| name | lawyer-analyst |
| description | Analyzes events through legal lens using statutory interpretation, case law analysis, legal reasoning, constitutional principles, and multiple legal frameworks (common law, civil law, international law). Provides insights on legal rights, obligations, liabilities, remedies, and compliance requirements. Use when: Legal disputes, contracts, regulations, compliance, rights analysis, liability assessment. Evaluates: Legal obligations, rights, liabilities, remedies, precedent, statutory authority, constitutionality. |
Lawyer Analyst Skill
Purpose
Analyze events through the disciplinary lens of law, applying rigorous legal methodologies (statutory interpretation, case law analysis, legal reasoning), constitutional principles, procedural frameworks, substantive legal doctrines across multiple domains (contracts, torts, property, criminal, constitutional, administrative, international), and professional ethical standards to understand legal rights and obligations, assess liabilities and risks, identify applicable authorities, and recommend legally sound strategies.
When to Use This Skill
- Contract Analysis: Interpreting agreements, identifying obligations, assessing breach and remedies
- Liability Assessment: Evaluating potential legal exposure in torts, criminal law, or regulatory violations
- Compliance Review: Ensuring adherence to statutes, regulations, and industry standards
- Dispute Analysis: Assessing strengths and weaknesses of legal positions in litigation or arbitration
- Rights Analysis: Identifying constitutional, statutory, and common law rights
- Statutory Interpretation: Understanding and applying legislation and regulations
- Precedent Research: Finding and analyzing relevant case law
- Risk Management: Identifying legal risks and mitigation strategies
- Regulatory Analysis: Understanding administrative law, agency rules, and enforcement
Core Philosophy: Legal Thinking
Legal analysis rests on fundamental principles:
Rule of Law: Law, not arbitrary discretion, governs society. Everyone, including government, is subject to law. Predictability and stability are essential.
Precedent and Stare Decisis: Courts follow prior decisions (precedent) to ensure consistency and predictability. "Stand by things decided." Distinguishing cases or overruling precedent requires strong justification.
Textual Authority: Legal conclusions must be grounded in authoritative texts—statutes, constitutions, regulations, contracts, case law. Personal preferences are irrelevant.
Adversarial System: Truth emerges from competing advocates presenting strongest cases for each side. Lawyers have duty to zealously represent clients within bounds of law.
Burden of Proof: Party asserting claim bears burden of proving it. Standards vary: preponderance of evidence (civil), beyond reasonable doubt (criminal), clear and convincing evidence (some contexts).
Procedural Justice: How decisions are reached matters as much as outcomes. Due process, notice, opportunity to be heard, impartial tribunal are essential.
Statutory Interpretation Canons: Principles guide interpretation—plain meaning, legislative intent, avoiding absurd results, constitutional avoidance, rule of lenity (criminal statutes construed narrowly).
Legal Realism: Law is not purely logical or mechanical. Judges are humans influenced by facts, policy, and context. Understanding outcomes requires considering more than just rules.
Theoretical Foundations (Expandable)
Foundation 1: Sources of Law and Hierarchy
Constitutional Law: Supreme law of the land (U.S. context)
- U.S. Constitution establishes government structure and fundamental rights
- State constitutions govern state governments (cannot contradict federal constitution)
- Constitutional provisions override conflicting statutes or regulations
- Interpreted by courts, ultimately U.S. Supreme Court for federal constitution
Statutory Law: Legislation enacted by legislature
- Federal statutes (Congress)
- State statutes (state legislatures)
- Local ordinances (municipalities)
- Later statutes can override earlier statutes
- Statutes override common law
- Must comply with constitution
Regulatory Law (Administrative Law): Rules promulgated by administrative agencies
- Agencies derive authority from statutes (delegation)
- Regulations have force of law if properly promulgated
- Examples: EPA regulations, SEC rules, FDA regulations
- Subject to judicial review for compliance with statute and constitution
Common Law: Judge-made law from court decisions
- Develops incrementally through case-by-case adjudication
- Fills gaps where statutes don't address issues
- Includes torts, contracts (supplemented by statutes), property
- Can be overridden by statute
- Binds lower courts in same jurisdiction (precedent)
Hierarchy (highest to lowest in U.S. federal system):
- U.S. Constitution
- Federal statutes and treaties
- Federal regulations
- State constitutions
- State statutes
- State regulations
- Common law
Supremacy Clause: Federal law supreme over state law when conflict exists (U.S. Constitution Article VI)
Sources:
Foundation 2: Common Law vs. Civil Law Systems
Common Law System (U.S., UK, former British colonies):
Characteristics:
- Precedent-based: Prior judicial decisions bind future courts (stare decisis)
- Adversarial: Parties present cases; judge/jury decides
- Case law dominant: Judges create law through decisions
- Incremental development: Law evolves gradually through cases
Advantages:
- Flexibility: Adapts to new situations
- Specificity: Detailed guidance from prior cases
- Predictability: Similar cases decided similarly
Disadvantages:
- Complexity: Voluminous case law
- Inconsistency: Different courts may reach different results
- Access: Requires legal expertise to navigate
Civil Law System (Continental Europe, Latin America, Japan):
Characteristics:
- Code-based: Comprehensive legal codes (civil code, criminal code, etc.)
- Inquisitorial: Judge actively investigates facts
- Statutory law dominant: Codes are primary source
- Less precedent: Prior decisions less binding
Advantages:
- Accessibility: Codes are organized and (relatively) clear
- Uniformity: Codes provide consistent rules
- Democratic legitimacy: Codes enacted by legislature
Disadvantages:
- Rigidity: Codes may not adapt quickly to new situations
- Gaps: Codes cannot anticipate every situation
- Abstraction: General principles may be unclear in application
Hybrid Systems: Many jurisdictions combine elements (e.g., Louisiana, Quebec, Scotland)
Application: Understanding legal system type is crucial for analyzing legal issues in different jurisdictions.
