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Informal Fact Gathering & Investigation

Informal Fact Gathering & Investigation. 2 nd Class Session LEGL 261. Chapter Objectives. How to structure a factual investigation Where to obtain facts to prove your client's case How to interview clients When and how to gather documents that may be used as evidence

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Informal Fact Gathering & Investigation

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  1. Informal Fact Gathering & Investigation 2nd Class Session LEGL 261

  2. Chapter Objectives • How to structure a factual investigation • Where to obtain facts to prove your client's case • How to interview clients • When and how to gather documents that may be used as evidence • Where to locate witnesses • How to use the internet to gather facts.

  3. Structuring Fact Investigations • Facts consist of what people heard, said, or did regarding an incident. • Two ways of "getting the facts" • informal before suit • formal discovery

  4. Fact Investigations • In litigation the facts and the law are intertwined. • The facts can make or break a case. • Facts are applied to the law to make a case.

  5. Causes of Action • A cause of action is the theory of recovery that entitles the plaintiff to recover damages or equitable remedies against the defendant. • Examples: • Negligence • Fraud • Breach of Contract

  6. Causes of Action • How do I find the elements of causes of action • Law books (Witkin, Summary of California Law) • Jury Instructions • Case law • Statutes

  7. Litigation Chart • A Litigation Chart can help to structure your fact investigation and identify the major parts of a litigation plan: • Elements of claims • Sources of proof • Informal fact investigation • Formal discovery

  8. The Elements of CofA • “Cause of Action”: The “wrong” • Example: Civil Assault • Intent • To cause harmful or offensive contact • reasonable belief about to be touched in a harmful [or an offensive] manner or was threatened to touch … • Imminent and capable • No consent • Harm, and substantial factor in causing harm

  9. California Civil Jury Instructions • 1301. Assault—Essential Factual Elements • [Name of plaintiff] claims that [name of defendant] assaulted [him/ her]. To establish this claim, [name of plaintiff] must prove all of the following: • [1. That [name of defendant] acted, intending to cause harmful [or offensive] contact; • 2. That [name of plaintiff] reasonably believed that [he/she] was about to be touched in a harmful [or an offensive] manner;] • [or] • [1. That [name of defendant] threatened to touch [name of plaintiff] in a harmful [or an offensive] manner; • 2. That it reasonably appeared to [name of plaintiff] that [name of defendant] was about to carry out the threat;] • 3. That [name of plaintiff] did not consent to [name of defendant]’s conduct; • 4. That [name of plaintiff] was harmed; and • 5. That [name of defendant]’s conduct was a substantial factor in causing [name of plaintiff]’s harm. • [A touching is offensive if it offends a reasonable sense of personal dignity.] • [Words alone do not amount to an assault.]

  10. Battery—Essential Factual Elements • [Name of plaintiff] claims that [name of defendant] committed a battery. To establish this claim, [name of plaintiff] must prove all of the following: • 1. That [name of defendant] [touched [name of plaintiff]] [or] [caused [name of plaintiff] to be touched] with the intent to harm or offend [him/her]; • 2. That [name of plaintiff] did not consent to the touching; and • 3. That [name of plaintiff] was harmed [or offended] by [name of defendant]’s conduct; [and] • [4. That a reasonable person in [name of plaintiff]’s situation would have been offended by the touching.] California Civil Jury Instructions (CACI) 1300

  11. CofA: Negligence • Duty • Breach of Duty • Harm proximately caused by breach of duty • Resulting in injury • (Ladd v. County of San Mateo (1996) 12 Cal.4th 913, 917 [50 Cal.Rptr.2d 309, 911 P.2d 496].)

  12. Case Study: Palsgraf • Long Island Rail Road station. A passenger carrying a package, while hurrying to catch and board a moving train, appeared to two of the railroad's (Defendant's) employees to be falling. The employees were guards, one of whom was located on the car, the other of whom was located on the platform. The guard on the car attempted to pull the passenger into the car and the guard on the platform attempted to push him into the car from behind. • The guards' efforts to aid the passenger caused the passenger to drop the package he was holding onto the rails. Unbeknownst to the guards, the package, which was approximately 15 inches long and wrapped in newspaper, contained fireworks, and the package exploded when it hit the rails. The shock reportedly knocked down scales at the other end of the platform (although later accounts suggest that a panicking bystander may have upset the scale), which injured Mrs. Helen Palsgraf (Plaintiff). • Palsgraf sued the railroad, claiming her injury resulted from negligent acts of the employee. The trial court and the intermediate appeals court found for Palsgraf (Plaintiff) by verdict from a jury, and Long Island Rail Road appealed the judgment. • It should be noted that Mrs. Palsgraf's injuries were not physical; she claimed to be suffering from a "nervous disorder" as a consequence of the incident. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palsgraf_v._Long_Island_Railroad_Co.

