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How to identify a legal issue

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legal skills

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Academic year: 2021/2022
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What is a legal issue?

There have been tens of thousands of legal opinions written over

the years, but in law school you’ll only read a small slice of cases.

Why are those cases picked? They are chosen because of the

way they illuminate issues -- the precise legal questions or

conflicts whose resolutions end up shaping the development

of the law. Identifying the issues that a case present is perhaps

the central skill you’ll learn in law school: they call law school

exams “issue spotters” for a reason.

So, what is a legal issue, exactly, and how do you identify it

before that first cold-call? Here are my tips for identifying those

legal issues.

  1. IGNORE THE OBVIOUS.

Generally, if two parties sign a written agreement with the word

“Contract” on it, it’s a contract. If a statute gives federal courts

jurisdiction over a certain type of claim, they have jurisdiction.

What makes cases interesting -- and fun -- is not the facts or

claims that are easy to make, but the ones that are tricky. The

issue is never a question that can be resolved with a simple, clear

answer.

  1. LOOK FOR AMBIGUITY IN THE FACTS.

Lawyers LOVE ambiguity. It’s exactly what allows us to make arguments! There are some famous cases with straightforward facts -- where the intrigue comes exclusively from the legal principles at stake -- but just as often there’s a question of how a generally accepted legal principle (equal protection, the tax-and- spend power, etc.) applies to a particular set of facts. Where

there’s something you don’t quite get in the facts, there’s a nice legal issue lurking.

  1. FIND WHERE THE OPINIONS DISAGREE.

Many cases you read in law school have dissenting opinions, precisely because these opinions help you see both sides of the contested legal or factual points. Dissents are great because they show you what both sides accept -- see above -- as well the points at which the judges’ opinions diverge. Where they diverge is what’s interesting and important. That’s the issue!

  1. THINK ABOUT WHAT YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND.

Have a question about how the case was decided? So did the parties, and the judges -- that’s why they brought the case to court! If you’re unsure of what the answer should be, and your friends are unsure, and you all have the same question, you’ve probably found the issue. Now all you have to do is articulate the question!

SUMMARY Essentially, what you’re doing is looking for whatever doesn’t make sense. Sound confusing? It can be! In other schools we have been so trained to look for a “right” answer that it’s almost counterintuitive to seek out the questions that don’t have such an answer... but that’s exactly what lawyers do!

Elizabeth Warren told us on our last day of class that law school

-- and the practice of law, at least for appellate lawyers -- is about

“interpreting the law at dawn and dusk:” not the times when it’s

clear but at the time when things are murkiest. It’s a different way

of thinking, but it’s truly what it means to “think like a lawyer.”

Now go spot those issues!

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How to identify a legal issue

Course: legal skills

105 Documents
Students shared 105 documents in this course
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What is a legal issue?
There have been tens of thousands of legal opinions written over
the years, but in law school you’ll only read a small slice of cases.
Why are those cases picked? They are chosen because of the
way they illuminate issues -- the precise legal questions or
conflicts whose resolutions end up shaping the development
of the law. Identifying the issues that a case present is perhaps
the central skill you’ll learn in law school: they call law school
exams “issue spotters” for a reason.
So, what is a legal issue, exactly, and how do you identify it
before that first cold-call? Here are my tips for identifying those
legal issues.
1. IGNORE THE OBVIOUS.
Generally, if two parties sign a written agreement with the word
“Contract” on it, it’s a contract. If a statute gives federal courts
jurisdiction over a certain type of claim, they have jurisdiction.
What makes cases interesting -- and fun -- is not the facts or
claims that are easy to make, but the ones that are tricky. The
issue is never a question that can be resolved with a simple, clear
answer.
2. LOOK FOR AMBIGUITY IN THE FACTS.
Lawyers LOVE ambiguity. It’s exactly what allows us to make
arguments! There are some famous cases with straightforward
facts -- where the intrigue comes exclusively from the legal
principles at stake -- but just as often there’s a question of how a
generally accepted legal principle (equal protection, the tax-and-
spend power, etc.) applies to a particular set of facts. Where

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