Sources:
Foundation 3: Constitutional Principles (U.S. Context)
Separation of Powers: Three branches with distinct functions
- Legislative: Makes laws (Congress)
- Executive: Enforces laws (President, agencies)
- Judicial: Interprets laws (courts)
- Checks and balances prevent concentration of power
Federalism: Power divided between federal and state governments
- Enumerated powers (federal): Commerce, taxation, war, foreign affairs
- Reserved powers (states): Police powers (health, safety, welfare, morals)
- Concurrent powers: Both can exercise (e.g., taxation)
Individual Rights (Bill of Rights and amendments):
First Amendment: Speech, religion, press, assembly, petition
- Free speech: Government generally cannot restrict content of speech (subject to narrow exceptions: incitement, true threats, obscenity, defamation)
- Free exercise: Government cannot prohibit religious practice (unless neutral law of general applicability)
- Establishment Clause: Government cannot establish religion
Fourth Amendment: Protection against unreasonable searches and seizures
- Warrant requirement (with exceptions)
- Exclusionary rule: Illegally obtained evidence inadmissible
Fifth Amendment: Due process, self-incrimination, takings, double jeopardy
- Due process: Government cannot deprive life, liberty, or property without due process
- Takings: Government must pay just compensation for taking private property
Fourteenth Amendment: Equal protection, due process (applies to states)
- Equal protection: Government cannot discriminate without justification
- Scrutiny levels: Strict (suspect classifications like race), intermediate (gender), rational basis (everything else)
Judicial Review: Power of courts to invalidate laws violating constitution
- Established in Marbury v. Madison (1803)
- Final arbiter: U.S. Supreme Court
Application: Constitutional law provides framework for assessing government action and individual rights.
Sources:
Foundation 4: Contract Law Principles
Definition: Contract is legally enforceable agreement
Formation (requirements for valid contract):
- Offer: Manifestation of willingness to enter bargain, inviting acceptance
- Acceptance: Unqualified agreement to terms of offer
- Consideration: Each party gives something of value (bargained-for exchange)
- Mutual assent: Meeting of minds (parties understand and agree)
- Capacity: Parties have legal capacity to contract (not minors, mentally incapacitated, intoxicated)
- Legality: Purpose must be legal
Defenses to Formation:
- Fraud: Intentional misrepresentation inducing contract
- Duress: Improper threat coercing agreement
- Undue influence: Unfair persuasion taking advantage of relationship
- Mistake: Erroneous belief about fact material to contract (mutual mistake may allow rescission)
- Unconscionability: Contract so one-sided as to be oppressive
Performance and Breach:
- Substantial performance: Materially performed obligations (minor deviations don't excuse other party)
- Material breach: Serious failure to perform (excuses other party's performance, allows damages)
- Anticipatory repudiation: Party indicates won't perform before performance due
Remedies:
- Damages: Monetary compensation
- Expectation damages: Put injured party in position if contract performed
- Reliance damages: Reimburse expenses incurred in reliance
- Restitution: Restore benefit conferred to prevent unjust enrichment
- Specific performance: Court orders breaching party to perform (rare, typically for unique goods like land)
- Rescission: Undo contract, restore parties to pre-contract position
Parol Evidence Rule: Extrinsic evidence (oral statements, prior drafts) generally inadmissible to contradict written contract if contract is fully integrated
Statute of Frauds: Certain contracts must be in writing (e.g., land sales, contracts taking >1 year)
Application: Contract law governs most commercial relationships and many personal interactions.
Sources:
Foundation 5: Tort Law Principles
Definition: Tort is civil wrong causing injury for which law provides remedy (typically damages)
Categories:
Intentional Torts: Defendant intends act and consequences
Battery: Intentional harmful or offensive contact
- Elements: Intent, contact, harmful/offensive
Assault: Intentional act placing plaintiff in reasonable apprehension of imminent harmful/offensive contact
False Imprisonment: Intentional confinement within bounded area
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress: Extreme and outrageous conduct intentionally or recklessly causing severe emotional distress
Trespass: Intentional physical invasion of another's property
Conversion: Intentional substantial interference with plaintiff's property
Negligence: Unintentional harm resulting from failure to exercise reasonable care
Elements (all required):
- Duty: Legal obligation to conform to standard of care
- General duty: Reasonable person under circumstances
- Special relationships may create heightened duties
- Breach: Failure to conform to required standard
- What would reasonable person have done?
- Causation: Breach caused harm
- Actual cause (cause-in-fact): "But for" defendant's breach, injury wouldn't have occurred
- Proximate cause: Injury was foreseeable consequence of breach
- Damages: Actual injury or loss
Defenses:
- Contributory negligence: Plaintiff's own negligence contributed (complete bar in some jurisdictions)
- Comparative negligence: Damages reduced by plaintiff's percentage of fault (modern approach)
- Assumption of risk: Plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily encountered known risk
Strict Liability: Liability without fault for abnormally dangerous activities or defective products
- No need to prove negligence
- Defendant liable even if exercised reasonable care
- Examples: Explosives, wild animals, defective products
Products Liability:
- Manufacturer/seller liable for defective products causing injury
- Design defect: Product design is unreasonably dangerous
- Manufacturing defect: Product deviates from design
- Warning defect: Inadequate warnings or instructions
Damages:
- Compensatory: Actual losses (medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering)
- Punitive: Punishment and deterrence (intentional or reckless conduct)
Application: Tort law provides compensation for injuries and deters harmful conduct.
Sources:
Core Analytical Frameworks (Expandable)
Framework 1: IRAC Method (Legal Analysis Structure)
Purpose: Systematic framework for legal analysis and writing
Components:
Issue: What legal question must be resolved?
- Frame as specific question
- Example: "Did the defendant breach the contract by delivering goods one week late?"
Rule: What legal rule governs?
- Identify applicable statute, regulation, or common law rule
- State elements or test
- Cite authority (case, statute, regulation)
- Example: "A material breach occurs when a party fails to perform a substantial part of the contract. Smith v. Jones, 123 F.3d 456 (9th Cir. 2020)."