  13. Dominoes? Foreseeable • Element of Foreseeablity: • It began with a single row boat…

  14. Negligence Chart

  15. Criminal Elements? Elements of Burglary Offense • Trespass • Breaking • Entry • Dwelling • Nighttime • Intent Under the common law, an intent to commit a felony at the time of breaking and entering into the dwelling was an essential element of burglary. Since Larceny was a felony at common law, an intent to commit a larceny would suffice. Statutes vary from one jurisdiction to another. An intent to commit a felony is no longer required for all grades of the offense. In some states an intent to commit any crime will suffice.

  16. Elements: Contract • Offer • Acceptance • Consideration • Form • Legality • Capacity

  17. Sources of Facts • The Five Main Sources for Facts: • The client • Exhibits • Witnesses • Experts • The opposing parties

  18. Informal Investigations • Four sources for informal investigations • The client • Exhibits • Witnesses • Experts

  19. Client Interviews • Just take down the facts; do not give legal advice. • Try to get full disclosure of the facts. Some clients will try to color or hide the facts because: • May be embarrassed to reveal some facts; • May try to say what he thinks the paralegal wants to hear; • May feel you will judge him. • Remind client to reveal the whole truth.

  20. Preparation for Interview • Have client bring all paper work • Have client fill out a New Client Form • Have an interview form

  21. Initial Client Interview • Offer the client something to drink • Talk to the client informally; ask him about himself • Let the client know what's going to happen during the interview; • Have the client tell the story of what happened to him • Get a detailed chronological history of the events; if possible get dates

  22. Initial Client Interview • Tell the client you may attempt to verify certain facts with an other source. • Ask client what he/she believes the other side will say; • Facts bearing on liability must be developed fully. Details are critical. • Obtain information on damages and sources of insurance;

  23. Initial Client Interview • Get the client's personal background information • Find out the names of all parties involved • Do not make any commitments about taking the case until you speak with the attorney

  24. Evaluating The Case • Are there any cross-claims? • What defenses will the other side have? • What the statutes of limitations for each of the causes of action • List all possible witnesses

  25. Evaluating The Case • Determine all records and documents pertinent to the case • What physical evidence is there? • Has the client spoken to other law firms? • What does the client want? • Do periodic interviews by phone or in person

  26. Evidence • Two types of evidence • Testimony • Physical evidence

  27. Getting The Evidence • Identify all exhibits • The scene • Physical evidence • Records and documents

  28. Interviewing Witnesses • Try to interview each witness, favorable or not • Decide the order in which to interview them • Locate those witnesses for whom you do not have a number or address. If you cannot find the person on your own, you may have to hire an investigator.

  29. Interviewing Witnesses • Set up the interview (in person is best) • Make a list of the questions you need answered before calling. • At the interview, make the witness feel as comfortable as possible. Be friendly and open. • Ask the witness if you can record his answers or get a written statement. Pin the witness down to details.

  30. Structuring Witness Interviews • Witness background • Story in witness' own words • Detailed chronology • Questions focused on the theory of the case.

  31. Evaluate The Witness • Write a short memo to the file or attorney evaluating the witness by appearance, verbal skills, non-verbal communication, credibility, etc.

  32. Expert Witnesses • Many cases need expert witnesses to help establish liability or prove damages. • Consulting experts • Testifying Experts

  33. Venue • The county in which the facts are alleged to have occurred and in which the trial will be held. • Venue is the legally proper place where a particular case should be filed or handled. Every state has rules determining the proper venue for different types of lawsuits. For example, the venue for a paternity suit might be the county where the mother or the man alleged to be the father lives. • The venue is the county from which the jury are to come, who are to try the issue. • The pleadings support a venue.

  34. The First Documents & Letters • Retainer Agreement • Letter to client (in/out) • Letter to opposing party • Letter to evidence sources (medical?) • Request for police (or official) reports • Waivers, if needed (HIPAA?)

  35. Retainer • No retainer, no service • Decline letters are important • Notice of waiting for retainer?

  36. Client Contact Letter • Thank them • Build confidence and trust • Inform them • Get any needed docs or info • Form a record of representation

  37. Letter to Opposing Party • If represented, do not send to defendant! • Inform • Request • Intimidate?

  38. Demand Letter • If case is ready • May not need to litigate • Get sense of opposing party’s positions • Don’t give away too much What to put in? What to leave out?

  39. Litigation Technology • Communication • Data Storage • Organization • Case Management • Dates and Deadlines • Billing

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