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Legal Writing Manual 3rd Edition: Chapter 13 - Summary of Law

Legal Writing Manual 3rd Edition
Chapter 13 - Summary of Law
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table of contents
  1. Front Matter
  2. Chapter 1 - Sources of Law and Court Systems
  3. Chapter 2 - Reading Cases
  4. Chapter 3 - Briefing Cases
  5. Chapter 4 - Local Rules and Standing Orders
  6. Chapter 5 - Time Management
  7. Chapter 6 - Metacognition and Study Skills
  8. Chapter 7 - Introduction to Citation
  9. Chapter 8 - The Legal Reader
  10. Chapter 9 - Prewriting
  11. Chapter 10 - CREAC Legal Writing Paradigm
  12. Chapter 11 - Predictive Writing
  13. Chapter 12 - Rule Synthesis
  14. Chapter 13 - Summary of Law
  15. Chapter 14 - Case Synthesis
  16. Chapter 15 - Parts of a Memo
  17. Chapter 16 - Transitions and Signposting
  18. Chapter 17 - Persuasive Writing
  19. Chapter 18 - Policy
  20. Chapter 19 - Parts of an Appellate Brief
  21. Chapter 20 - Assessing Your Own Work
  22. Chapter 21 - Conducting Peer Review
  23. Chapter 22 - Writing for Exams
  24. Chapter 23 - Legal Phrases

Chapter 13: Summary of Law

A Summary of Law is both exactly what it says and also far more challenging to write than it sounds. There are times in legal practice when you do not have a specific fact pattern that you are analyzing and instead you are focused on determining what the law says to do with a particular piece of a legal issue. In essence, a Summary of Law is the written product of the process of rule synthesis. 

This is the first test of your skills that you have been learning thus far in this course. Your goal is to properly identify the legal issue you are being asked to examine and then to use sources of law, such as statutes and case law, to provide guidance on how a person should approach assessing the legal issue. 

Remember how our legal system is founded on the English common law system? An earlier case might have stated a legal rule that was sufficiently clear to answer that particular legal issue, but a later case had facts that were just different enough to create ambiguity or confusion in how the legal rule should not be applied, which required the later case to clarify or expand on the earlier case’s legal rule.

In a Summary of Law, you are tracing how the law evolved and then reorganizing the material to produce a final product that is organized by topic rather than chronologically. Your job in this document is to do the “heavy lifting” for the reader and show clearly how and why the cases you discuss address the legal issue and answer the question posed. Put another way, your Summary of Law is where you demonstrate the work you did in finding and synthesizing the rule so that the reader does not have to conduct that process independently.

For your Summary of Law, you will have an introductory paragraph that provides the overall conclusion, the general rule, and the roadmap for the remainder of the document. For your body paragraphs, use a CRE-C structure. There is no Application section because in this document you are not applying the general rule to determine a specific outcome for a specific fact pattern. The Application section will come later in your case synthesis practice and your memoranda.

There is an example of Summary of Law in Appendix E that uses Unmarked Cases (Appendix A), Reading Cases (Appendix B), Briefing Cases (Appendix C), and Rule Synthesis Example (Appendix D) to write a Summary of Law showing how the author synthesized a rule from those cases.

Conclusion

The Summary of Law is the first building block of written legal analysis. Your understanding of where laws come from, practicing reading and briefing sources of law, and shifting focus from the sources of law to legal issues come together to let you find and synthesize legal rules and provide descriptions of the sources of law on which you rely to formulate your rule. Remember that a Summary of Law is like a geometry proof; you are showing the reader not just what the final answer is but also the steps you took along the way to reach your conclusion.

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Chapter 14 - Case Synthesis
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