Section 1:
A.
You must pay the fine.
B.
You have three months to render assistance.
C.
It is unlawful for a person to enter during construction.
D.
The oral commitment binds you even without a contract.
E.
She consulted a lawyer about possible litigation.
F.
She accepted the appointment because she’s qualified.
G.
It’s green.
H.
Ask witnesses about the bills.
I.
Judge Jones is on the bench.
Section 2:
Answers found in Statsky p. 543-546
Caption- Contains the names of the parties, name of
the court, court file number/docket number,
and type of appellate brief. This information goes
on the title page.
Statement of Jurisdiction- This is a paragraph that
states the subject-matter jurisdiction and may
also contain some essential facts that relate to jurisdiction.
Table of Contents- This is an outline of the major
components of the brief and where they are
located.
Table of Authorities- This lists all of the primary
and secondary authorities used in the brief.
Questions Presented- This is the statement of the
legal issues that the party wishes the
appellate court to consider and decide.
Statement of the Case- This contains a summary of
the history of the dispute and presents the
essential facts of the case.
Summary of Argument- This is a summary of the major
points that are made in the brief.
Argument- This is the explanation of the legal positions
of the client and where the primary and
secondary sources are relied on analyzed.
Conclusion- This states what action the attorney wishes
the appellate court to take.
Appendixes- If needed, this contains excerpts from
statutes or other primary authority, trial
transcript, charts, descriptions of exhibits, etc.
A.
You must pay the fine.
B.
You have three months to render assistance.
C.
It is unlawful for a person to enter during construction.
D.
The oral commitment binds you even without a contract.
E.
She consulted a lawyer about possible litigation.
F.
She accepted the appointment because she’s qualified.
G.
It’s green.
H.
Ask witnesses about the bills.
I.
Judge Jones is on the bench.
Section 2:
Answers found in Statsky p. 543-546
Caption- Contains the names of the parties, name of
the court, court file number/docket number,
and type of appellate brief. This information goes
on the title page.
Statement of Jurisdiction- This is a paragraph that
states the subject-matter jurisdiction and may
also contain some essential facts that relate to jurisdiction.
Table of Contents- This is an outline of the major
components of the brief and where they are
located.
Table of Authorities- This lists all of the primary
and secondary authorities used in the brief.
Questions Presented- This is the statement of the
legal issues that the party wishes the
appellate court to consider and decide.
Statement of the Case- This contains a summary of
the history of the dispute and presents the
essential facts of the case.
Summary of Argument- This is a summary of the major
points that are made in the brief.
Argument- This is the explanation of the legal positions
of the client and where the primary and
secondary sources are relied on analyzed.
Conclusion- This states what action the attorney wishes
the appellate court to take.
Appendixes- If needed, this contains excerpts from
statutes or other primary authority, trial
transcript, charts, descriptions of exhibits, etc.