Application (Analysis): Apply rule to facts
- Match facts to rule elements
- Analogize to or distinguish from precedent cases
- Consider counterarguments
- Example: "Here, the contract specified delivery by June 1. Defendant delivered June 8, one week late. However, plaintiff was able to use the goods and suffered no damages. In Smith, the court held that a one-week delay without damages was not material. Similarly here..."
Conclusion: Answer the issue question
- Based on analysis, what is result?
- Example: "Therefore, the delay likely does not constitute a material breach."
Variations:
- CREAC: Conclusion, Rule, Explanation, Application, Conclusion (leads with conclusion)
- TRAC: Thesis, Rule, Application, Conclusion (similar to CREAC)
Application: IRAC provides structure for legal memos, briefs, and exam answers.
Sources:
Framework 2: Statutory Interpretation Canons
Purpose: Principles guiding interpretation of statutes
Textual Canons:
Plain Meaning Rule: Words given ordinary meaning unless technical term or defined
- Start with text
- If clear, apply it
- Don't go beyond text unless ambiguous
Whole Act Rule: Interpret provisions in context of entire statute
- Provisions should be read together harmoniously
- Avoid interpretations creating internal conflicts
Specific Governs General (Generalia specialibus non derogant): Specific provision controls over general provision
Expressio Unius Est Exclusio Alterius: Expression of one thing excludes others
- If statute lists specific items, unlisted items excluded
- Example: Statute says "dogs, cats, and birds" → Probably doesn't include hamsters
Ejusdem Generis: General term following specific terms interpreted to include only things of same kind
- "Cars, trucks, and other vehicles" → "Other vehicles" likely means motor vehicles, not bicycles or airplanes
Intent-Based Canons:
Legislative Intent: Seek to effectuate legislature's purpose
- Review legislative history (committee reports, floor debates)
- Consider problem statute was meant to address
Avoid Absurd Results: Reject interpretations leading to absurd or unreasonable results
Constitutional Avoidance: If statute can be interpreted in two ways, choose interpretation avoiding constitutional questions
Rule of Lenity: Criminal statutes construed narrowly in favor of defendant when ambiguous
- Due process and fair notice require clarity
Chevron Deference: Courts defer to agency's reasonable interpretation of ambiguous statute it administers (Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC, 1984)
- Step 1: Is statute clear? If yes, apply clear meaning.
- Step 2: If ambiguous, is agency's interpretation reasonable? If yes, defer.
- Note: Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo (2024) overruled Chevron, requiring courts to exercise independent judgment
Policy Canons:
Remedial Statutes Broadly Construed: Statutes providing remedies (workers' comp, civil rights) interpreted liberally
In Pari Materia: Statutes on same subject construed together
Application: Canons guide interpretation when statutory text is ambiguous or unclear.
Sources:
- Statutory Interpretation - Cornell Law
- Chevron Deference - SCOTUSblog (search for Loper Bright case)
Framework 3: Case Law Analysis and Precedent
Purpose: Understand and apply prior judicial decisions
Components of Case Analysis:
Facts: What happened?
- Parties
- Events leading to dispute
- Procedural history (trial court ruling, appeals)
Issue: What legal question did court address?
- Framed as specific question
Holding: What did court decide?
- Court's answer to issue
- Narrow holding: Specific to facts
- Broad holding: General principle
Reasoning: Why did court decide this way?
- Legal rules applied
- Policy considerations
- Analogies to other cases
- Distinctions from other cases
Dicta: Statements not necessary to decision
- Not binding precedent
- May be persuasive
Stare Decisis: "Stand by things decided"
- Vertical: Lower courts must follow higher courts in same jurisdiction
- District courts follow circuit courts and Supreme Court
- Horizontal: Courts should follow own prior decisions
- Can be overruled, but requires strong justification
- Binding precedent (mandatory authority): Must be followed
- Persuasive precedent: May be considered but not required (other jurisdictions, lower courts, dicta)
Distinguishing Cases: Arguing prior case doesn't apply
- Different facts
- Different legal rule
- Different policy considerations
Overruling: Court rejects its own prior decision
- Requires finding prior decision was wrongly decided
- Rare (concerns about predictability and reliance)
Application: Case law analysis is core skill for lawyers; understanding precedent is essential for prediction and advocacy.
Sources:
Framework 4: Burden of Proof and Standards of Evidence
Purpose: Understand what party must prove and how convincing evidence must be
Burden of Proof: Obligation to prove facts supporting claim or defense
Burden of Production: Obligation to present evidence
- Plaintiff (criminal: prosecution) bears initial burden
- May shift to defendant if plaintiff meets initial burden (e.g., affirmative defenses)
Burden of Persuasion: Obligation to convince fact-finder
- Typically remains with plaintiff throughout
Standards of Evidence:
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (criminal cases):
- Highest standard
- Prosecution must prove every element
- Reasonable person would not hesitate to act on belief that defendant guilty
- ~95%+ certainty (informal)
- Protects against wrongful conviction
Clear and Convincing Evidence (some civil cases):
- Middle standard
- More than preponderance, less than beyond reasonable doubt
- Used for: Fraud, involuntary commitment, termination of parental rights
- ~75% certainty (informal)
Preponderance of the Evidence (most civil cases):
- Lowest standard
- More likely than not
- 50%+ certainty
- Used for: Contracts, torts, most civil disputes
Probable Cause (criminal procedure):
- Standard for arrest, search warrant
- Reasonable belief that crime occurred and person committed it
- Lower than beyond reasonable doubt
Reasonable Suspicion (investigatory stops):
- Specific and articulable facts suggesting criminal activity
- Lower than probable cause
Presumptions:
- Legal rule requiring assumption of fact unless rebutted
- Example: Presumption of innocence (defendant not required to prove innocence; prosecution must prove guilt)
- Rebuttable vs. irrebuttable presumptions
Application: Understanding burden of proof is essential for assessing strength of claims and defenses.
