j.n.o.v. is the same as the test for granting a directed verdict.
The court considers the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and
should grant the judgment notwithstanding the verdict only where the evidence so strongly and so favorably points in the favor of the moving party that reasonable people could not arrive at a contrary verdict.
The judge will then enter a different verdict as "a matter of law." Essentially the judge should have required a "directed verdict" (instruction to the jury to return with a particular verdict since the facts allowed no other conclusion), and when the jury "went wrong," the judge uses the power to reverse the verdict instead of approving it, to prevent injustice.
How often is this used:State Court civil actions 1.8%source: www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/
Integrity of Verdicts
Motion for New Trial
Grounds:irregularity
jury misconduct
newly discovered evidence
insufficient evidence
Integrity of VerdictsMotion for New Trial. The trial judge has the power to grant a motion for a new trial when errors or irregularities have occurred during the proceedings.
Grounds for a New TrialIrregularity of the proceedings;
Misconduct of jury;
Accident or surprise;
Newly discovered evidence;
Insufficient evidence;
Error in law; - judge made error in law (procedural or substantive)
Excessive or inadequate damages. (Cal.Code.Civ.Proc. 657.)
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