Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Yay Clarence Thomas

I just came across this interesting article in The Atlantic about Clarence Thomas's philosophy on judicial opinion writing.  While I know we can't all agree on the correctness of Justice Thomas's decisions, I think we all can get behind shorter, clearer opinions.

Why Clarence Thomas Uses Simple Words in His Opinions

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Some Typos are Worse than Others

Exhibit A--Misspelling your own name.  Poor Missouri State.  Unfortunately, typos can happen to all of us.  This is another reminder about the importance of proofreading and spell-checking.

http://news.yahoo.com/oops-university-misspells-own-name-70k-worth-canvas-153200695.html

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Mind Your Ps (Pronouns, That Is)


Smith struck Jones, injuring his hand.
Did Smith injure Jones’s hand, or did Smith injure his own hand?
Legal writers often overuse pronouns, leading to confusion.   As I’ve said previously, the legal writer’s overall goal should be to make sentences as clear as possible.  Writers who aren’t careful about pronoun use produce unclear sentences.  This lack of clarity often occurs because the pronoun is too far away from the antecedent, or because the writer includes multiple persons or things to which the pronoun might refer.  For example,

The defendant told the judge he was sorry.  He then sat down. 
Did the defendant say “I’m sorry,” or did the defendant tell the judge, “You’re sorry.”  Who sat down?  The judge? The defendant?  You can easily correct ambiguous pronoun use.  In the first example, change “his,” or re-word.

The defendant struck the plaintiff, injuring the plaintiff’s hand.
The defendant injured the plaintiff’s hand when he struck the plaintiff.

There is a similar remedy for the second example:

The defendant said, “I’m sorry,” and then sat down.
The defendant told the judge the defendant was sorry.  The defendant then sat down.

Strive for clarity, even if changing a pronoun makes a sentence slightly more bulky.