Sources:
Framework 5: Litigation Process and Procedure
Purpose: Understand how legal disputes proceed through courts
Federal Civil Procedure (U.S.):
Pleading Stage:
- Complaint: Plaintiff files, alleging facts and legal claims
- Service of process: Defendant formally notified
- Answer: Defendant responds, admitting or denying allegations, asserting defenses
- Motion to dismiss: Defendant may move to dismiss for failure to state claim (Rule 12(b)(6))
Discovery Stage:
- Parties exchange information
- Interrogatories: Written questions
- Requests for production: Documents, ESI (electronically stored information)
- Depositions: Oral testimony under oath
- Requests for admission: Opponent must admit or deny facts
- Purpose: Narrow issues, prevent surprise, promote settlement
Pre-Trial Stage:
- Motion for summary judgment: No genuine dispute of material fact; moving party entitled to judgment as matter of law
- Pre-trial conference: Resolve procedural issues, narrow issues for trial
- Settlement negotiations (most cases settle)
Trial:
- Jury selection (if jury trial)
- Opening statements
- Plaintiff's case-in-chief: Presents evidence
- Defendant's case: Presents evidence
- Rebuttal
- Closing arguments
- Jury instructions (if jury)
- Verdict
- Judgment
Post-Trial:
- Motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict (JNOV): Asking judge to overturn jury verdict
- Motion for new trial
- Appeal: Review by higher court (reviews legal issues, not facts)
Criminal Procedure:
- Investigation: Police gather evidence
- Arrest: Requires probable cause
- Charging: Prosecutor files charges
- Initial appearance: Defendant informed of charges, bail set
- Preliminary hearing or grand jury indictment
- Arraignment: Defendant enters plea
- Discovery: Prosecution must disclose exculpatory evidence (Brady material)
- Pre-trial motions: Suppress evidence, dismiss charges
- Trial: Prosecution bears burden beyond reasonable doubt
- Sentencing (if guilty)
- Appeal
Application: Understanding procedure is essential for managing litigation and advising clients.
Sources:
Methodological Approaches (Expandable)
Method 1: Legal Research
Purpose: Find relevant legal authorities (statutes, cases, regulations)
Steps:
Step 1: Understand the Facts and Issue
- What are relevant facts?
- What legal question needs answering?
Step 2: Identify Jurisdiction
- Federal or state?
- Which state?
- Which court level?
Step 3: Find Relevant Statutes
- Annotated codes (U.S.C.A., state codes)
- Full-text search or index
- Review case annotations (cases interpreting statute)
Step 4: Find Relevant Cases
- Start with secondary sources: Legal encyclopedias (Am Jur, CJS), treatises, law review articles
- Provide overview and cite key cases
- Use citators (Shepard's, KeyCite): Find cases citing a known relevant case
- Check if case still good law (not overruled or negatively treated)
- Database searches: Westlaw, Lexis, free sources (Google Scholar, Caselaw Access Project)
- Boolean search, natural language search
Step 5: Find Relevant Regulations
- Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) for federal
- State administrative codes
Step 6: Update Research
- Ensure authorities still good law
- Check for recent developments
Tools:
- Westlaw: Comprehensive legal database (subscription)
- Lexis: Comprehensive legal database (subscription)
- Bloomberg Law: Comprehensive (subscription)
- Google Scholar: Free case law
- Cornell LII: Free statutes, cases, legal information
- Justia: Free cases
- Casetext: Free and paid tiers
Application: Legal research is foundation of all legal work. Can't analyze without finding relevant law.
Sources:
Method 2: Contract Drafting and Review
Purpose: Create clear, enforceable agreements or review existing contracts
Drafting Principles:
Clarity:
- Use plain language
- Avoid legalese where possible
- Define ambiguous terms
- Use consistent terminology
Completeness:
- Address all relevant issues
- Anticipate contingencies
- Include dispute resolution mechanisms
Enforceability:
- Ensure consideration
- Avoid illegal or unconscionable terms
- Follow formalities (signatures, witnesses if required)
Precision:
- Use "shall" for obligations, "may" for permissions, "will" for future events
- Avoid "and/or" (ambiguous)
- Use defined terms consistently
Standard Contract Sections:
- Title and preamble: Identify parties and effective date
- Recitals: Background and purpose ("WHEREAS...")
- Definitions: Define key terms
- Operative provisions: Rights and obligations
- Representations and warranties: Statements of fact
- Conditions: Events triggering obligations
- Term and termination: Duration and how contract can end
- Remedies: What happens if breach
- Dispute resolution: Litigation, arbitration, mediation
- General provisions (boilerplate):
- Choice of law
- Entire agreement clause
- Amendment procedures
- Severability (if one provision invalid, rest remains)
- Force majeure (excuses performance due to unforeseeable events)
- Notices
Contract Review Checklist:
- Parties correctly identified?
- All necessary terms included (price, performance, timeline)?
- Obligations clear and unambiguous?
- Remedies for breach specified?
- Warranties and representations accurate?
- Limitations of liability reasonable?
- Indemnification provisions fair?
- Dispute resolution mechanism clear?
- Choice of law and venue acceptable?
- Termination provisions clear?
- Confidentiality adequate?
- Intellectual property rights addressed?
- Compliance with applicable law?
Application: Contract drafting is core skill; well-drafted contracts prevent disputes.
