legal brief
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A formal written document presented to a court that outlines the factual circumstances, legal arguments, and relevant laws pertaining to a specific case on behalf of a client. It is a critical tool for advocating a client's position.
Usage
A "legal brief" is prepared by a lawyer or legal team. Its primary purpose is to persuade the court to rule in favor of the lawyer's client. It is submitted as part of the formal court proceedings. - The attorney spent the weekend preparing a detailed legal brief for the upcoming appeal. - The judge asked both sides to submit their legal briefs before the hearing.
Advanced Usage
- Amicus Curiae Brief: A "friend of the court" brief, filed by a person or organization not a party to the litigation but with a strong interest in the subject matter, to provide information or argument.
- Several civil liberties groups filed amicus curiae briefs in support of the defendant.
- To file a brief: The standard phrase for submitting the document to the court.
- The deadline to file a brief is next Friday.
Variants and Related Words
- Brief (noun, verb): In a legal context, "brief" is often used synonymously with "legal brief." As a verb, it means to instruct or inform someone, especially a barrister, about a case.
- The solicitor will brief the barrister on the new evidence.
- Memorandum of Law / Legal Memorandum: A document similar to a brief but often used for internal analysis or for submission in less formal contexts.
Synonyms
- Legal Memorandum
- Court Brief
- Written Argument
Related Phrases
- To brief a case: To study and summarize a court decision, including its facts, issues, holding, and reasoning.
- Law students must learn how to brief a case effectively.
- Brandeis Brief: A type of brief that emphasizes economic and social science data more than legal citations, named after Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis.
Noun
- a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's case