3.organizing_a_legal_discussionIRAC.pdf

    ORGANIZING A LEGAL DISCUSSION (IRAC, CRAC, ETC.)

    Introduction The organization of your writing will determine whether or not a reader will understand and be

    persuaded by your argument. Brilliant rhetoric will only carry you so far—if your piece does not

    follow a clear structure, many of your points will be lost or misunderstood. As a result, it is crucial

    that your writing follow a clear organizational format that will be intelligible to your reader.

    Most legal writing requires the writer to analyze a set of facts using legal rules gleaned from a

    myriad of sources, including cases, statutes, and secondary materials. Unlike the non-legal writing

    you’ve done in college and at work, legal writing has its own specific structure that lawyers

    everywhere use in one form or another—and which they expect to see in your written work.

    Whether they call it IRAC (Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion), CRAC (Conclusion, Rule,

    Application, Conclusion), or CREAC (Conclusion, Rule, Explanation, Application, Conclusion), all

    lawyers write in the same way: by laying out the issue to be discussed, the legal rule relevant to the

    issue, the analysis of the pertinent facts based on that rule, and the overall conclusion reached.

    Although this may sound daunting at first, it will quickly become second nature. Below is a primer

    on how to structure a legal argument using IRAC. CRAC and CREAC are incredibly similar to IRAC,

    and the same principles apply.

    Where do I use IRAC?

    IRAC is used after your facts section, in the ‘discussion’ section or your memo, or the ‘argument’

    section of your brief. Each discrete legal topic will have its own IRAC structure, under a separate

    sub-heading. For example, an affirmative defense and a necessary element of a claim would each

    receive their own complete, independent IRAC discussions.

    How do I use IRAC?

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    With practice, it will feel entirely natural to organize your legal discussion following the IRAC form.

    In the meantime, below is a basic outline of the IRAC format and its best uses.

    Issue

    State the issue in the first paragraph at the beginning of the sub-section: what is the legal question

    you will need to analyze? Why do you need to analyze this issue? This first section should give your

    reader an understanding of what you intend to discuss and why you must discuss it.

    In a memo, you should be neutral in your statement of the facts while also predicting how the judge

    will rule on the issue.

    Best: state the relevant issue in a way that reveals your conclusion

     Example: The Court will likely rule that Officer used unconstitutionally excessive force under the Graham test as applied to the facts of this case.

     Good: state the relevant issue in a neutral fashion.

     Example: The judge must then decide whether the balancing test in Graham

    warrants a finding of excessive force.

     Not Good: state the relevant issue as a question

     Example: Did the Officer use excessive force under the Graham test?

    Note that using the question format is stylistically disfavored in the legal profession.

    In a brief, you should be more opinionated and assert how your client would like the issue to be

    resolved.

    Best: assert that the relevant issue should come out in your client’s favor and (briefly)

    explain why

    o Example: The balancing test in Graham warrants a finding of excessive force

    because Officer responded to an unthreatening suspect with a serious intrusion

    into his Fourth Amendment rights.

     Good: assert that the relevant issue should come out in your client’s favor

    o Example: The court should find that the officer used excessive force under the balancing test in Graham.

     Not Good: state the relevant issue in a neutral fashion

    o Example: The court will need to employ the balancing test in Graham to decide whether the officer used excessive force.

    Rule/Explanation

    After you lay out the issue, you will need to establish the governing legal rule that the court will

    employ to resolve that issue. Your rule section should resemble a funnel: set out the broadest

    principles first, with the smaller, secondary components, or exceptions to the rule following

    afterwards. Generally, you will be able to naturally create a funnel by discussing authorities in order

    from most important to least important. State holdings of cases briefly, and only include relevant

    facts and conclusions. Depending on the nature of your case, you may also wish to include a

    paragraph discussing particularly relevant precedent in order to establish how the rule works in

    practice.

     Order of Authorities: Constitution, statutes, regulations, Supreme Court cases, appellate

    court cases, trial court cases, and lastly, secondary sources.

     General  specific

     Baseline rule  exceptions

     Tip: For concise use of legal sources, use ellipses (Bluebook R. 5.3), and minimize use of block quotations

     Explain the whole rule; don’t just give a one-liner

    Example: It is well established that “the use of force is contrary to the Fourth Amendment if it is excessive under objective standards of reasonableness.” Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201–02, 121

    S. Ct. 2151, 150 L.Ed.2d 272 (2001) (citing Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 109 S. Ct. 1865, 104

    L.Ed.2d 443 (1989)). The reasonableness of the application of force applied by a police officer

    depends on a balancing of the force applied and the circumstances confronted by the officer. “A

    claim that excessive force was used in the course of a seizure is subject to an objective test of

    reasonableness under the totality of the circumstances of each case, including the severity of the

    crime at issue, whether the suspect posed an immediate threat to the safety of others, and whether

    he is actively resisting arrest.” Sullivan v. Gagnier, 225 F.3d 161, 165 (2d Cir. 2000) (citing Graham v.