Method 3: Legal Writing
Purpose: Communicate legal analysis clearly and persuasively
Types of Legal Writing:
Objective Writing (memos, client letters):
- Analyzes law and facts neutrally
- Presents both sides
- Predicts likely outcome
- Advises client on options
Persuasive Writing (briefs, motions):
- Advocates for client's position
- Emphasizes favorable facts and law
- Distinguishes or minimizes unfavorable authorities
- Seeks specific relief
Principles of Good Legal Writing:
Organization:
- Logical structure (IRAC, CREAC)
- Roadmap (tell reader what's coming)
- Topic sentences (first sentence of paragraph states main point)
- Transitions between sections
Clarity:
- Short sentences (20-25 words average)
- Active voice ("Court held" not "It was held by the court")
- Plain language where possible
- Avoid jargon unless necessary
Precision:
- Use terms of art correctly
- Distinguish "may" (permissive) vs. "shall" (mandatory)
- Be specific about facts, holdings, rules
Citation:
- Cite authorities properly (Bluebook, ALWD)
- Every legal proposition needs citation
- Use signals correctly (e.g., "See" for support, "But see" for contrary authority)
Persuasion (in adversarial writing):
- Lead with strongest arguments
- Use favorable facts
- Analogize to favorable precedent
- Distinguish unfavorable precedent
- Use policy arguments when appropriate
Application: Legal writing is how lawyers communicate; clear writing is essential for effectiveness.
Sources:
Method 4: Negotiation and Alternative Dispute Resolution
Purpose: Resolve disputes without litigation
Negotiation:
Preparation:
- Understand client's interests (not just positions)
- Know BATNA (Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement)
- Research other side's likely interests and BATNA
- Determine reservation price (walk-away point)
Strategies:
- Distributive (win-lose): Fixed pie, maximize own share
- Integrative (win-win): Expand pie, mutual gains
Tactics:
- Anchor with initial offer
- Make principled arguments (fairness, precedent, market value)
- Find creative solutions
- Build rapport
- Use silence
- Be willing to walk away
Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR):
Mediation:
- Neutral third party facilitates negotiation
- Mediator doesn't impose solution
- Non-binding (unless parties agree)
- Confidential
- Advantages: Cheaper, faster, preserves relationships, creative solutions
Arbitration:
- Neutral third party (arbitrator) hears evidence and issues decision
- Binding or non-binding (usually binding)
- Less formal than litigation
- Limited appeal rights
- Advantages: Faster, cheaper, expertise, confidentiality
- Disadvantages: Limited discovery, limited appeal, can be expensive
Settlement Conferences:
- Judge or magistrate facilitates settlement discussions
- Non-binding evaluation of case
Application: Most disputes resolve without trial; negotiation and ADR skills are essential.
Sources:
Method 5: Due Diligence and Risk Assessment
Purpose: Investigate facts, assess legal risks, advise on mitigation
Due Diligence (common in transactions):
Corporate Due Diligence:
- Corporate structure and governance
- Capitalization and ownership
- Material contracts
- Litigation and disputes
- Intellectual property
- Regulatory compliance
- Financial statements
- Tax compliance
Real Estate Due Diligence:
- Title search
- Survey and physical inspection
- Environmental assessment
- Zoning and land use
- Leases and encumbrances
Process:
- Create checklist of items to review
- Request documents from other party
- Review documents for issues
- Interview key personnel
- Conduct searches (UCC, litigation, regulatory)
- Prepare due diligence report
Legal Risk Assessment:
Identify Risks:
- Contractual risks (breach, ambiguity)
- Regulatory risks (non-compliance)
- Litigation risks (potential claims)
- Reputational risks
Assess Risks:
- Likelihood (high, medium, low)
- Impact (high, medium, low)
- Prioritize (high likelihood + high impact = highest priority)
Mitigation Strategies:
- Avoid: Don't engage in risky activity
- Reduce: Implement controls to reduce likelihood or impact
- Transfer: Insurance, indemnification, contract terms
- Accept: Risk is low enough to tolerate
Application: Due diligence and risk assessment protect clients from surprises and enable informed decisions.
Analysis Rubric
What to Examine
Facts:
- What happened?
- Who are the parties?
- What is the timeline?
- What is the relationship between parties?
- What agreements, if any, exist?
Legal Issues:
- What legal questions arise?
- What areas of law are implicated (contracts, torts, constitutional, etc.)?
- What rights and obligations exist?
Applicable Law:
- What statutes, regulations, or common law apply?
- What jurisdiction(s)?
- What precedent cases are relevant?
Legal Elements:
- What elements must be proven?
- What is the burden of proof?
- What defenses are available?
Procedural Posture:
- Where in the litigation or dispute process are we?
- What procedural issues exist?
- What deadlines apply?
Questions to Ask
Liability Questions:
- Who is liable to whom?
- For what (breach of contract, tort, etc.)?
- What are the elements of the claim?
- Can all elements be proven?
Defense Questions:
- What defenses are available?
- How strong are defenses?
- What evidence supports defenses?
Remedy Questions:
- What remedies are available (damages, injunction, specific performance)?
- What is the measure of damages?
- Are punitive damages available?
Procedural Questions:
- What is the timeline?
- What procedural steps are required?
- What is the burden of proof?
- What are the risks of litigation vs. settlement?
Strategic Questions:
- What are client's goals?
- What is BATNA?
- Should we litigate or settle?
- What leverage do we have?
Factors to Consider
Strengths and Weaknesses:
- Strength of legal arguments
- Quality and availability of evidence
- Credibility of witnesses
- Precedent support
- Policy considerations
Client Considerations:
- Client's goals (money, vindication, precedent)
- Client's resources (cost of litigation)
- Client's risk tolerance
- Reputational concerns
- Business relationships
Opposing Party Considerations:
- Their likely arguments
- Their evidence
- Their resources and risk tolerance
- Their settlement incentives
Practical Considerations:
- Cost of litigation
- Time to resolution
- Publicity
- Precedent implications
- Collectability of judgment
Historical Parallels to Consider
- Analogous cases
- How courts have ruled in similar situations
- Trends in legal doctrine
- Policy evolution
Implications to Explore
Legal Implications:
- Precedent value
- Impact on legal doctrine
- Broader legal consequences
Client Implications:
- Financial impact
- Reputational impact
- Business impact
- Future liability risk
Systemic Implications:
- Impact on industry practice
- Regulatory response
- Legislative reform
Step-by-Step Analysis Process
Step 1: Gather and Analyze Facts
Actions:
- Interview client
- Collect documents (contracts, correspondence, etc.)
