Showing posts with label legal system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legal system. Show all posts

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Winning smart: The advantages of litigation

Judge Presiding Lawsuit
Image Source: theguardian.com


The United States is said to be a far too litigious society—a country where remedies for perceived injustices are commonly pursued through the legal system.

As a form of dispute resolution, litigation is based on taking action through the courts, which involves a formal process, formal rules of evidence, and formal discovery. Furthermore, it also takes into account public records and the decision of the judge and jury. During the process, the courts are concerned with the application of public policy and strict adherence to the law of the land.


Image Source: holcomb-law.com


Although commonly perceived as expensive and time-consuming, the advantages of litigation are mainly related to its nature, which involves transparency, compliance, uniformity, and binding final resolutions.

In addition, litigation is also considered as an effective legal method for highly charged issues. It allows the plaintiff to file lawsuits under a structure of rules that require facts, evidence, and arguments in support of the claim. The methods can be extraordinarily effective in clearing up obfuscation during arguments or debates.

Many companies today litigate to protect and advance their business interest. One of them is the multinational technology corporation Apple Inc. that has been a participant in various legal proceedings and claims since it began operations.


Image Source: mediamatters.org


Evan Granowitz is a recognized civil litigator in Southern California who counsels and represents clients in all facets of litigation. Learn more about him by visiting this Twitterpage.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Repost: Task Force Backs Changes in Legal Education System

A report that takes a look into the practice of most law schools in terms of providing little aid to needy students is currently in the works. Read this New York Times article for the details.
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Faced with rising student debt and declining applications to law schools, a task force of the American Bar Association is calling for sweeping changes in legal education, including training people without law degrees to provide limited legal services and opening the bar to those who have not completed four years of college and three years of  law school.
The report, to be issued on Friday, does not refer specifically to President Obama’s suggestion last month that law schools mightlimit classes to two years, and have students spend their third year clerking or practicing in a firm. But it did recommend the elimination of the rules that law students must have 45,000 minutes in a classroom to graduate and that they cannot get credit for field placements that are paid.
The report describes an urgent need for change in the nation’s legal education.  
“The system faces considerable pressure because of the price many students pay, the large amounts of student debt, consecutive years of sharply falling applications, and dramatic changes, possibly structural, in the jobs available to law graduates,” it said.  “These have resulted in real economic stresses on law school, damage to career and economic prospects of many recent graduates, and diminished public confidence in the system of legal education.”
It called  the predicament of the many recent graduates who may never get the kind of jobs they anticipated  “particularly compelling.”
The report is still a draft, to be distributed for comment, then considered at the bar association’s 2014 meeting. If adopted there, it will be influential but not binding on either law schools or state bar associations.
Randall T. Shepard, the former Indiana chief justice who was chairman of the task force, said that within the group, the most controversial sections were those dealing with how legal education is financed and with the accreditation standards.
The report criticizes the practice of most law schools to provide little aid to needy students, reserving most of their scholarships for those with the highest credentials in part to help raise the school’s rankings.
“There were very prickly long discussions about whether the language in the report accurately describes the situation,” Mr. Shepard said. “The other issue where there was real disagreement was on the list of items in the accreditation standards that we thought should be liberalized or eliminated.”
Among the items on the list are  the standards on credit  for  work  before law school matriculation, distance education, student-faculty ratios, the proportion of courses taught by full-time faculty, tenure, physical facilities and more.
The overall idea, said James. B. Kobak Jr., a New York lawyer on the task force, was to free law schools to be more innovative and get away from the one-size-fits-all model.
But Leo P. Martinez, a task force member who is president of the Association of American Law Schools, said that while he generally embraced the idea of encouraging heterogeneity among law schools, he thought the standards helped to ensure an “irreducible minimum of quality.”  
Mr. Shepard said that there had been little controversy over the use of  nonlawyer practitioners, in part  because the members were so impressed by Washington State’s experiment with limited-license legal technicians, trained and licensed to handle certain civil legal matters. That program’s success has led to an expansion to practitioners for domestic relations, an area in which many of those who come to court are now unrepresented.
The report, citing the wide variety of colleges in the United States, called for more differentiation and experimentation by law schools.  It  also recommended the  creation of national standards for admission to the bar.
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Interesting news and articles on the legal arena can be found in the Evan Granowitz blog site

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Legal assistance: Analyzing the disconnect between cost and need



Working as a lawyer is one of the most respected careers today. Companies need lawyers to handle their legal transactions as much as appellants come to these professionals for much-needed legal guidance. Yet amidst this prestige, the said line of work is still far from perfect.


Image Source: braintrack.com


This is what the American Bar Association believes, asserting that the legal education system is facing what one may call an existential crisis. This can be observed in how law school applications significantly dropped, arguably resulting from not only the expensive tuition (which eventually yields to student debts), but also the difficulty of finding employment after graduation.

The lack of employment opportunities for law graduates is rooted from a harsh truth: in financial crises, clients avoid paying higher rates for lawyers or avoid hiring lawyers altogether.


Image Source: nytimes.com


There are ways to resolve this problem, as suggested by John Farmer of The New York Times. He recommends that an entry level period of practice be enforced upon new graduates, under experienced supervision and at reduced hourly rates.

These reduced rates will hopefully encourage clients to hire more young lawyers, testing out what the new generation of legal specialists can offer them. In this manner, the growing need for legal representation can be satiated whilst providing law graduates not only with the job they studied and worked hard for, but also with the chance to shine in their chosen field.


Image Source: law.ufl.edu


This Evan Granowitz Facebook page offers valuable information and updates on the field of law.