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Sui Juris - The Truth is in the Record
You will learn valuable tips and tactics.
See email Topics from
Jurisdictionary
You will learn procedures that win lawsuits.
You will learn about evidence and how to get it.
You will learn about drafting.
You will learn about causes of action.
You will learn about motions and hearings.
You will learn about courtroom objections.
You will learn how to fight in court to win!
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Jurisdictionary email Topics(2)
Allegations &
Proof ~ Due Process ~
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More Tip & Topics

To win your case:
Allege all the Facts
Prove all the Facts
Alleging all the necessary facts is like drawing plans for a workshop project. You make a detailed drawing of all the parts and how they fit together. Expert workmen always begin with a plan, then they follow their plan. (A word processing outline template that may assist you organizing your thoughts. Download. From our NFPCAR web site)
Pleadings are your lawsuit blueprint ... whether you're a plaintiff or defendant. Pleadings are the tool you use to allege all the facts that support your case. They give you and the court a clear vision of the final result you seek. In your blueprint pleadings you set out the facts that support the legal basis that requires the court to rule in your favor.
Failure to start with powerful pleadings always results in a weak case and foreseeable failure in court.
Your pleadings' weakness is the other side's strength.
If you're a plaintiff, the blueprint is a "complaint" in which you allege all ultimate facts necessary to support all essential elements of your cause(s) of action (what federal courts call a "claim on which the court can grant relief"). You make it clear that the court is obligated to rule in your favor if you prove your alleged facts by the greater weight of admissible evidence.
If you're a defendant, your blueprint is an "affirmative defense" in which you allege all ultimate facts necessary to support all essential elements of your defenses. You counter the plaintiff's allegations of fact with allegations of your own. Prove the facts of your affirmative defenses by the greater weight of admissible evidence.
Most pro se people (non-lawyers going to court on their own) draft pleadings as if they were writing a "letter to the judge", weaken their case at the very start by failing to lay out a powerfully complete blueprint for their proofs.
An essential maxim of law states simply, "A judge who rules without first hearing both sides, though his judgment may be just, is not himself just."
Justice implies this essential right to be heard.
One might rather say, true justice requires the right to be heard. The court should give both parties an equal opportunity to present the facts and law on which the court is required to rule with regard to those facts. Each side has a different point of view, but both are given an equal chance to argue their case free from the court's prejudice or penalty.
Anything less is ... well ... un-American!
But!
Simply arguing to a judge that your "constitutional rights have been violated", and expecting such a simplified argument to move the court to do something in your favor is a waste of time.
Courts don't operate that way - nor should they.
Courts act on pleadings and motions (usually after a hearing where both sides argue their motions in person or after the court has read and considered written motions supported by memoranda and responses in opposition.
The average courtroom is witness to dozens of complex and sometimes heated legal arguments in the space of an average day. The typical judge reads hundreds of pages of pleadings, motions, notices, and memoranda - not to mention official documents and court records - between the time the judge arrives at the courthouse in the morning and the hour when the judge finally heads home to be with family at the end of the day. Multiply this judicial workload by the number of judges in a typical courthouse, then multiply by the number of days in a year, and you quickly realize why there must be order in the court.
Courts have strict rules that govern everyone
At least, that's the way it's supposed to work!
If you don't understand how to draft powerful pleadings and move the court with persuasive proof, you don't stand a chance against an experienced lawyer.
(Related information: Definition of Due Process of Law)
Hopefully this course will be helpful to you to go Pro Se for the Legal Concerns you may have. However, if you go Pro Se or seek Legal Council, knowing the statutes, policies, etc., is the most important thing you can do... For "Knowledge is Power."... And you are the "Leader", who must protect your children.
Also, I would most definitely want your Feed Back on the value of this course. (See what others have had to say)
Also, I will be giving at least an Annual Financial Report of Sales, plus send an invoice, if you decide to donate.
GranPa Chuck
Keeper of the web files for http://nfpcar.org
(1) From Jusrisditionary.com
Web Site
(2) From Jusrisditionary.com eMails
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May you find
strength in your Higher Power,
GranPa Chuck
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