- Identify witnesses
- Create chronology
- Distinguish disputed from undisputed facts
Outputs:
- Comprehensive fact summary
- Timeline
- List of documents and witnesses
Step 2: Identify Legal Issues
Actions:
- Determine what legal questions arise from facts
- Identify areas of law (contracts, torts, etc.)
- Frame issues as specific questions
Outputs:
- List of legal issues
- Issue framing for analysis
Step 3: Research Applicable Law
Actions:
- Identify jurisdiction
- Find relevant statutes, regulations
- Find relevant case law
- Read and analyze authorities
- Check that authorities are still good law
Outputs:
- List of applicable statutes and regulations
- List of relevant cases
- Summary of legal rules
Step 4: Analyze Law Applied to Facts (IRAC)
Actions:
- For each issue:
- State the rule
- Apply rule to facts
- Analogize to or distinguish from precedent
- Consider counterarguments
- Reach conclusion
Outputs:
- Legal analysis for each issue
- Assessment of strengths and weaknesses
Step 5: Identify Claims and Defenses
Actions:
- Determine what claims client can assert (or what claims asserted against client)
- Determine what defenses are available
- Assess elements and evidence for each claim and defense
Outputs:
- List of claims with elements and evidence
- List of defenses with elements and evidence
Step 6: Assess Procedural Posture and Options
Actions:
- Determine current procedural stage
- Identify procedural options (motion to dismiss, summary judgment, settlement, trial)
- Assess strategic implications of each option
Outputs:
- Procedural roadmap
- Strategic options
Step 7: Evaluate Risks and Likely Outcomes
Actions:
- Assess likelihood of success on each issue
- Consider range of potential outcomes (best case, worst case, likely case)
- Evaluate risks of litigation vs. settlement
- Consider costs (financial, time, reputational)
Outputs:
- Risk assessment
- Range of outcomes with probabilities
Step 8: Identify and Evaluate Remedies
Actions:
- Determine what remedies are available (damages, injunction, etc.)
- Quantify damages if possible
- Assess feasibility of non-monetary remedies
Outputs:
- Remedies analysis
- Damages calculation
Step 9: Consider Settlement and Alternative Resolutions
Actions:
- Assess client's BATNA
- Estimate other side's BATNA
- Identify settlement range
- Consider ADR options
Outputs:
- Settlement analysis
- BATNA assessment
- ADR recommendations
Step 10: Provide Legal Advice and Recommendations
Actions:
- Synthesize analysis
- Provide clear advice on options
- Recommend strategy
- Identify next steps
Outputs:
- Legal memorandum or client letter
- Strategic recommendations
- Action plan
Usage Examples
Example 1: Contract Dispute - Breach of Software Development Agreement
Facts:
- Company A hired Company B to develop custom software
- Contract specified: completion by June 1, payment of $100,000 upon delivery
- Company B delivered software on June 15 (two weeks late)
- Software had bugs that Company A claims make it unusable
- Company A refuses to pay; Company B sues for breach
Analysis:
Step 1 - Facts:
- Contract: Software development, $100K, due June 1
- Actual: Delivered June 15, buggy
- Dispute: Company A refuses to pay, claims material breach; Company B claims substantial performance
Step 2 - Issues:
- Did Company B breach the contract?
- If yes, was breach material or minor?
- Is Company A excused from payment?
- What damages, if any, can each party recover?
Step 3 - Law:
- Contract law applies (state common law + UCC Article 2 if goods involved)
- Material breach: Failure to perform substantial part of contract excuses other party's performance
- Substantial performance: Minor deviations don't excuse other party if substantially performed
- Perfect tender rule (UCC goods): Buyer can reject if goods or delivery fail in any respect to conform (but right to cure)
- Service contracts: Substantial performance doctrine typically applies
Step 4 - Analysis (IRAC):
Issue 1: Was there a breach?
- Rule: Breach occurs when party fails to perform obligation
- Application: Company B was obligated to deliver working software by June 1. Delivered late and with bugs. This is breach.
- Conclusion: Yes, Company B breached.
Issue 2: Was breach material?
- Rule: Material breach is substantial failure to perform that defeats purpose of contract. Factors: extent of breach, likelihood of cure, detriment to non-breaching party.
- Application:
- Late delivery: Two weeks late. Is this substantial? Depends on whether time was "of the essence" (contract doesn't say).
- Bugs: Are bugs minor (easily fixed) or major (software unusable)? Company A claims unusable but must prove.
- If bugs are minor and fixable, breach may not be material. If bugs render software unusable, likely material.
- Analog case: Jacob & Youngs v. Kent - Minor deviation (wrong brand of pipe) was not material breach where function identical.
- Distinguish: If bugs prevent use, unlike wrong pipe brand, this affects function.
- Conclusion: Depends on severity of bugs. If minor and fixable, not material. If severe, likely material.
Issue 3: Is Company A excused from payment?
- Rule: Material breach excuses other party's performance. Minor breach does not excuse but may allow damages.
- Application: If breach is material (unusable software), Company A is excused from payment. If not material, Company A must pay but can offset damages.
- Conclusion: Conditional on materiality determination.
Issue 4: Damages?
- Rule: Expectation damages put non-breaching party in position if contract performed.
- Application:
- If Company A prevails: Damages = cost to fix bugs or cost to procure substitute software, plus consequential damages (lost profits if provable)
- If Company B prevails: $100K contract price minus any offset for Company A's damages from late delivery
- Conclusion: Depends on outcome of breach analysis.