    Connor, 490 U.S. at 395–396). Under the law, police are not permitted to use any degree of force in

    all instances—in some circumstances, no use of force is reasonable because none is required. Bauer

    v. Norris, 713 F.2d 408, 412 (2d Cir. 1983) (“the use of any force by officers simply because a suspect

    is argumentative, contentious, or vituperative is not to be condoned”) (internal quotations

    omitted). The Second Circuit has held that the degree of injury is not determinative of an excessive

    force claim; even an injury that is not permanent or severe can suffice. Robinson v. Via, 821 F.2d 913,

    924 (2d Cir. 1987).

    Example: When applying the balancing test in Graham, the court has held that the there is little governmental interest in arresting a suspect for a minor offense. See Jones v. Parmley, 465 F.3d 46

    (2d Cir. 2006) (jury could reasonably find that kicking and punching peaceful protesters in violation

    of local ordinance was excessive); Thomas v. Roach, 165 F.3d 137 (2d Cir. 1999) (verbal threats are a

    too minor a crime to create a strong governmental interest in the arrest). Therefore, a suspect’s

    alleged crime must be sufficiently serious to warrant use of painful force, such as a taser, under a

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    Graham analysis. Tennessee v. Garner, 471 U.S. at 11. Given that the threat posed by the suspect is

    “the most important single element” of the Graham analysis, Chew v. Gates, 27 F.3d 1432, 1441 (9th

    Cir. 1994), any arrest in which the suspect poses no threat and is only wanted for a minor infraction

    likely does not give rise to a significant governmental interest.

    Application

    In this section, you will apply the rule to your facts, using the cases you’ve discussed in the rule

    section to draw analogies or distinctions. You should track the order and key phrases of the Rule

    section so that your reader can easily follow along. Don’t be afraid to repeat key terms and

    phrases—you will frequently need to do so to show that your case follows precedent. This section

    will be the bulk of your argument, and may run several paragraphs or pages long.

    Example: In the instant matter, the officer’s use of force against Victim was objectively unreasonable because Victim committed only a minor offense and posed no threat to Officer.

    Officer arrested Victim for loitering under New York Penal Law § 240.35, which classifies the

    infraction as a violation – a lower grade than even a misdemeanor. This infraction is even less

    serious than the one at issue Thomas (verbal threats) and is equivalent to the minor ones in Jones

    (protest violation). Moreover, Victim posed so little threat to Officer that sanctioning taser use in

    this situation would run contrary to precedent and notions of justice. Victim did not approach

    Officer or manifest any intention to harm him. Much like in Tennessee v. Garner, 471 U.S. at 21,

    where substantial force was unreasonable because the fleeing suspect posed no threat to the

    officer, Victim was actually attempting to escape away from Officer.

    Conclusion

    Here, all you will need is a sentence or two that concisely state the outcome of the issue, based on

    the Application of the Rule to the facts of the case.

    Example: Therefore, because Victim posed no threat to Officer and was only liable for a minor infraction, Officer’s use of force was excessive under Graham.

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    Putting it all together

    Fully synthesized, IRAC will allow you to move from the main problems in a case through the

    governing law, and to a final conclusion. Consider one final example. Your client is getting

    divorced in Connecticut. Her husband argues that she did not fairly and reasonably disclose her

    property, which Connecticut law requires, because her disclosure inaccurately stated her overall

    assets. In a memo, you might analyze this point like this:

    ISSUE, or Topic Sentence:

    A court will not be convinced that my client’s financial disclosures are ‘incomplete.’

    RULE:

    A “‘fair and reasonable’ disclosure refers to the nature, extent and accuracy of the information to be

    disclosed.” Friezo v. Friezo, 914 A.2d 533, 545 (Conn. 2007). Friezo notes that “a fair and reasonable

    financial disclosure requires each contracting party to provide the other with a general

    approximation of their income, assets and liabilities.” 914 A.2d at 550.

    ANALYSIS: Interpret the Evidence

    In Friezo, the defendant provided “an accurate representation, in writing,” that “set forth a list of

    the defendant’s assets and liabilities, most of which were valued individually.” Id. at 551, 550. Here,

    my client provided a similarly detailed written valuation. Her husband’s claims that the schedules

    omit key information about the value of my client’s real estate holdings and miscalculate her total

    assets, undervaluing them by $1,000,000, are inaccurate. My client provided either statements of

    value or recent assessments of value for each of her properties holdings to her husband. While

    Schedule A inaccurately states my client’s total assets, this misstatement is a clerical error; each of

    her properties is accurately valued individually.

    CONCLUSION: Reconnect This Point to Your Thesis

    Since Connecticut requires only a “general approximation” of assets, a court will find my client’s

    disclosure to be fair and reasonable.

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