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Summary SQE2 Legal Drafting Notes

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Complete and comprehensive notes including all relevant material tested in the SQE2 Legal Drafting written exam, information on the assessment criteria and objectives, techniques on how to develop Legal Drafting skills, example templates, precedents and clauses of each document that could potentially be tested in each practice area tested in the SQE2 Legal Drafting exam.

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SQE2 LEGAL DRAFTING ASSESSMENT - EXAM NOTES

Basic principles of good drafting; clear, precise, concise and acceptable language

Assessment
• Form
o Instructions and any supporting documents will be provided electronically
o Will have 45 minutes to complete answer
• Assessment Criteria
o Expected to know and address detail that a Day One Solicitor wouldn’t have to look up .: may be provided
with legal materials where SRA considers that a Day One Solicitor would need to refer to those materials
o Must structure document drafted appropriately and logically
▪ If document has recognised structure, must follow that e.g.:
• Property certificates of title
• Property contracts and transfers
• Leases
• Deeds of assignment of a lease
• Licenses to assign a lease and licences to underlet
• Wills and codicils
• Shareholders agreements
• Partnership agreements
• Board minutes
• Criminal defence statements
• Civil statements of case
• Civil witness statements
o Must use clear, precise, concise and acceptable language
▪ Clarity in drafting and using accurate language is essential as ambiguity in a key provision of a document
will significantly undermine its effectiveness
▪ Normally have to include technical terms but these must be suitable for the legal document that you are
drafting
o Need to draft a document which is legally correct and legally comprehensive
▪ Starting point = analyse all assessment material and extract relevant information quickly but accurately
to draft the required document
▪ Need to plan the structure of the document and ensure compliance with all appropriate formalities
▪ Document produced must be legally effective and accurately reflect your instructions
▪ Need to identify and address all key relevant legal and factual issues put into assessment material by
examiner
o Need to identify any ethical and professional conduct issues and have exercised judgment to resolve
them honestly and with integrity
▪ Should have resisted any pressure put in instructions to condone, ignore or commit unethical behaviour
• Threshold Standard for Competency
o Autonomy is about drafting documents to the acceptable standard without the need for supervision
o Complexity
▪ Need to be able to deal not only with straightforward transactions but also unfamiliar tasks which
present a range of problems and choices
▪ The breath and dept of knowledge must be such that if you can draft one type of legal document in a
particular context, you could draft a similar one in a different context
• E.g. board meeting minutes

, o Should be able to list the matters that would typically comprise the minutes of a routine board
meeting
o Should then be able to add to that anything non-routine e.g. board considering a substantial
transaction/ appointment of a new director
o Perception of legal context
▪ Demonstrate an understanding of the significance of your actions in the context of the objectives of the
transaction you are dealing with/ the strategy for the case you are handling
▪ Need a strategy for the case/ transaction add4essing in the assessment in order to deliver its overall
objective
▪ Starting point with drafting any legal document is to plan its structure and content
▪ Plan is likely to consist of a list
▪ List should be in your head and contain all possible topics that you can include/ exclude according to
analysis of the information provided in the assessment material
o Only a limited role for innovation and originality in assessment
• Overview of drafting process
o Prepare
▪ Should allow about 10 minutes for preparation and planning
▪ May be given instructions on specific aspects of the document you are to draft e.g. basis and calculation
of interest in particulars of claim
▪ Materials may specify certain assumptions you can make
▪ May stipulate that you don’t need to deal with certain matters e.g. costs
▪ Pay attention to any instructions you have received from client
• May take form of correspondence/ note of a meeting with client/ statement
• May be contained in an email from a partner
▪ Client’s instructions should be starting point for any piece of drafting
▪ Shouldn’t assume that legal document which you are drafting has to include all the information which
has been provided to you
• Avoid simply copying across large chunks of the assessment materials into your draft
• Need to sift through information to identify what is relevant
▪ Having decided what information is relevant, convert it into a legal document which is concisely drafted,
achieves client’s intentions and is legally correct and comprehensive
o Plan
▪ Helpful to set out a structure before begin to draft using bullet points to remind you of the points you
need to cover in each area
▪ Ensures that the contents of the legal document are correct
o Draft
▪ Once have clear structure mapped out, can begin to draft
▪ Should be thinking of the layout and language of the legal document
• May be standard one e.g. will or may be dictated by rules e.g. CPR
• May be provided/ partly provided by a precedent supplied
▪ Are some common rules which apply to all the drafting which you will carry out in assessments:
• Layout
o Focus on making the legal document as easy to navigate and understand as possible by using
numbered paragraphs and sub-headings
• Language
o Focus on making draft as easy to read as possible
o Try to keep drafting as concise as possible
• Definitions

