Prof. Lawrence Wilkins discusses Palsgraf v. Long Island RR Co.
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Prof. Lawrence Wilkins discusses Palsgraf v. Long Island RR Co.
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Tags:Palsgraf
Professor Glesner Fines discusses the relationship between law school and jobs.
This is the fifth and final podcast from Professor Glesner Fines that accompanies her book “Materials for Law School Success,” available for free from CALI’s eLangdell® Press.
Professor Glesner Fines has written numerous CALI lessons on a variety of legal topics. Her lessons are listed here.
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Tags:1L·2L·3L·advice·employment·Glesner Fines·jobs·law school·lawdibles
Professor Glesner Fines explains why you should re-visit last semester’s law school exams to improve your performance this semester and to ensure that you know the subject for use in law practice. Her suggestions include how best to review your own exam and how to prepare for a meeting with your former professor to discuss your exam.
This podcast is the fourth in a series from Professor Glesner Fines that accompanies her book “Materials for Law School Success,” available for free from CALI’s eLangdell® Press.
Professor Glesner Fines has written numerous CALI lessons on a variety of legal topics. Her lessons are listed here.
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Tags:1L·advice·exams·Glesner Fines·law school·law school success·lawdibles
Professor Glesner Fines explains how create an outline for your law school class that reflects what you have learned and prepares you for your exam.
This podcast is the third in a series of Lawdibles from Professor Glesner Fines. The series of podcasts accompanies her book “Materials for Law School Success,” available for free from CALI’s eLangdell® Press.
Professor Glesner Fines has written numerous CALI lessons on a variety of legal topics. Her lessons are listed here.
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Tags:1L·advice·exam·Glesner Fines·law school·law school success·lawdibles·outline
Professor Glesner Fines speaks with a 1L student about how to brief a case and the relationship between briefing a case and writing an exam.
This podcast is the second in a series from the author that accompanies her book “Materials for Law School Success,” available for free from CALI’s eLangdell® Press.
Professor Glesner Fines has written numerous CALI lessons on a variety of legal topics. Her lessons are listed here.
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Tags:1L·advice·Glesner Fines·law school·law school success·lawdibles·study tips
Professor Glesner Fines speaks with an entering law student about the factors that influence law school success, including resources, attitude, cooperation and challenge.
This is the first in a series of podcasts from Professor Glesner Fines that accmpanies her eBook, “Materials for Law School Success,” available for free from CALI’s eLangdell® Press.
Professor Barbara Glesner Fines’ numerous CALI lessons are listed here.
Her faculty biography can be found here.
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Tags:1L·advice·Glesner Fines·law school·law school success·lawdibles
What is the difference between comparative negligence and assumption of the risk?
This Lawdible helps students learn to recognize the differences between the two most important affirmative defenses to a negligence claim — assumption of the risk and comparative negligence. Professor Fordham works through a hypothetical that highlights the differences between assumption of the risk and comparative negligence. He then explains a narrow, but essential exception to the rule for assumption of the risk, often referred to as “primary” assumption of the risk. Professor Fordham shows how primary assumption of the risk is different from secondary assumption of the risk and suggests keys to applying these affirmative defenses.
Professor Brigham Fordham is an Associate Professor at Phoenix School of Law.
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Tags:Assumption of Risk·Brigham Fordham·Comparative Negligence·Torts
How can an opponent impeach a hearsay declarant, when the declarant does not appear in court? Find out in this Lawdible.
When hearsay is introduced against a party, that party may impeach the Declarant using any techniques that could be used against a witness who testifies live in court. For example, evidence of past convictions related to truth-telling may be introduced, to show that jury that the declarant has a character trait of untruthfulness. Similarly, opinion and reputation evidence about that character are admissible. Proof of bias in any form can be introduced to show that the declarant may have had a motive to shade his or her statements in a particular direction.
With regard to inquiring about past bad acts relevant to truth-telling, that technique can be used against a live-in-court witness, but probably cannot be used where a hearsay declarant is sought to be impeached, since the declarant is not on the witness stand to hear and answer a question about his or her past acts.
Here’s Professor Best’s faculty bio.
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As an attorney, you will often receive funds from a client before you even perform any services for a client. Many attorneys require payment of a retainer or an advance for future services. What’s the difference between the two? What legal ethics issues do retainers and advances create? Professor Barbara Glesner Fines of the University of Missouri – Kansas City will explains the issues in this Lawdible.
Professor Glesner Fines’ faculty biography can be found here.
We don’t have a specific CALI Lesson to pair with this Lawdible. But Professor Glesner Fines is a prolific CALI Lesson author and has written many Professional Responsibility CALI Lessons listed here.
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Evidence about a person’s character for impeachment purposes gets treated differently from evidence about a person’s character to show how he or she acted out of court. What are these differences and why does the law have them?
When a party wants to show how someone acted out of court, using character evidence for that purpose is generally prohibited. But when a party wants to show that a witness likely lied while testifying, character evidence about the witness’s character trait for truthfulness is allowed. In the first situation, character evidence to show conduct out-of-court, risks of prejudice against the defendant are high, and the vagueness of character evidence is particularly problematic.
When character evidence is offered to show whether a person lied on the witness stand, the risks of prejudice against the defendant are reduced since the witness may not be the defendant. Also, the probative value of the character evidence is likely to be high, since the trait – truthfulness – is clearer than other traits such as violence, and the conduct to which the trait is linked, testifying, may be less complex than much other conduct in the world.
CALI Lesson Pairings: Impeachment and Rehabilitation of Witnesses and Character Evidence Under Federal Rules.
Here’s Professor Best’s faculty bio.
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