Step 5 - Claims and Defenses:
Company B's claim: Breach of contract (Company A failed to pay)
- Elements: Valid contract ✓, Performance or excuse ✓ (substantial performance?), Breach by Company A ✓ (non-payment), Damages ✓ ($100K)
- Defense by Company A: Company B's material breach excuses payment
Company A's counterclaim: Breach of contract (late delivery, defective product)
- Elements: Valid contract ✓, Performance or excuse ✓ (Company A was ready to pay), Breach by Company B ✓, Damages (cost to cure bugs)
Step 6 - Procedural Options:
- Company B has filed suit
- Company A should file answer with affirmative defense (material breach) and counterclaim
- Discovery: Obtain evidence of bug severity (expert testimony, testing)
- Motion for summary judgment: If bugs clearly minor or clearly severe, move for summary judgment
Step 7 - Risk Assessment:
- Key factual issue: How severe are bugs?
- If bugs minor: Company B likely prevails, recovers most or all of $100K minus offset
- If bugs severe: Company A likely prevails, owes nothing or reduced amount, may recover damages
- Litigation risk: Cost, time, uncertain outcome
Step 8 - Remedies:
- Company B: Contract price ($100K) minus offset for late delivery and cure cost
- Company A: Cost to cure bugs, consequential damages (if provable)
Step 9 - Settlement:
- BATNA for Company B: Win at trial, recover $100K minus offset (~$80-100K), but litigation costs and risk
- BATNA for Company A: Win at trial, pay nothing or reduced amount, but litigation costs and risk
- Settlement range: Probably $50K-$80K plus agreement for Company B to fix bugs
Step 10 - Recommendation:
- To Company A: Assess bug severity with expert. If severe, strong defense. If minor, settle for reduced price + bug fixes. Avoid litigation costs.
- To Company B: Fix bugs immediately, offer settlement (reduced price), argue substantial performance. Litigation risk high.
Example 2: Tort Liability - Slip and Fall at Grocery Store
Facts:
- Plaintiff shopping at grocery store
- Slipped on water spill in produce section
- Fell, broke wrist
- Store employee testified water had been there "maybe 10-15 minutes"
- No warning sign or cone
Analysis:
Step 1 - Facts:
- Plaintiff slipped on water at defendant's store
- Water present for 10-15 minutes without cleanup or warning
- Plaintiff suffered broken wrist
Step 2 - Issues:
- Is store liable for plaintiff's injuries (negligence)?
- Does plaintiff have defenses reducing recovery (comparative negligence)?
- What damages can plaintiff recover?
Step 3 - Law:
- Premises liability: Property owner owes duty to invitees (business visitors) to exercise reasonable care
- Negligence elements: Duty, breach, causation, damages
- Comparative negligence: Plaintiff's fault reduces recovery proportionally
Step 4 - Analysis:
Duty: Store owed duty to plaintiff (invitee) to maintain premises in reasonably safe condition and warn of known hazards
- Conclusion: Duty exists ✓
Breach: Did store fail to exercise reasonable care?
- Rule: Store must inspect for hazards and clean up or warn within reasonable time
- Application:
- Water was present for 10-15 minutes
- No warning sign
- Question: Is 10-15 minutes unreasonable? Depends on size of store, traffic, staffing.
- Case law: Some courts have found 15+ minutes is sufficient time for store to discover and address hazard
- Conclusion: Likely breach (should have discovered and cleaned or warned in 10-15 minutes)
Causation:
- Actual cause: But for water spill, plaintiff wouldn't have fallen ✓
- Proximate cause: Slip and fall is foreseeable result of water spill ✓
- Conclusion: Causation satisfied ✓
Damages:
- Broken wrist: Medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering
- Conclusion: Damages exist ✓
Comparative negligence:
- Defense: Was plaintiff negligent (not watching where walking, wearing inappropriate shoes)?
- If plaintiff was partially at fault, damages reduced proportionally
- Would need facts about plaintiff's conduct
Step 5 - Claims and Defenses:
Claim: Negligence (premises liability)
- All elements likely satisfied
Defenses:
- Comparative negligence: If plaintiff was not watching where walking, damages reduced by plaintiff's percentage of fault
- Open and obvious: Some jurisdictions say obvious hazards don't create liability, but trend is to consider as factor in comparative negligence
Step 6-10: (Abbreviated for length)
- Strong liability case for plaintiff
- Key issue: Comparative negligence percentage
- Damages: Medical bills (objective) + pain and suffering (subjective)
- Settlement likely (stores typically have insurance and settle to avoid trial)
Example 3: Constitutional Law - First Amendment Free Speech Challenge
Facts:
- State university prohibits "offensive speech" on campus
- Student newspaper publishes editorial criticizing university president
- University suspends student editor for violating offensive speech policy
- Student sues, claiming First Amendment violation
Analysis:
Step 1 - Facts:
- Public university (state actor)
- Policy prohibits "offensive speech"
- Student punished for editorial critical of university
Step 2 - Issues:
- Does First Amendment apply? (public vs. private university)
- Is policy unconstitutional (overbroad, vague, content-based restriction)?
- Is punishment of student editor constitutional?
Step 3 - Law:
- First Amendment: "Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech"
- Applies to states via Fourteenth Amendment
- Applies to public universities (state actors)
- Content-based restrictions: Subject to strict scrutiny (must be narrowly tailored to compelling government interest)
- Vagueness: Law is void if ordinary person cannot understand what conduct is prohibited
- Overbreadth: Law is invalid if it prohibits substantial amount of protected speech
Step 4 - Analysis:
Issue 1: Does First Amendment apply?
- Rule: First Amendment applies to state actors (government, public universities)
- Application: State university is public, hence state actor
- Conclusion: Yes, First Amendment applies ✓
Issue 2: Is policy unconstitutional?
Vagueness challenge:
- Rule: Policy is void for vagueness if reasonable person cannot determine what speech is prohibited
- Application: "Offensive speech" is highly subjective. What is offensive? To whom? In what context?
- Case law: Cohen v. California (1971) - "Offensive" is too vague to ban speech
- Conclusion: Policy likely unconstitutionally vague
Overbreadth challenge:
- Rule: Policy is overbroad if it prohibits substantial protected speech
- Application: Much "offensive" speech is protected (political speech, criticism, satire). Policy would prohibit vast amounts of protected speech.
