Previous survey articles have discussed the need for precise objections to preserve an issue for appeal. Sometimes, however, even the most precise objection may not be sufficient. In Garner v. Victory Express, Inc., plaintiff objected to defendant\u27s counsel\u27s comment during closing argument on the lack of any evidence indicating that defendant was unsafe or careless. Apparently, defense counsel was referring to the absence of evidence of prior negligence on the part of defendant\u27s driver. The trial court overruled this objection. Plaintiff argued that because he was precluded from proving defendant\u27s negligence by his prior driving record or from proving the driver\u27s general character for recklessness in driving, defendant sh...
Scholars have long been divided over the role, function, and significance, if any, of oral argument ...
Attorneys object at trial to immediately correct errors or to preserve the record for appeal; howeve...
This is a subject which so distinguished an advocate as John W. Davis has characterized as well-wor...
What comes to mind when you think of evidence being presented at jury trials? Typically, both sides ...
Should attorneys object during trial? Does preserving the record outweigh the potential costs of obj...
Researchers have proposed many explanations for the replicated finding that jurors often fail to dis...
One of the paradoxes of the law is presented by the large number of decisions discussing evidence po...
Crafting the right objection to evidence presented at trial is important both to win an evidence fig...
In this article no mention is made of the numerous reiterations of the rule that in considering a mo...
The requirement of standing to sue in federal court is familiar, but the related requirement of stan...
Whether watching a law drama on television or attending a trial in person, we have all become accust...
An uninterrupted offer of evidence by an attorney during a trial in North Carolina is a rare if not ...
This article seeks to end fifty years of confusion over how to proceed when a criminal defendant wan...
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree. At the trial, certain incompetent testimo...
On March I, 2004, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Florida v. Nixon to resolve whether Strick...
Scholars have long been divided over the role, function, and significance, if any, of oral argument ...
Attorneys object at trial to immediately correct errors or to preserve the record for appeal; howeve...
This is a subject which so distinguished an advocate as John W. Davis has characterized as well-wor...
What comes to mind when you think of evidence being presented at jury trials? Typically, both sides ...
Should attorneys object during trial? Does preserving the record outweigh the potential costs of obj...
Researchers have proposed many explanations for the replicated finding that jurors often fail to dis...
One of the paradoxes of the law is presented by the large number of decisions discussing evidence po...
Crafting the right objection to evidence presented at trial is important both to win an evidence fig...
In this article no mention is made of the numerous reiterations of the rule that in considering a mo...
The requirement of standing to sue in federal court is familiar, but the related requirement of stan...
Whether watching a law drama on television or attending a trial in person, we have all become accust...
An uninterrupted offer of evidence by an attorney during a trial in North Carolina is a rare if not ...
This article seeks to end fifty years of confusion over how to proceed when a criminal defendant wan...
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree. At the trial, certain incompetent testimo...
On March I, 2004, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Florida v. Nixon to resolve whether Strick...
Scholars have long been divided over the role, function, and significance, if any, of oral argument ...
Attorneys object at trial to immediately correct errors or to preserve the record for appeal; howeve...
This is a subject which so distinguished an advocate as John W. Davis has characterized as well-wor...