Record Details



Enlarge cover image for On appeal : courts, lawyering, and judging / Frank M. Coffin ; illustrations by Douglas M. Coffin. Book

On appeal : courts, lawyering, and judging / Frank M. Coffin ; illustrations by Douglas M. Coffin.

Summary:

The pursuit of justice does not always end with the verdict of a judge or jury. Along with the right to a speedy, public trial, we have the right to challenge an unfavorable verdict, to appeal our case to higher courts. But whether they affect us by deciding our own case or, more likely, by ruling on a wide range of societal issues, neither the United States Courts of Appeal nor the state appellate courts are well understood. In this book, Senior Judge Frank M. Coffin, bringing over twenty-five years of experience serving the First Circuit Court of Appeals, takes all of us, citizens and attorneys, judges and journalists, inside the appellate courtrooms as well as behind the scenes into the judges' chambers.
We see the wide range of appellate cases - from environmental, governmental, and criminal to cases testing the rights of handicapped persons, employees, prisoners, and others. We see how attorneys argue these cases - why some are successful, like the late legendary attorney Edward Bennett Williams, and how some lose, sometimes irreparably damaging their clients' appeals by committing basic yet avoidable errors.
We are treated to an insider's rare view of the private work of judges - how they approach the practical task of reading the many pages of briefs, what they look for in attorneys' oral arguments, their interactions with law clerks, and the collegial dynamics of the all-important decision-making process with fellow judges. We see their minds in action as they write opinions that often open new legal approaches required by our modern and technological world. With much common sense, practical advice, and wit, Judge Coffin sizes up our unique court system as a major, and now well-portrayed, source of second-change justice for us as individuals and as a society.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0393035824
  • ISBN: 9780393035827
  • Physical Description: xix, 373 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : W.W. Norton, ©1994.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 339-354) and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
1. A day in court -- 2. The appellate world today -- 3. The state-federal court system: "one whole" -- 4. In chambers -- 5. Where appeals begin -- 6. Briefs: reflections of an advocates' consumer -- 7. Oral argument: conversing with the court -- 8. The judges' conference -- 9. Opinions I: organizing the workload and doing an opinion -- 10. Opinions II: working with law clerks -- 11. Opinions III: the workings of collegiality -- 12. On judging appeals I: the quest for legitimacy -- 13. On judging appeals II: familiar waters -- 14. On judging appeals III: uncharted depths -- 15. On the future -- Appendix: the appellate idea in history.
Subject:
Appellate courts > United States.
Appellate procedure > United States.
Judicial process > United States.
Lawyers > United States.
Appellate courts.
Appellate procedure.
Judicial process.
Lawyers.
United States.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Northwest Indian College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lummi Library KF 8750 .C64 1994 255782 Stacks Available -

Summary: The pursuit of justice does not always end with the verdict of a judge or jury. Along with the right to a speedy, public trial, we have the right to challenge an unfavorable verdict, to appeal our case to higher courts. But whether they affect us by deciding our own case or, more likely, by ruling on a wide range of societal issues, neither the United States Courts of Appeal nor the state appellate courts are well understood. In this book, Senior Judge Frank M. Coffin, bringing over twenty-five years of experience serving the First Circuit Court of Appeals, takes all of us, citizens and attorneys, judges and journalists, inside the appellate courtrooms as well as behind the scenes into the judges' chambers.
We see the wide range of appellate cases - from environmental, governmental, and criminal to cases testing the rights of handicapped persons, employees, prisoners, and others. We see how attorneys argue these cases - why some are successful, like the late legendary attorney Edward Bennett Williams, and how some lose, sometimes irreparably damaging their clients' appeals by committing basic yet avoidable errors.
We are treated to an insider's rare view of the private work of judges - how they approach the practical task of reading the many pages of briefs, what they look for in attorneys' oral arguments, their interactions with law clerks, and the collegial dynamics of the all-important decision-making process with fellow judges. We see their minds in action as they write opinions that often open new legal approaches required by our modern and technological world. With much common sense, practical advice, and wit, Judge Coffin sizes up our unique court system as a major, and now well-portrayed, source of second-change justice for us as individuals and as a society.