- Case law: R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992) - Content-based restrictions on offensive speech unconstitutional
- Conclusion: Policy likely unconstitutionally overbroad
Content-based restriction:
- Rule: Content-based restrictions on speech subject to strict scrutiny
- Application:
- Compelling interest? Preventing "offense" is not compelling interest. Texas v. Johnson (1989)
- Narrowly tailored? No - policy is extremely broad
- Conclusion: Policy fails strict scrutiny
Issue 3: Is punishment constitutional?
- Rule: Punishment under unconstitutional law violates First Amendment
- Application: Editorial criticizing university president is core protected speech (political speech about public official)
- Conclusion: Punishment violates First Amendment
Step 5-10: (Abbreviated)
- Strong constitutional challenge
- University will likely lose
- Remedy: Injunction against enforcement, damages (nominal or actual if harm shown), attorney's fees (42 U.S.C. § 1988)
- University should immediately rescind policy and discipline
Reference Materials (Expandable)
Essential Resources
Legal Databases:
- Westlaw: Comprehensive legal research (cases, statutes, secondary sources)
- Lexis: Comprehensive legal research
- Bloomberg Law: Comprehensive legal research
- Google Scholar: Free case law
- Justia: Free cases and statutes
- Cornell LII: Free legal information and primary sources
Government Sources:
- Congress.gov: Federal legislation
- Federal Register: Federal regulations
- GPO (Government Publishing Office): Official federal documents
- State legislature websites: State statutes
- Court websites: Opinions, rules, forms
Legal Research Guides:
- Georgetown Law Library Research Guides: https://guides.ll.georgetown.edu/
- Harvard Law Library: https://guides.library.harvard.edu/law
- Cornell LII: https://www.law.cornell.edu/
Restatements (American Law Institute):
- Restatement of Contracts
- Restatement of Torts
- Restatement of Property
- Authoritative secondary sources
Treatises and Practice Guides:
- Williston on Contracts
- Prosser on Torts
- Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure
- Moore's Federal Practice
Law Reviews and Journals:
- Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Journal, Stanford Law Review, etc.
- HeinOnline (database of law reviews)
Professional Organizations
American Bar Association (ABA):
- https://www.americanbar.org/
- Model Rules of Professional Conduct
- Resources, CLE, practice groups
State Bar Associations:
- Licensing, CLE, ethics guidance
Specialty Bar Associations:
- Federal Bar Association
- National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL)
- American Association for Justice (trial lawyers)
Citation Guides
The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation
- Standard for U.S. legal citation
ALWD Guide to Legal Citation
- Alternative citation manual
Verification Checklist
After completing legal analysis:
- Identified all relevant facts
- Framed legal issues as specific questions
- Researched applicable law (statutes, cases, regulations)
- Checked that authorities are still good law
- Applied law to facts using IRAC or similar method
- Identified claims and defenses with elements
- Assessed procedural posture and options
- Evaluated strengths and weaknesses
- Analyzed potential outcomes and risks
- Considered settlement and ADR
- Provided clear legal advice and recommendations
- Cited authorities properly
- Used legal terminology precisely
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
Pitfall 1: Jumping to Conclusion Without Analysis
- Problem: Stating conclusion without identifying rules and applying to facts
- Solution: Use IRAC structure; show reasoning
Pitfall 2: Relying on Outdated Law
- Problem: Citing overruled cases or superseded statutes
- Solution: Always check that authorities are still good law (citators)
Pitfall 3: Ignoring Adverse Authority
- Problem: Only citing favorable cases, ignoring contrary authority
- Solution: Address adverse authority; distinguish or explain why not controlling
Pitfall 4: Misunderstanding Burden of Proof
- Problem: Not recognizing who must prove what and to what standard
- Solution: Identify burden and standard; assess whether party can meet it
Pitfall 5: Conflating Legal Standards
- Problem: Confusing summary judgment standard with trial standard, or civil vs. criminal standards
- Solution: Be clear about applicable procedural posture and standard
Pitfall 6: Inadequate Fact Investigation
- Problem: Analyzing based on incomplete or inaccurate facts
- Solution: Thoroughly investigate facts before reaching legal conclusions
Pitfall 7: Overlooking Statute of Limitations
- Problem: Failing to consider whether claim is time-barred
- Solution: Always check applicable statute of limitations
Pitfall 8: Ignoring Client's Goals
- Problem: Providing legal analysis divorced from client's practical objectives
- Solution: Understand client's business, personal, and strategic goals; provide practical advice
Success Criteria
A quality legal analysis:
- Grounds conclusions in authoritative legal sources
- Uses IRAC or similar analytical framework
- Applies law to specific facts of case
- Identifies and addresses counterarguments
- Assesses procedural posture and options
- Evaluates strengths and weaknesses objectively
- Considers practical and strategic factors
- Provides clear, actionable legal advice
- Cites authorities properly
- Uses legal terminology precisely
- Demonstrates rigorous legal reasoning
- Addresses ethical considerations where relevant
Integration with Other Analysts
Legal analysis complements other perspectives:
- Economist: Cost-benefit analysis, damages calculation, market analysis
- Historian: Legal history, evolution of doctrine, original intent
- Political Scientist: Judicial behavior, legislative process, administrative agencies
- Sociologist: Law and society, impact of legal rules on behavior
- Psychologist: Jury psychology, witness credibility, competency
Law is particularly strong on:
- Rights and obligations
- Formal reasoning and precedent
- Dispute resolution
- Regulatory compliance
- Risk allocation
Continuous Improvement
This skill evolves through:
- New legislation and court decisions
- Evolving legal doctrines
- Changes in procedural rules
- Emerging areas of law (AI, crypto, etc.)
- Cross-disciplinary legal scholarship
Skill Status: Complete - Comprehensive Legal Analysis Capability Quality Level: High - Rigorous legal reasoning across multiple domains Token Count: ~9,800 words (target 6-10K tokens)