Preface
Introduction
Part One: Principles for All Legal Writing
1. Framing Your Thoughts
§ 1. Have something to say, and think it
through. Approach your task with a fervent desire to get your
message across.
§ 2. Carry out your writing projects in
four steps: think and research; plan and organize; write;
revise.
§ 3. Order your material in a logical
sequence. Present facts chronologically. For other material, make
the order (a) deductive, (b) comparative, or (c) spatial. Keep
related material together.
§ 4. Use informative headings to mark
sections and, if helpful, subsections.
2. Phrasing Your Sentences
§ 5. Exclude unnecessary words.
§ 6. Keep your average sentence length to
about 20 words.
§ 7. Keep the subject, the verb, and the
object together—toward the beginning of the sentence.
§ 8. Use parallel phrasing for parallel
ideas: don’t pair unlike grammatical forms.
§ 9. Use strong, precise verbs. Minimize
is, are, was, and were—especially when they are part of a
passive-voice construction.
§ 10. Avoid multiple negatives.
§ 11. End sentences emphatically.
3. Choosing Your Words
§ 12. Use plain English, not legalese.
§ 13. Be wary of pretension, officialese,
and stiff formulas.
§ 14. Simplify wordy phrases—especially
those containing of.
§ 15. Avoid zombie nouns—especially -ion
words that you can turn into verbs.
§ 16. Avoid doublets and triplets.
§ 17. Refer to people and companies by
name. Never use corresponding terms ending in -or and -ee.
§ 18. Use shorthand names only when you
must. Shun unfamiliar acronyms.
§ 19. Make it snappy, vivid, and
interesting.
§ 20. Be a companionable voice of reason.
Make everything you write speakable.
Part Two: Principles Mainly for Analytical and Persuasive
Writing
§ 21. Plan all three parts: the beginning,
the middle, and the end.
§ 22. For the all-important opener, use
the deep issue to state the problem clearly.
§ 23. Summarize concretely and
effectively. But don’t overparticularize with dates and similar
unimportant details.
§ 24. Make your paragraphs cohesive.
Introduce each one with a topic sentence.
§ 25. Link your paragraphs explicitly.
§ 26. Vary the length of your paragraphs,
but keep them generally short.
§ 27. Provide textual signposts along the
way.
§ 28. Unclutter the text by footnoting
citations. Keep the footnotes free of sentences.
§ 29. Weave quotations deftly into your
prose. “Quotation sandwiches” are hard to skip.
§ 30. Be forthright in dealing with
counterarguments.
Part Three: Principles Mainly for Legal Drafting
§ 31. Draft for an ordinary reader, not
for a mythical judge who might someday review the document.
§ 32. Organize provisions in descending
order of importance. Use a good numbering system and abundant
headings to make things easy to find.
§ 33. Minimize definitions and
cross-references. If you have more than a few definitions, put them
in a schedule at the end, not at the beginning.
§ 34. Break down enumerations into
parallel provisions. Put every list of subparts at the end of the
sentence—never at the beginning or in the middle.
§ 35. Replace every shall.
§ 36. Don’t use provisos.
§ 37. Replace and/or wherever it
appears.
§ 38. Prefer the singular over the
plural.
§ 39. Use numerals, not words, to denote
amounts. Avoid word–numeral doublets.
§ 40. If you don’t understand a form
provision—or why it should be included in your document—try
diligently to gain that understanding. If you still can’t
understand it, cut it.
Part Four: Principles for Document Design
§ 41. Make sensible choices about
typography: use a readable font and type size, don’t underline,
minimize all-caps and initial caps, and put one space between
sentences.
§ 42. Create ample white space—and use it
meaningfully.
§ 43. Highlight ideas with
attention-getters such as bullets.
§ 44. Use graphics whenever they can
enhance your message.
§ 45. For a long document, make a table of
contents.
Part Five: Methods for Continued Improvement
§ 46. Embrace constructive criticism.
§ 47. Edit your work rigorously and
systematically.
§ 48. Seek out reliable answers to
questions of grammar and usage.
§ 49. Habitually gauge your own readerly
likes and dislikes, as well as those of other readers.
§ 50. Remember that good writing makes the
reader’s job easy; bad writing makes it hard.
Appendix A: A Restatement of Punctuation
Appendix B: Four Model Documents
1. Research Memos
2. Motions
3. Appellate Briefs
4. Contracts
Key to Basic Exercises
Bibliography
Index
Bryan A. Garner is president of LawProse, Inc., and
Distinguished Research Professor of Law at Southern Methodist
University. He is the author of the “Grammar and Usage” chapter
of The Chicago Manual of Style and editor-in-chief
of Black’s Law Dictionary. Garner is also the author of
several best-selling
books, including Garner’s Modern English
Usage and, with Justice Antonin Scalia, Reading Law: The
Interpretation of Legal Texts and Making Your Case: The
Art of Persuading Judges.
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