Good Legal Thought: What Wordsworth Can Teach Langdell About Forms, Frames, Choices, and Aims

H. Lloyd
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Abstract

Langdellian “science” and its “formalism” ignore ways form permits and even creates freedom of choice. For example, as Wordsworth notes, though the weaver is restricted by what his form of loom can weave, the weaver may nonetheless choose what and how he weaves. Furthermore, the loom creates weaving possibilities that do not exist without it. Such freedom alongside form is often lost on lawyers, judges, and teachers trained primarily in Langdellian redacted appellate cases where “facts” and other framed matters often wrongly appear as simply given. Similarly, in the context of their redacted appellate cases, many current students may only see constraint in IRAC (Issue-Rule-Application-Conclusion) and other thought forms rather than the fastidious freedoms such forms both provide and create.Overlooking such freedoms is not only misleading in itself. It also misses the need to study how such freedoms are and should be exercised. When facts are simply presented as “given” and strategic and other choices go unrecorded and unnoticed in redacted appellate opinions, no thorough analysis of these overlooked subjects can occur. This is extremely troubling since such overlooked subjects are at the very heart of the lawyer’s craft.Attempting to remedy such Langdellian shortcomings, this article explores, among other things, five basic levels of thought and the framing choices in such levels of thought: references, issues, rules, application of rules, and conclusions. Though often merely taken as “given” in redacted appellate opinions, a good grasp of reference assures that parties are in fact talking about the same matter or matters (the “reference”). It also increases the likelihood of ascertaining and properly framing all the relevant “facts” in a manner reasonably and ethically consistent with a client’s real interests. Similarly, focusing on flexibility of issue framing both brings necessary focus on what is important in the reference and, to the extent reasonable and ethical, again increases the likelihood of frames most consistent with a client’s real interests. A good grasp of applicable rules and how to frame and apply them on its face increases the likelihood of representing a client well. A good grasp of conclusions and how to frame and hedge them also does the same. Grasping the multilevel complexities in play at these multiple levels pushes us beyond briefing redacted appellate cases to the much more difficult and stimulating work of exploring and teaching good legal thought at all its levels. Legal writing professors are pioneers in this regard and others in the academy can learn much from them.
好的法律思想:华兹华斯教给朗德尔的形式、框架、选择和目的
朗德尔式的“科学”及其“形式主义”忽视了形式允许甚至创造选择自由的方式。例如,正如华兹华斯所指出的,尽管织布机能织的东西限制了织布机,但织布机可以选择织什么和怎么织。此外,织布机创造了没有它就不存在的编织可能性。律师、法官和主要从事朗德尔式修订上诉案件培训的教师往往失去了这种自由,在这些案件中,“事实”和其他框架问题往往错误地表现为简单的给出。同样,在他们编辑的上诉案件的背景下,许多当前的学生可能只看到IRAC(议题-规则-应用-结论)和其他思维形式的约束,而不是这些形式提供和创造的挑剔的自由。忽视这些自由不仅本身就是一种误导。它还忽略了研究这些自由是如何行使的以及应该如何行使的必要性。当事实被简单地呈现为“给定的”,而战略和其他选择在编辑的上诉意见中没有被记录和忽视时,就不可能对这些被忽视的主题进行彻底的分析。这是非常令人不安的,因为这些被忽视的主题是律师技术的核心。为了弥补这种朗德尔式的缺陷,本文探讨了五个基本的思想层次,以及这些思想层次中的框架选择:参考、问题、规则、规则的应用和结论。虽然在修订后的上诉意见中通常只是被视为“给定的”,但对参考文献的良好把握可以确保当事人实际上谈论的是同一件事或同一件事(“参考文献”)。它还增加了以合理和道德上符合客户实际利益的方式确定和适当构建所有相关“事实”的可能性。同样,关注问题框架的灵活性,既能使人们必要地关注参考文献中的重要内容,又能在合理和道德的范围内,再次增加框架最符合客户实际利益的可能性。对适用规则的良好把握,以及如何构建和应用这些规则,增加了很好地代表客户的可能性。对结论的把握,以及如何构建和对冲结论,也起到了同样的作用。掌握在这些不同层面上发挥作用的多层次复杂性,使我们超越了简要介绍修订后的上诉案件,而进入了更困难、更刺激的工作,即在各个层面探索和教授好的法律思想。法律写作教授是这方面的先驱,学院里的其他人可以向他们学习很多东西。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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