| About the Book
This book describes not rules of law
but rules about law: tools that lawyers use to lawyer. It is meant
to show serious legal assistants and law students how lawyers
practice law.
A law school education is more one of learning about the law than
memorizing the laws. Our legal system is so vast that no single
person can be familiar with every law on the books, but most can
learn to use the tools that lawyers and judges use for analysis,
interpretation, and application of those laws. Knowing of the rules
of law distinguishes a lawyer’s approach to a problem from the
layman’s. Normally, legal education and training is task-specific;
i.e., particular to an area of specialization. That focus is
necessary and appropriate, but the novice requires a foundation of
knowledge about the legal method – the tools – used, regardless of
which area of law is involved.
The object of this work is to distill three years of law school
experience (and many years of practice) into a compact manual that
describes how judges and lawyers, well, judge and lawyer. It
specifically covers the intrinsic and extrinsic guides to statutory
construction, the guides for analysis and use of case law, and the
basic guides to contract interpretation, as well as what is implied.
Its primary purpose is to explain the fundamental method of analysis
of any legal issue by discussing the tools for extracting meaning
from legal texts.
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