Learn How to Be Heard. Learn How to Make Your Opponents
Answer Truthfully in Court. The Power is Yours! Every case should have a theory. The
plaintiff’s case has one theory; the defendant’s case has another. If I am going to court I Make certain that I
understand my theory of the case and make the other side tell me its theory on
the record. I never omit to do this.
Many times a case can be won by poking holes in the other side’s theory. Or, if
it can be shown that facts simply cannot support the other side’s theory, you
win. I trust brother Kenny Is listening
and will receive this edification. Or,
if the law cited by the other side doesn’t fit the theory they say they are
operating from, they lose. If a case theory is not supported by the facts and
law, the case is un-winnable.
Understood? A good case theory can
be stated in just a single paragraph. For example, “Defendant owed plaintiff a
duty to provide safe seating at its pool hall. When plaintiff sat at
defendant’s table to eat his sandwich the table collapsed. Plaintiff was dumped
to the floor where he was permitted to remain 12 minutes in full view of
defendant’s employees. Plaintiff suffered physical injury and emotional
embarrassment as a direct result.”
Always write your theory of the case, then get the other side to put its
theory on the record. Let opposing theories direct your strategy and tactics in
the case. Many cases are lost
because the losing party does not see the big-picture view by writing a case
theory.
Answer Truthfully in Court. The Power is Yours! Every case should have a theory. The
plaintiff’s case has one theory; the defendant’s case has another. If I am going to court I Make certain that I
understand my theory of the case and make the other side tell me its theory on
the record. I never omit to do this.
Many times a case can be won by poking holes in the other side’s theory. Or, if
it can be shown that facts simply cannot support the other side’s theory, you
win. I trust brother Kenny Is listening
and will receive this edification. Or,
if the law cited by the other side doesn’t fit the theory they say they are
operating from, they lose. If a case theory is not supported by the facts and
law, the case is un-winnable.
Understood? A good case theory can
be stated in just a single paragraph. For example, “Defendant owed plaintiff a
duty to provide safe seating at its pool hall. When plaintiff sat at
defendant’s table to eat his sandwich the table collapsed. Plaintiff was dumped
to the floor where he was permitted to remain 12 minutes in full view of
defendant’s employees. Plaintiff suffered physical injury and emotional
embarrassment as a direct result.”
Always write your theory of the case, then get the other side to put its
theory on the record. Let opposing theories direct your strategy and tactics in
the case. Many cases are lost
because the losing party does not see the big-picture view by writing a case
theory.
Of course lawsuits are far more complicated than this,
however the basics are the same in every lawsuit. Which are as follows……
however the basics are the same in every lawsuit. Which are as follows……
Complaint, Flurry of Motions, Answer, Discovery, Trial
Focus on this simplicity. Winners know how the game is
played. That’s how winners win! If you
can spell “CAT” you can master the fundamental anatomy of every lawsuit. C ...
Complaint A ... Answer T
... Trial. Creditors win debtors
lose. Because a secured party creditor now. Contact me creditorsdebtorscontracts@yahoo.com
played. That’s how winners win! If you
can spell “CAT” you can master the fundamental anatomy of every lawsuit. C ...
Complaint A ... Answer T
... Trial. Creditors win debtors
lose. Because a secured party creditor now. Contact me creditorsdebtorscontracts@yahoo.com
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