, o Almost every legal document will include some defined terms
o Think about which terms require definition
o If amending/ continuing an existing draft, should adopt existing definitions unless there is good
reason not to
o Defined terms are usually capitalised
o Remember to use the defined term all the way through the legal document
• Formalities
o Ensure that legal document is valid and effective → incorporate/ select the appropriate provisions to
achieve this when document is completed
o Check
▪ Vital to proofread document
▪ Should allocate some time in the 45 minutes to do this
▪ Checklist:
• Does the document make sense through the eyes of the recipient?
• Has information from your instructions been carried over accurately?
• Are names and dates correct?
• Has all key information been included?
• Have you used any defined terms correctly and consistently?
• Does the numbering work?
• Do the cross-references to other parts of the document work?
• Any errors of spelling/ grammar?
• Forms of drafting in the assessment
o May be asked to continue drafting a legal document which is partially complete
▪ Look to see what has already been done
▪ If document is a form, the areas for you to complete may be greyed out &/ there may be notes which give
you guidance on what to include
▪ Will want to note them on initial read through and check its complied with as you proofread completed
draft
o May be presented with a list of specimen clauses e.g. for a will/ different orders for directions in a civil
case and be asked to select appropriate ones to incorporate into draft, amending as necessary
▪ Process of selecting best clause is similar to SBAQ technique
▪ Focus on facts of case and client’s instructions to choose best option
o May be presented with existing draft and asked to amend it
▪ Instructions should make it clear whether need to show your changes to the draft
▪ A danger when reviewing an existing draft is that you are beguiled by what is already on the page and
don’t stop to consider what the document/ clause needs to contain
▪ To avoid this, should still use the same 4 stage process:
• Prepare
o check what client’s instructions are
o Don’t assume that these will be reflected in existing draft
• Plan
o step back from existing draft and remind yourself what this type of document/ clause should contain
o Check your list of points against version that has been provided
• Draft
o Having assessed how much amendment is required, can now decide whether to redraft whole thing
or simply tweak it, changing a few aspects until the draft works
• Check
o Make sure that any redrafted section makes sense and that it works with the rest of the document

, o E.g. any defined terms in existing document which must be used in redrafted section? Is redraft
consistent with other clauses or contradicts them?
o Above exercises may be combined
o May be asked to draft a document without precedent or existing draft → drafting from scratch
▪ Need to identify type of document being asked to draft if not clear from instructions
▪ Check whether being asked to draft whole document or only part of it
▪ Depending on type of document, may have existing structure in mind
▪ Apply any rules particular to that practice area
▪ If document is a type you haven’t come across before, remind yourself of common elements of most
documents and basics of defining terms and structuring clauses → use these are guide
• Ethical and professional conduct issues
o Dispute Resolution
▪ Solicitor must only make assertions/ put forward statements/ representations/ submissions to court/
others which are properly arguable
• E.g. solicitor shouldn’t allege in statement of case that opponent has acted fraudulently unless there is
evidential basis for this
▪ When documents are being amended & negotiated between parties, must not attempt to mislead the
other side by concealing amendments made to draft
▪ Shouldn’t take advantage of clear mistakes made by other side
o Undertakings
▪ Should only given an undertaking if have client’s express authority to do so
▪ Subject matter of undertaking must be within your control
o Conflicts of interest
▪ Solicitor shouldn’t act where there is own interest conflict/ significant risk of such a conflict
▪ Might come into play when a solicitor is drafting a will and client wishes to make gift of significant value
to solicitor/ someone connected with them e.g. member of their family
• Shouldn’t include gift in first draft of will
• Should add note that provision cant be included until client has taken independent advice on it
▪ Client may wish to appoint solicitor as executor under their will
• Potential own interest conflict as solicitor will charge for services acting as executor
• Solicitor musts ensure that client has made decision to appoint them on a fully informed basis, having
explained the options available to the client as to the choice of executor and recoding the advice that
has been given
▪ Take care that you are acting only on instructions of testator themselves and not from another person
purporting to give instructions on their behalf

Legal Drafting
• the task of creating a legal document
• Can include preparing a document from scratch, following a template/ precedent/ completing a form
• 4 stage process:
o Preparation and research
▪ Take full instructions, undertake any further enquires which are needed, identify the objectives/ purpose
of the legal document, research the law
o Planning
▪ Decide on best structure and necessary content
o Drafting
▪ Clearly and concisely set out information/ points following plan
o Checking

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Uploaded on
March 3, 2026
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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